While my 11 year old son and I were on our big trip from Dayton, OH to Phoenix, AZ, we experienced an engine failure and had to make an emergency landing in our Aerovee equipped Waiex. About 15 minutes after departing from KTCC - Tucumcari, NM (AKA - middle of nowhere), and after we climbed through 6000 ft MSL (planed cruise at 8500 ft), the engine started cutting out just a tad. My first though was mixture due to the high density altitude (7400 ft density altitude at time of departure) but we had been cruising at 6500 feet and landed at a field elevation over 4000 ft with a density altitude of 7800 without any issues at all. I tried leaning the mixture without any improvement, then tried to go richer with the mixture, again with no improvement. It had been about 10-15 seconds at this point, and we were about 20 nm west of KTCC, so I immediately turned toward I-40, which was about 7 or 8 miles to the south. I had a good spot in the desert picked out in case the engine cut out completely and we couldn't make it to the highway. I couldn't maintain altitude, and was slowly descending, so I got Albuquerque Center on the radio and informed the controller of the engine troubles, as well as got a transponder code so they'd know exactly where we were. I let them know we were keeping I-40 under us to follow it back to KTCC (I-40 goes right by the runway). As we descended, the engine started cutting out more, so I declared an emergency with the expectation of landing on I-40. Luckily, the engine stayed on enough for us to make it back to KTCC a couple hundred feet below pattern altitude. I stayed in close on downwind in case we lost the engine completely. We lost the engine completely a couple seconds after the wheels planted on the runway. That was one of the toughest landings I've ever done. We landed on runway 21 with winds from 170 at 22 gusting to 33. My son did a good job of staying calm through the whole ordeal as I explained what I was doing and why with each step. I had him record the last few minutes of the flight and the landing (definitely not the smoothest landing, but it worked). I have to apologize that the video isn't great, but considering the fact that a very scared 11 year old did it while trying to pay attention to me and while he was saying lots of prayers, I'd say he did just fine. You can definitely hear what the engine was doing in the video, and after touchdown, you can see that the prop is stopped while we're still rolling. You can also see the engine information gauges quite a bit and see that all numbers were normal. I'm guessing it was a fuel flow issue, but because I'm not the builder and not experienced with engine tuning, I'd love to hear your input as to what you all think it may be.
I had to leave the plane there and had my brother from Albuquerque come rescue us. I'll have to figure out how to get back out there to diagnose it, fix it, and fly it back some time, but I'm not sure when I'll be able to do that.
Here's the link to the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1jHT-jSd6I&t=52s