by Bryan Cotton » Tue Oct 01, 2024 2:13 pm
I had a similar scenario but no homebuilt time. Lots of other tailwheel time.
I'd start with minimal to no crosswind. The Waiex at least is not the low speed rudder power champion. With minimal crosswind, I prefer to pick up the tail for takeoff. For us, the solid link tailwheel is a crucial part of our crosswind capability and if we had a castering wheel we would have a lot less than 300 hours.
It took me a while to get good/comfortable doing the 3-point takeoff. The visibility is not great and you need to use the Force to keep aligned. I never liked the 3 point takeoff in cubs, C140s, etc either so that may be a personal bias. But once you pick it up on the mains the visibility is really good.
The airplane wheel lands great, but again be mindful of your crosswind capability. For any crosswinds over 5kts or so we do a 3 point takeoff and a full stall/tailwheel first landing.
For a crosswind takeoff, the stick is full back to nail the wheel down until the mains come off. I've been relaxed on the back pressure and run out of pedal, woke up and got the stick back and got it back.
We have more crosswind takeoff capability with it from the left as it reduces the amount of left pedal you need for torque/P factor. Landing we have more capability with a crosswind from the right.
Back to the original question, for the first flight in benign conditions I don't think it matters. I would pick your favorite or what seems right to you. Good luck!
Bryan Cotton
Poplar Grove, IL C77
Waiex 191 N191YX
Taildragger, Aerovee, acro ailerons
dual sticks with sport trainer controls
Prebuilt spars and machined angle kit
Year 2 flying and approaching 200 hours December 23