I
think that I have you both beat at 5 hours. I had moved from SC to NC way
before my 40 hours was flown off. I also built a new house myself in NC,
which required most of my free time. Somehow, I managed to get the rest of
the 40 hours flown off, and the plane is ready to move to NC now.
I
decided to wait for good weather (not 90 - 100) to make the 1.5 hour flight.
Probably September.
Steve
Brooks
Al – I hear you on
the “50 minutes from home”. Mine is more like 60 minutes and that is on a good
day. Makes working on the plane a whole lot harder – and the wife
doesn’t like it much either.
I’m still looking
forward to the get-in-and-go too – but then again – what will I do then? Build
another one?!
Joe Hull
Cozy Mk-IV N31CZ (65 hrs - Rotary 13B NA)
Redmond (Seattle), Washington
From:
Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Al Gietzen Sent: Monday, August 07, 2006 3:31
PM To: Rotary motors in aircraft Subject: ***SPAM*** [FlyRotary] Re: It's
officially an airplane
CONGRATULATIONS! For
me it took a couple of days to realize that I actually had an "AIRPLANE" and
not a project. Although I'm starting to believe you are never really finished.
Thanks,
Jason
Mine is still a
project – or even more of a project because it’s 50 minutes from home instead
of in the garage. It’s not a project when it is ‘get in, and go’.
Will I still be young enough to fly?
Best,
Al
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