Matthew
Touchdown! Greaser!
Don't know why this popped into my head, but in the mid-70s I seemed to always know someone who knew someone whose dad or neighbor was building an airplane in his garage. What were the popular models back then?
I'm getting ready to build a LongEZ and have been reading all of the back issues of Burt Rutan's newsletter. It's fascinating to read about how homebuilts were "back in the day." Homebuilts seemed like they really thrived in the 70's, especially the VariEze. I can't imagine what it was like seeing that thing roll out on the flight line for the first time!
I don't recall what Leroy built in the eighties but it was a small amphibian. Every time he flew the ARFF crew was on standby pending his landing.
Might have been a George Pereira Osprey 2 or one of Moulton Taylor's Coots
the eagle was really a breakthrough in what defined a kit airplane. even with that, it was still a lot more involved than building most kits today.
bob
The photos look right. I think you got it. It was a long time ago, and what I had for breakfast yesterday is now a mystery.
I helped a friend build his Eagle in the early 80's. The first kits came with the ribs already built up and ready to assemble on the wing. This was before the 51% rule and the FAA stipulated that the builder had to build all the ribs. It took almost as much time to build the ribs as to assemble the rest of the airplane. The instructions were the best I've ever seen and Frank Christen designed the building process after the famous Heathkit electronic kits. Every single nut and bolt and every part was included in the kit. I got to fly that airplane a lot over the next 15 years.
Frank Christen designed the building process after the famous Heathkit electronic kits.
The late Leeon Davis [that's how he spelled it] had a whole line of popular homebuilts back in the day. http://www.angelfire.com/ks2/janowski/other_aircraft/Davis/
There was also the EAA Biplane, plans marketed by EAA itself:
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The odd Dyke Delta generated a lot of interest, but only about 50 were built:
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A Dyke flew in the show today.
And lest we forget, the first "Heathkit" was an airplane -- the Heath Parasol. Hundreds of 'em were built in the late 1920s and early 1930s, before the Heath company got going in home electronics in the '40s. Ed Heath himself was killed in a test flight.
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