Steve said:
One main difference I've found between AOPA and EAA is that EAA offers many more opportunities for its members to get directly involved in aviation related activities.
Another is EAA membership is open to any one interested in aviation, whereas AOPA, at least back when I joined, was exclusive to certificated pilots. So EAA potentially has the potential to outpace AOPA in that regard.
...
The pilot requirement wasn't true when I joined AOPA about 10 years ago. I stopped by the AOPA tent at Oshkosh and asked if I had to be a pilot. No. I signed up. I called AOPA for advice on taking lessons and getting the medical 2-3 years later.
Note that the AOPA membership and renewal applications ask if you're a pilot and owner now.
I had been an EAA member for over 10 years at that point. I went to Oshkosh a year or two after hearing Bob Collins talk about it with Paul Poberezny. (I actually heard the first call that Paul made to Bob Collins on the air when Bob said he'd never go up in one of those things. )
I got the feeling that EAA became the "Recreational Flying Association" when they had to seek out a bigger market as the homebuilders part was becoming too small of a market. A lot of homebuilders were and remain very bitter about that. There was very little about homebuilding in Sport Pilot for a long time at that point.
EAA also made a change for a while where you had to be a member to get to the flight line at Oshkosh, and I think later to get in at all. They had many complaints about rowdy and disrespectful visitors when the crowds had grown to millions. The thinking was that members are more responsible. BUT, since they didn't' want to pass on the revenue they made it so EVERYBODY got a 3 month membership with admission.
In spite of that, since they changed the rules the attendance at Oshkosh dropped dramatically. I guess the word got out to great unwashed that dere were rules and ya had to join now.
I think EAA and AOPA are friendly competitors because they do overlap in missions to an extent. Phil Boyer mentions visiting "that convention of the group way up north in Wisconsin" at his Town Hall meeting.
I agree that we should all be a member of both. I think the $35/year for AOPA has always been a bargain.