Yes and as I stated in my reply I am not happy with the EAA becoming a recruiter for airlines.
EAA should be about Part 147 schools and mechanics. Have you read any of the issues from the 80s? Significantly different tone. Even Kitplanes has turned to trash. Almost every issue of Sport Aviation is nothing more than a rich guy showing off what he did with his money.
As the EAA done a lot regulatory wise? Basic Med was a win, but had a lot of help.
So yeah, I'm not willing to support EAA in a significant manner because in the mid 90's they stopped supporting me. I am a huge proponent of auto conversions... and in the 80's/90's there were many articles about them. Now not so much. Has the EAA ever done something like a series on designing? Kitplanes (again, way back) did have a series 'Stress without Tears' that I remember to this day. But now? Gotta fill the pages with OSH ads, Garmin ads, and a $250k barn find restoration.
Blah blah blah, you're old and things were better back in the day.
All I remember from the EAA magazine in the 80s was the incessant bitching about being required to equip with a Mode C transponder to fly within 30nm of what are now class B airports. And talk about Oshkosh. I don't think it's changed that much!
But in the grand scheme of things -
I don't fly aerobatics, though I wish I could. But I know people who do, and need someone to give them a home.
I don't have a warbird, though I like warbirds and know people who have them, and appreciate what EAA does for them.
I don't have a vintage airplane - My Mooney is a 1997, a baby in this industry. But I have lots of friends who fly vintage airplanes, and I'm glad EAA has helped to guide regulators so it's possible to maintain them.
I don't build airplanes, I don't even fly homebuilt airplanes, but I know people who do and have built airplanes, and I'm glad EAA's original core mission still exists and is thriving, even if it's different now.
I do appreciate having another voice in the room besides AOPA when it comes to advocating for recreational aviation.
I do appreciate the amount of effort required in making aviation heaven appear on a piece of earth called Oshkosh one week a year for me to see my pilot friends from several continents, and meet new ones.
So yeah, I'm going to be a member of EAA even if I'm never going to restore a plane or build a new one or be a part of many of the corners of aviation that I am still happy can exist. EAA provides a voice for all of us that is far stronger than any individual specialist organization would be. That's enough for me.
Is a 1969 Ford Mustang not a vintage car just because Ford still makes Mustangs? If that’s the criteria, though, my 69 Musketeer is certainly vintage since they’re no longer made.
But that’s not the criteria. The criteria is age, so imagine this is 1970. Wouldn’t you call a plane from 1910 “vintage?”
That’s a 60 year span. It’s now 2024, so why wouldn’t a plane from 1964 be vintage?
A 1910 airplane is made from wood or welded steel, covered in fabric, insanely hard to fly in many cases, probably has two wings, and has (an) engine(s) that is heavy and weak and breaks frequently.
A 1970 airplane is made from aluminum semimonocoque construction, fairly forgiving, probably has one wing, and has an engine with a decent balance of power to weight ratio and durability.
A 2024 airplane is usually still made from aluminum semimonocoque construction, fairly forgiving, probably has one wing, and has the exact same engine as the 1970 airplane.
1910 airplane
1969 airplane:
2025 airplane:
1969 Mustang:
2025 Mustang:
In aviation, age alone isn't a very good divider of what is "classic" or "vintage", whereas with cars a lot more has changed.