I have heard/read from a few sources that its ok for an owner/builder to pay friends or others to help as long as the ppl they pay aren't professionals (in which case they couldn't do more than 49% of the build). Is this true? If so, is there any reason why someone couldn't pay other home builders who have experience to mentor & help them build an RV, or even to hire a handyman-type person to help lots on the build? I've been searching & not finding definitive & clear answers on this from an authoritative source (like FAR). I'll keep looking - in the meantime, would love feedback here b/c it seems dumb for me to buy a 4 seater (like a mooney or something) when I could instead order an RV 10 QB kit & almost immediately start building the empennage w/my kids help & with one or two paid skilled (but not pro) helpers & then receive the QB body + wings 8-9 months from now & keep 2-3 helpers working tons with me (I have plenty of time weekdays and weekends, am single & mostly retired) ... seems like it could be finished in 18-24 months from now with many (skilled) helping hands. I'd have many checks & balances in the process, never allowing work to go forward without review by me and (for bigger stuff that is harder to correct/reverse later, I'd have an experienced Vans builder as a Mentor come & do periodic checks on things before we pass critical assembly points). I know many of you purists will say "don't build it unless you're up for decades of blood, sweat, and tears building every piece of it yourself & doing every rivet yourself ... that's how you know you're a true enthusiast & builder not just a flyer. But I know myself, and I'm never going to be that guy working for 15 yrs on it alone. I just can't stand settling right now for a plane that is worse in so many ways for my needs IMO (and wants) when it seems like I could approach it this other way (i.e. paying for lots of consistent help) and in 2 yrs or slightly less, have the plane of my dreams to fly my family around in. Could this work? Plz go easy on me if I'm missing something obvious etc - I'll fly my first dual XC as a student pilot tomorrow so I know that I don't even know what I don't know at this point
(thx in advance for the comments ... this forum has already been incredibly helpful)
I wonder how Synergy Air and others like them (quick-build assist programs) make it work? I've talked with them & if it weren't for the cost, I'd be all over it. They're clearly commercial help, right? The question is, what constitutes commercial help vs amateur & can it still be amateur 'for entertainment or education' if paid? I'll keep digging but seems if I had a few friends or local EAA ppl help me & paid them a bit to teach me while they help work on it, ... seems I could be just fine. Curious if anyone else here has done it like this, out of their garage, paying for help, etc.
seems like these sources would suggest I can do what I'm describing here.
http://www.faa-aircraft-certificatio...quirement.html
https://www.eaa.org/eaa/aircraft-bui...1-percent-rule
https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-id...se14.1.21_1191
https://www.faa.gov/aircraft/gen_av/...st_job_aid.pdf
I wonder how Synergy Air and others like them (quick-build assist programs) make it work? I've talked with them & if it weren't for the cost, I'd be all over it. They're clearly commercial help, right? The question is, what constitutes commercial help vs amateur & can it still be amateur 'for entertainment or education' if paid? I'll keep digging but seems if I had a few friends or local EAA ppl help me & paid them a bit to teach me while they help work on it, ... seems I could be just fine. Curious if anyone else here has done it like this, out of their garage, paying for help, etc.
seems like these sources would suggest I can do what I'm describing here.
http://www.faa-aircraft-certificatio...quirement.html
https://www.eaa.org/eaa/aircraft-bui...1-percent-rule
https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-id...se14.1.21_1191
https://www.faa.gov/aircraft/gen_av/...st_job_aid.pdf