bullwinkle
Pattern Altitude
Eric, thanks for helping me find a local Sonex owner. I swear someday we will be at the airport at the same time so I can check out your plane. I check your hangar every time I am there.
Andy - The Jabiru 3300 would be a lot of fun, but that puts the cost of acquisition and operation near an RV-4. I think I'd be stuck with a Aerovee Sonex for the time being. When you say a long runway, are you talking 2000, 2500, 3000? 130MPH indicated or TAS at altitude? I would be plenty happy with 130MPH indicated, as long as it isn't working the engine at max RPM, temp, etc. I've flown a Cessna 120 with 85HP and about 400 lbs heavier than a Sonex at gross. I can only imagine the Aerovee outperforms the 120 by a bit.
Here in Georgia on a humid 95 degree day, I would not want to take off on less than 3000, and be prepared to abort the takeoff if you are not off the ground in a reasonable distance. The Sonex is lighter, but also has less wing than the Cessna 120. IIRC the airfoil on a Sonex is the same as a Grumman Yankee wing, and that airplane is a known dog in climb under high DA conditions.
At altitude I'd flight plan 130mph true. You might do better than that, but I know a lot of Aerovee Sonex guys plan around that number. Also be aware an Aerovee is a kit-built motor, with all that that implies. The guys I have seen with them tend to spend a lot of time tweaking them; how much of that is necessary and how much is just optimization fiddling, I can't really say.
You are right, a 3300 Sonex starts to get pricey. A friend of mine recently decided against a Sonex and is instead building an RV-4 for exactly that reason. But the Sonex will probably perform close to an RV-4 and burn less fuel and maybe be a tad simpler to maintain. It just depends on what you are looking for.