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- Jul 17, 2019
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The Little Arrow That Could
My nephew asked me a question that I didn't have a good answer for and it's kind of bugged me since.
I was telling him about experimental airplanes and he asked why don't we see experimental cars on the road?
Here's my logic:
- I'd estimate more people are interested in cars than planes by at least a factor of 50:1
- A drivers license is pretty much a given for most people, and requires virtually no skill or investment relative to that of a pilot
- The risk in building an experimental car "wrong" is a lot lower than that of building+flight testing an experimental aircraft with no proven history of being able to... you know... fly.
- Lots of people clearly feel comfortable wrenching on their cars and extensively modifying them in some cases (for racing/to make them better for off-roading/etc). Even on our boards here we have guys like Ted, Gary W and others who seem to have backgrounds working on cars (I know there's many more, too).
So why don't we see experimental cars driving around? Like built from scratch using the motor of your pick, the interior, etc... Just like building an aircraft from scratch. A car where you know how everything works because you built it yourself from the ground up.
Is it due to regulations? Req'd safety standards? Emissions requirements? Insurance? Difficulty in getting custom parts? Or more parts that go into a car? I really don't know.
Or are existing cars are just too inexpensive, where it doesn't make sense to build piece-by-piece from the ground up as opposed to modifying them?
I was telling him about experimental airplanes and he asked why don't we see experimental cars on the road?
Here's my logic:
- I'd estimate more people are interested in cars than planes by at least a factor of 50:1
- A drivers license is pretty much a given for most people, and requires virtually no skill or investment relative to that of a pilot
- The risk in building an experimental car "wrong" is a lot lower than that of building+flight testing an experimental aircraft with no proven history of being able to... you know... fly.
- Lots of people clearly feel comfortable wrenching on their cars and extensively modifying them in some cases (for racing/to make them better for off-roading/etc). Even on our boards here we have guys like Ted, Gary W and others who seem to have backgrounds working on cars (I know there's many more, too).
So why don't we see experimental cars driving around? Like built from scratch using the motor of your pick, the interior, etc... Just like building an aircraft from scratch. A car where you know how everything works because you built it yourself from the ground up.
Is it due to regulations? Req'd safety standards? Emissions requirements? Insurance? Difficulty in getting custom parts? Or more parts that go into a car? I really don't know.
Or are existing cars are just too inexpensive, where it doesn't make sense to build piece-by-piece from the ground up as opposed to modifying them?