I wouldn't let VMC scare you. Know the numbers for the plane your flying, how it behaves on one engine and go from there and then practice, practice, practice to keep your skills up. The common theme coming from folks that have never flown a ME aircraft is that they are twice as likely to kill you if you lose an engine or it just means you'll fly to the scene of the crash after losing one (not saying that about anyone here doing that though...
).
I've flown my Travel Air just over 65 hours since February when I picked her up and that included a 15 hour "checkout" requirement from my insurance company, which is way more than what the FAA even requires to get your MEL - maybe they know something there?? My take, don't just jump into a twin without knowing what it's capable of. That becomes really important in my mind, when you start getting into the higher HP variants.
So guess what we did, almost 7 hours of single engine work - SE approaches and landings, SE failures enroute, failures on approach, failures on takeoff and then a long cross country down to Florida and back to Richmond to cover the last 8 hours. After doing all that, I feel pretty comfortable with how my plane will behave on one and can get her cleaned up and trimmed to fly OEI pretty quickly. She has no problem climbing OEI
IF the DA is below 7000' (book says 8K SE service ceiling, but I don't trust that number...) - it may be slow, but she'll still climb even at gross weight. The later models have a higher MGW (B95/A, D95A/E95) on the same HP engines, but I would limit myself to 4,000 MGW in those versions as well.
The biggest thing is don't panic if you lose one on takeoff and just fly the plane by the numbers. Even if that means you are still low and need to cut the power to land straight ahead. I was taught and ABS backs this up, to not bring up the gear and start climbing until you hit blue line. Takes me about 3-4 seconds in ground effect to hit that mark then I start the climb, usually at about 1200' per minute at 120 mph, which is 20 mph over blue line.
If you read through all that, thanks!
Cheers,
Brian
P.S. I love flying the Travel Air. Lot's of rudder authority and is a delightful platform to hand fly in VMC or IMC (although having a nice STEC autopilot helps a lot in IMC).