I learned to fly at 32S Stevensville, MT there wasn't an LSA within a 400 mile drive of there... It would have been a struggle to accomodate. MOST of my flights are mutli-day with my wife and her bike and a couple days worth of camping gear, up high to stay above the granite, to find the smooth air and some slid in after dark. An LSA would have been tough to accomodate that.
So it's not the right strategy for you - That doesn't mean it's wrong for everyone else.
Be real here, any manufacturer could have built LSA planes prior to the regulation being passed, why do you suppose they didnt? Hint: It's not because PPL requirements are too onerous, It's because they're impractical and there was ZERO market for them for anyone holding a medical.
No, it's that the FAA certification process was so costly that nobody could afford to build a 2-seater any more.
For fun, for travel, for telling your buddies about, I don't see the point in an SPL cert if you can pass a medical.
Flying an LSA isn't fun? You can't go anywhere? You can't tell your buddies you're a pilot?
Its extremely restrictive
Rec is restrictive. Sport really isn't. Day VFR below 10,000 is about it.
Acting like LSAs are a viable alternative to "regular" planes is an insult to intelligence, no matter how much interior cessna rips out and avionics they put in (Which is laughable because SPL is day VFR only... you don't even need the ball for that)
As pointed out elsewhere in this thread, the Skycatcher is a horrible example of an LSA - Nearly every other one is better, has an interior, etc.
I've seen the same sort of reaction to LSA's in our area, because the only newer LSA that's been around this area is the Allegro 2000, which is really a steaming pile of ****.
Before you bag on LSA's, fly a GOOD one like the Evektor SportStar - It's delightful to fly, attractive, good view, good performance. I'd buy one in a heartbeat if a 2-seater fit my mission.
Im hearing some pretty weak arguments on here such as "It is a check point where people can fly their buddies" or "You get to fly new planes". If you're too GD impatient to wait a couple more flight lessons or just have to have a new plane.... Flying aint for you, hang it up. It takes money, dicipline, time and dedication.
This is the kind of attitude that is killing GA. These things are important to non-pilots. If you drive up in a nice new Lexus with a nice, modern leather interior, you get into an old airplane with cracking plastic and torn fabric and mechanically-tuned radios, it's going to have an effect on your impression of the experience.
These days, I'd LOVE to hop in a J-3 and go tooling around with the door and windows open and scare some horses in a field somewhere. Prior to my intro flight, that's not how I thought. You have to get people to fall in love with aviation, and that doesn't happen when they're uncomfortable. Yes, it takes money, discipline, time, and dedication - You need to give a prospective pilot the motivation to put that effort in, not have the attitude that they should have been born that way.
I think for a person starting out with the mentailty that "all i ever want to do is fart around the pattern in a LSA" is probably doomed from the start.
Why? While I love to go cross-country and that's my primary mission in flying, there are plenty of people out there who just like to get into the sky and play around. There's nothing wrong with either one, and we need more pilots, period. We need to not have the exclusionary attitude you're displaying.