Hey my names Kanyan, I'm a 23 yo aviation management student at OU. I'm not a pilot yet nor have I built a kit plane before. I do plan on building a kit someday while I get my license, but before I do I've had some questions pop up that may determine the type of flying I do.
My main question/concern to kit planes is the ease of the build. I am a huge fan of bearhawk from the standpoint of a company as well as the aircraft itself, but I also love kitfox to the same extent. While not perfect by any means, kitfox is up there in the high standards of manual and "buildability", but my biggest issue with kitfox is that they only offer two place kits that can't really carry a whole lot. In the future I plan on building out a bush plane that will allow me to fly my dad and I out to a hunting spot and give us the capability to haul out whatever we shoot. And this main goal is what brings me to the big bearhawk 4, or what I'd really like, the 5.
So, the big question is... How does the bearhawk compare to other kit planes in the sense of manual straightforwardness, access to parts and materials, buildability, am I going to be spending/wasting hours on end trying to interpret what the manual is trying to say or lacking saying, am I going to be having to fabricate more parts than that of other kits, (while I know of the 51% rules) what percentage of the kit do I get to just assemble vs build from scratch???
Sorry for such a long post, hopefully my point gets across and makes some sense. Thanks for getting this far, and please if you have any answers (preferably from those who have built other kits) please send any info my way!
Boomer Sooner!!!
My main question/concern to kit planes is the ease of the build. I am a huge fan of bearhawk from the standpoint of a company as well as the aircraft itself, but I also love kitfox to the same extent. While not perfect by any means, kitfox is up there in the high standards of manual and "buildability", but my biggest issue with kitfox is that they only offer two place kits that can't really carry a whole lot. In the future I plan on building out a bush plane that will allow me to fly my dad and I out to a hunting spot and give us the capability to haul out whatever we shoot. And this main goal is what brings me to the big bearhawk 4, or what I'd really like, the 5.
So, the big question is... How does the bearhawk compare to other kit planes in the sense of manual straightforwardness, access to parts and materials, buildability, am I going to be spending/wasting hours on end trying to interpret what the manual is trying to say or lacking saying, am I going to be having to fabricate more parts than that of other kits, (while I know of the 51% rules) what percentage of the kit do I get to just assemble vs build from scratch???
Sorry for such a long post, hopefully my point gets across and makes some sense. Thanks for getting this far, and please if you have any answers (preferably from those who have built other kits) please send any info my way!
Boomer Sooner!!!
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