John,
You must go read the history of what the EAA accomplished in getting the
FAA "Experimental, Amateur Built" airworthiness category established.
I believe the text was (is) something like "The builder shall do a
majority of the work in constructing the plane.
The purpose of the plane is for the education and recreation of the
builder."
Majority = 51% rule.
I think the FAA has come more than 50% of the way in only requiring at
least 20% of the fabrication and at least 20% of the assembly
as sub-requirements of accomplishing the majority of the
work.
What is interesting is that the FAA has placed no safety requirements
on the pilot (the insurance companies have, however). The
airworthiness certificate is issued if it is an aircraft, built with reasonable
standards and the engine runs. There usually is a check of the
builder's log and a Q & A to determine if the builder did enough of the
work (has intimate knowledge) to qualify for the repairmen's certificate -
thus allowing the builder to sign off the required annual inspection.
Remember that there is a placard informing occupants that the aircraft was
not built to FAA standards.
What more do you want?
Perhaps you have yet to build an aircraft in this category?
Scott Krueger
AKA Grayhawk
Lancair N92EX IO320 SB 89/96
Aurora, IL (KARR)
Pilot
not TSO'd, Certificated score only > 70%.
In a message dated 7/20/2008 5:58:46 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
j.hafen@comcast.net writes:
As I
read about fabrication versus assembly versus X percentage of building
work
not applying to the entire aircraft but only the "builder's portion"
that
is arbitrarily defined anyway, it seems to me that the FAA has
complicated
this issue beyond comprehension, much like the IRS has done with
our tax
code.
I would argue that an aircraft is either certified, or it is
not. Anything
less that a 100% compliant aircraft is simply not
certified.
I question the value of the arbitrary assignment of
51%. It is still not
certified. Is it "half certified?"
(I would argue no, since the half that
got built by an amateur still got
built by an amateur, therefore, "no
certification for you.") If a plane is
built by an unqualified amateur, one
could argue that ANY portion of the
plane built by that unwashed amateur
(myself in the case of LIVP N413AJ) is
unsafe, or at least not certified,
therefore making the entire airplane
dangerous.
Is "safety" the point behind the 51% rule? What is the
FAA justification
that makes 51 the magic number. Does 51% make it
"safe?" If the amateur
doesn't have to build to certification
standards, why is 51 significant,
relevant, or applicable?
Does the
FAA think that a plane that was constructed 100% (or at least 51%)
by a guy
who doesn't know what he is doing is safer than a plane built for
pay by a
shop who has done it dozens of times?
Someone please tell me what I'm
not seeing here. What is the FAA's
rationale in assigning 51% as the
magic number? Does it have any meaning
what-so-ever? Why not
just say it is certified, or it is not certified,
plane and
simple?
Thanks in advance,
John