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Faa Dar

Featured in: Favicon kitplanes.com

Articles

  • 4 weeks ago | kitplanes.com | Paul Dye |Faa Dar

    As I said last month at the start of the “Eating the Elephant” series, this isn’t a series about how to drill holes or hold a Cleco plier. It’s a guide, from an experienced builder, about how to think about the build and, perhaps, offer ways to push through actual and perceived roadblocks. Because they’re inevitable in every build. Probably like you, I hate backing up, turning around and undoing things that I had to work hard to do in the first place.

  • 1 month ago | kitplanes.com | Paul Dye |Faa Dar

    We’re still marking time on the fuselage of the F1 Rocket while waiting for winter to give way to spring and temperatures to reliably stay warm enough to work on the canopy. After a week or two of engine work—replacing all of the rubber seals on the Lycoming that has been pickled for 25 years—I opened up the box of fiberglass parts and pulled out all of the tail feather tips.

  • 1 month ago | kitplanes.com | Paul Dye |Faa Dar

    When you’re building an airplane that requires lots of “custom work”—one that comes from an older kit or plans and not from the modern realm where everything is provided (and fits)—it’s extremely helpful to visit other builders or owners of the same type to see what they have done and pick their brains for problem areas (with the kit—not their brains). The F1 Rocket project is a good example. I spent a few hours with a friend who had the cowling off his own Rocket, camera in hand.

  • 1 month ago | kitplanes.com | Paul Dye |Faa Dar

    Any pilot who has been flying for a few years has run into this situation: You cancel a trip for some reason—weather, most often—and as things develop, it turns out that you probably could have flown as you had planned. We tend to look at these situations and say, “Well that was a bad decision. I got that one wrong.” But this is absolutely not the right way to think about it.

  • 1 month ago | kitplanes.com | Paul Dye |Faa Dar |Thomas Wilson

    I tend to be a bit of a loner in the shop, kicking around on projects while mumbling to myself—making it a bit hard for a helper to follow what I’m going to do next. But every once in a while, it’s fun to pull someone else into a process and enjoy some quality time with a friend and a motor!Such was the case last week when KITPLANES Senior Editor Tom Wilson stopped by for a few days to help change all the soft seals on the IO-540 we are prepping for the F1 Rocket project.

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