Tuesday, August 21, 2012

August 10th, 2012:  First Flight

Since this was my first experience at being a test pilot, I took the day off from work so I would have zero distractions. I picked Friday because I did not want anyone at the airstrip other than my two building buddies. No need for an audience, just a couple of dependable friends in case of an emergency. Danny and Dave were at the hangar when I arrived at 6:30 am and already had N75ZX rolled out. I went through my preflight inspection and climbed in the cabin. She started right up, and right at this point it was all beginning to sink in that I'm about to try & fly in a machine that I built that has never left the ground. I knew this was going to happen, and I had replayed it in my mind in the previous few weeks prior. I would remind myself that I've built a proven design, the same design has flown on many previous occasions, and this is what I signed up for. This is the mountaintop, the finish line, the time to put it to the test.

I taxied out to the strip, nodded to Danny and slowly put the power in. The plane surged forward and the engine roared to full power. at about 400 ft. of roll out and a little back pressure on the stick she lifted off so smoothly. It was right at this point my plan was to check for any abnormal control issues and abort the take off if things were goofy, but I pretty much knew within a fraction of a second the plane was handling very well. I continued to climb out and get the speed up, and I turned left at 500' AGL to stay in the traffic pattern over the airstrip. After getting up to 1800', I kept the engine rpms at 2250 -2300 for around 45 minutes to break the engine in while I marveled at what I was in the middle of doing. Looking around the cockpit, smelling the paint cooking off the engine and the aroma of new upholstery, seeing the gauges working in response to the plane flying, well all I can say is it was just one great feeling of accomplishment.