Light Sport Speed Limits

So, if I can fly an LSA any speed it’ll manage, I guess I can fly it with any gross weight it can manage.....

Airworthiness and certification requirements are not operating requirements, except in cases where they are.

For example, in FAA certification requirements, maneuvering speed is a minimum speed, while for operation, it is a maximum speed.
 
You beat me to it. I may be a novice-working-on-Newbee-status but I had already looked at the Rules for that, very carefully. My plan is to use that DAR guy in Georgia (forgot his name!) to move my plane from SLSA to ELSA, then take the course so that I can do my own maintenance. Not so much so that I can do my own repairs, but so that if I decide to add something to the panel, I can.

This does NOT mean that I'm stupid. I will still pay someone to do those things that I'm not comfortable with, especially at first (such as airframe integrity checks).

Vic Syracuse?

So why do you want to move it to ELSA to do maintenance if you plan on taking the course? I assume the course you are referring to is for the repairman certificate. You don't need the repairman certificate to perform maintenance on an ELSA. Anyone can maintain an ESLA just as with any other experimental. But you do need a repairman certificate to maintain SLSA. Now, if you just mean the two day course to do the annual condition inspection, then ok, you do need it for that. But if you mean the 15 day course then that is only required for SLSA. Now, you might just have not expressed yourself correctly or I might have misunderstood but you may want to revisit the requirements. Personally I'd recommend keeping it as SLSA and doing the 15 day course. The money saved on the DAR and the two day course could help a bit with the 15 day course costs.
 
Vic Syracuse?

No, Michael Huffman with Sport Aviation Specialties, Lawrenceville, GA.


So why do you want to move it to ELSA to do maintenance if you plan on taking the course? I assume the course you are referring to is for the repairman certificate. You don't need the repairman certificate to perform maintenance on an ELSA. Anyone can maintain an ESLA just as with any other experimental.

Right. I said that badly. I want to be able to do my own annual inspections, thus the 16 hours course (LSRI). The fact that it's experimental will let me play with the panel stuff. (Within reason.) I shouldn't have used the word "maintenance," I guess. Or used it more selectively. :)
 
So why do you want to move it to ELSA to do maintenance if you plan on taking the course? I assume the course you are referring to is for the repairman certificate. You don't need the repairman certificate to perform maintenance on an ELSA. Anyone can maintain an ESLA just as with any other experimental. But you do need a repairman certificate to maintain SLSA. Now, if you just mean the two day course to do the annual condition inspection, then ok, you do need it for that. But if you mean the 15 day course then that is only required for SLSA. Now, you might just have not expressed yourself correctly or I might have misunderstood but you may want to revisit the requirements. Personally I'd recommend keeping it as SLSA and doing the 15 day course. The money saved on the DAR and the two day course could help a bit with the 15 day course costs.
The repairman certificate lets you do ONE thing, and one thing only, for an ELSA -- sign off on the condition inspection. That only requires the 2-day class, not the 2-week class. The benefit of ELSA is being able to modify it as you see fit, as long as you stay within LSA limits.
 
The repairman certificate lets you do ONE thing, and one thing only, for an ELSA -- sign off on the condition inspection. That only requires the 2-day class, not the 2-week class. The benefit of ELSA is being able to modify it as you see fit, as long as you stay within LSA limits.
Yeah. I know that. I was just questioning his logic based on how he phrased his post.
 
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