cjensen
Well Known Member
It's been a while since I had flown the EAA RV-6A. I've been spending most of my flying time and money in the Cub (which is a simple life story of it's own) in the last year or so, but I recently pulled out the RV-6A, and I was reminded, again, just how good these airplanes really are.
The 6A that EAA built years ago was built for a single purpose: to fly as many Young Eagles from Pioneer Airport as possible. They built two of them, and flew the daylights out of them. N6YE is the one that is in the EAA flying club, and because it was so purposefully built, it's just stone simple. Carb'd 320, no GPS, just a radio, xponder, and a panel of necessary round gauges.
The airplane is just a blast to fly. It's light and the 150 horse Lycoming (freshly overhauled) just pulls and pulls...who needs 200+ when this things does what it does on 150!? A simple, lightweight 6A...life is good with this airplane.
It looks a little different than when this pic was taken last year with new old EAA logo graphics and no nose pant, but I just had to take a moment to make a quick post about how much fun lightweight 6's are to fly.
The 6A that EAA built years ago was built for a single purpose: to fly as many Young Eagles from Pioneer Airport as possible. They built two of them, and flew the daylights out of them. N6YE is the one that is in the EAA flying club, and because it was so purposefully built, it's just stone simple. Carb'd 320, no GPS, just a radio, xponder, and a panel of necessary round gauges.
The airplane is just a blast to fly. It's light and the 150 horse Lycoming (freshly overhauled) just pulls and pulls...who needs 200+ when this things does what it does on 150!? A simple, lightweight 6A...life is good with this airplane.
It looks a little different than when this pic was taken last year with new old EAA logo graphics and no nose pant, but I just had to take a moment to make a quick post about how much fun lightweight 6's are to fly.