A few other things to consider;

I have seen RVs sell for more money than went into them.  You are very lucky if 
you can sell any KR for near the price of the materials.

There are a ton of people who would be willing to buy a completed RV.

Depending on where you are you can save between $1,000 and $4,000 a year by 
tying an RV down instead of a composite plane that needs to be kept in a hanger.

That is why I torn between building an RV-10 next or designing a composite 4 
place that can be built like a KR.

-------Original Message-------
From: Mark Langford <n5...@hiwaay.net>
Sent: 07/21/03 09:46 PM
To: KR builders and pilots <kr...@mylist.net>
Subject: Re: KR> Re: What size bolts get used to secure the seatbelts to        
theairframe...

> 
> > It's the price of the Kit

Don't forget the price of your time.  I "moonlight" as a computer system
administrator for a small company about 3 miles from my house, keeping
their
server and computers running and backed up.  They pay me $50 an hour for
my
time, which is about $33 an hour by the time Uncle Sam gets done with me.
If you consider that I have 4100 hours into my KR so far, I already have
over  $135,000 in it, not counting material!  Maybe that's not the way
most
people view it, but it's the way I look at it.  Of course, really, Dana
would say that I have to consider the value of money 9 years ago when I
started, and my salary at my regular job back then, and average it all
out,
and he's right, but you get the picture.  The time is worth a lot of money
that I could have earned, if I'd wanted to spend more time at work rather
than build an airplane.

Now if you're retired, and do it for the pleasure and to keep your mind
sharp, that's a whole 'nuther story, assuming of course, that you finish
the
thing before you actually lose your medical.   Don't get me wrong, I'm not
begrudging this process at all, and am, in fact, enjoying the process, but 
I
don't see the RV as being all that high priced when all things are
considered.  Like a lot of things in life, it's a tradeoff.  I have to
admit
that when I started my KR, I didn't really think I could afford it, and
now
9 years later, I'm already saving money for an RV-10 so I can haul the
kids
around.  Like my father says, "people spend their money on whatever they
want to spend it on".

One of the things I do at work (and at home, on KRnet) is spend a lot of
my
time greasing the skids and making life easier for those that follow. 
That
means I don't really get a lot done personally, but it does mean that I
save
a lot of other people's time.  That gives  me a lot of satisfaction,
knowing
that I turned a little of my time into saving a lot of time for others.
It's kind of like multiplying my time by a large factor, which makes me
feel
worth a little more than I really am.  That's exactly what Van is doing
for
RV builders, on a grand scale, and is why he's selling them like
hotcakes...

Mark Langford, Huntsville, AL
N56ML "at"  hiwaay.net
see KR2S project at http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford



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