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the story of Gary's RV-10 continues
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rv10flyer(at)verizon.net
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 3:28 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

http://macsblog.com/2011/08/when-a-kit-aircraft-is-not-a-kit-aircraft/
[quote][b]


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dave.saylor.aircrafters(a
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 4:10 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Greg doesn't deserve this. Changes, yes, but I've seen alot worse.
Greg's changes are well considered, and he seems to understand and
accept the compromises he made. From Greg's earlier posts he seems to
have learned a lot from the attention he received.

I have a huge respect for Van. He's one of my heros and I understand
his point. It's just that--his point.

I've flown heavy RVs and modified RVs. Lighter is better. Sometimes
mods don't work out. I don't think I'd hesitate to fly in Greg's
plane, in the manner he intends to use it. It's not one of the bad
ones.

I don't think any of us want to be bound by rules put forth by the
manufacturer of the kit, unless we get something for it--fewer
restrictions, or some other guarantee, but that seems to be where this
is headed. Abide or else.

I think EAA has done Greg a disservice by honoring him with a
complimentary write-up and yanking the rug out from under him. I
wouldn't want that attention. I think EAA owes him an apology, and
I'm going to tell them so. Rod Hightower needs to show some
leadership and explain how it is that EAA could change course so
abruptly in regards to the treatment Greg has received.

I hope Greg sees this as an opportunity for others to learn something
and can somehow see a positive side. His last post here seemed kind
of regretful, and that's too bad. His craftsmanship should never have
been rewarded with what he got.

Hang in there, Greg. Enjoy your plane.

Dave Saylor
AirCrafters
140 Aviation Way
Watsonville, CA 95076
831-722-9141 Shop
831-750-0284 Cell

On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Pascal <rv10flyer(at)verizon.net> wrote:
Quote:
http://macsblog.com/2011/08/when-a-kit-aircraft-is-not-a-kit-aircraft/



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pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 4:47 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

I agree with Dave. I looked at Greg's airplane at OSH and was impressed
with the workmanship. I was a bit surprised to see that he had doubled the
fuel capacity, but I feel that 60 gallons is a pretty minimal fuel load for
such an airplane so I can understand why he chose to increase it. Is this
an unproven change? Of course it is. These are EXPERIMENTAL aircraft. It
is incumbent on us, the builders, to do sufficent testing (that's what the
25 or 40 hour pahse I periodi is for) to prove that our aircraft are safe.
If that means flutter testing then so be it.

I resent EAA hiring Mac MacLellan to write for Sport Aviation. I didn't
like his writing for FLYING magazine, and always felt that he only wanted to
talk to people with turbine powered aircraft. He knows absolutely nothing
about homebuilt aircraft, kitplanes or plans-built. Until he (or Rod
Hightower for that matter) has built an aircraft with his own hands, I don't
feel that he has anything useful to offer.

Jack Phillips
#40610 Wings (still)
Raleigh, NC

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jeff(at)westcottpress.com
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 4:50 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

thumbs up Dave

do not archive
On Aug 18, 2011, at 5:06 PM, Dave Saylor wrote:

Quote:

>

Greg doesn't deserve this. Changes, yes, but I've seen alot worse.
Greg's changes are well considered, and he seems to understand and
accept the compromises he made. From Greg's earlier posts he seems to
have learned a lot from the attention he received.

I have a huge respect for Van. He's one of my heros and I understand
his point. It's just that--his point.

I've flown heavy RVs and modified RVs. Lighter is better. Sometimes
mods don't work out. I don't think I'd hesitate to fly in Greg's
plane, in the manner he intends to use it. It's not one of the bad
ones.

I don't think any of us want to be bound by rules put forth by the
manufacturer of the kit, unless we get something for it--fewer
restrictions, or some other guarantee, but that seems to be where this
is headed. Abide or else.

I think EAA has done Greg a disservice by honoring him with a
complimentary write-up and yanking the rug out from under him. I
wouldn't want that attention. I think EAA owes him an apology, and
I'm going to tell them so. Rod Hightower needs to show some
leadership and explain how it is that EAA could change course so
abruptly in regards to the treatment Greg has received.

I hope Greg sees this as an opportunity for others to learn something
and can somehow see a positive side. His last post here seemed kind
of regretful, and that's too bad. His craftsmanship should never have
been rewarded with what he got.

Hang in there, Greg. Enjoy your plane.

Dave Saylor
AirCrafters
140 Aviation Way
Watsonville, CA 95076
831-722-9141 Shop
831-750-0284 Cell

On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Pascal <rv10flyer(at)verizon.net> wrote:
> http://macsblog.com/2011/08/when-a-kit-aircraft-is-not-a-kit-
> aircraft/
>




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pilotmelch(at)omnav.com
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 6:21 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Add to Mac's blog on this
(http://macsblog.com/2011/08/when-a-kit-aircraft-is-not-a-kit-aircraft/). I
just added my three cents. Don't know if it will have an effect, but
perhaps if everyone writes something right on his Blog post (for all to see)
he'll take note.

John Melchert
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rv10flyer(at)verizon.net
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 6:52 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Not much more I can add to what you wrote. You pretty much nail what I
thought before I read your article. I'll add to this however. I think what
Rick and you have commented on is right on on how many of us are feeling
these days about the EAA. Great organization, but Peter Garrison should have
come over not Wallace and Mac.

--


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Mauledriver(at)nc.rr.com
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 1:51 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

The question this raises in my mind is; what kind of liability concerns
have kit makers had to deal with? Are they being routinely sued like
aircraft manufacturers when their aircraft are in accidents? If they
are being sued, are they settling or winning? If they aren't, how are
they protecting themselves?

We're all playing in this kit plane/experimental aircraft space where as
builders, each of us has a great deal of freedom to do whatever we want
with the only real liability being the souls we have on board. I just
don't understand how that freedom plays out on the kit makers' side.
Can anyone knowledgeably comment?

Bill "thinking the door should be better designed as I consider pencil
whipping my gross to 3200lbs" Watson


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dave.saylor.aircrafters(a
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 6:21 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Well...I have a little experience in the liability department. A few
years ago I got a subpoena to give information to the court about a
Lancair accident. I had nothing to do with the plane, or the
customer, or anyone on board. The court needed information about how
the planes are built, so it called me. For free, but that's a
different gripe.

Lancair was being sued because someone thought they might be
responsible for "producing" a faulty kit, which then somehow led to
the accident. So, manufacturers, at least Lancair, have had some
exposure and they will try to limit their exposure by insisting that
builders not change the kit. I'm don't think that currently they can
enforce it but they'll try.

I don't know if Lancair won or lost. The CEO at the time was a lawyer
and I got an earful about his legal expenses--he didn't represent
himself--so it was surely painful even if he won.

The trend is for better and better kits. We all know how good the 10
is. It seems to me that the better some kits get, the more they pull
the market up with them. They have to get better to compete. I think
that eventually we'll see a "not-as-light sport" category that further
reduces our ability to make changes, and I think that would be fine as
long as AB remains.

I hope logic prevails and relieves the kit provider from liability
when changes are made. I don't think any builder would expect their
changes to be guaranteed by the kit producer. But I guess judges and
juries do the unexpected.

Dave Saylor
AirCrafters
140 Aviation Way
Watsonville, CA 95076
831-722-9141 Shop
831-750-0284 Cell

On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 2:49 AM, Bill Watson <Mauledriver(at)nc.rr.com> wrote:
Quote:


The question this raises in my mind is; what kind of liability concerns have
kit makers had to deal with?  Are they being routinely sued like aircraft
manufacturers when their aircraft are in accidents?  If they are being sued,
are they settling or winning?  If they aren't, how are they protecting
themselves?

We're all playing in this kit plane/experimental aircraft space where as
builders, each of us  has a great deal of freedom to do whatever we want
with the only real liability being the souls we have on board.  I just don't
understand how that freedom plays out on the kit makers' side.  Can anyone
knowledgeably comment?

Bill "thinking the door should be better designed as I consider pencil
whipping my gross to 3200lbs" Watson



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rv10(at)colohan.com
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 6:58 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

As an engineer, I have to be pedantic.  So I apologise if my response is overly-pedantic...
On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 5:43 PM, Jack Phillips <pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net (pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net)> wrote:
Quote:
--> RV10-List message posted by: "Jack Phillips" <pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net (pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net)>

I agree with Dave.  I looked at Greg's airplane at OSH and was impressed
with the workmanship.  I was a bit surprised to see that he had doubled the
fuel capacity, but I feel that 60 gallons is a pretty minimal fuel load for
such an airplane so I can understand why he chose to increase it.  Is this
an unproven change?  Of course it is.  These are EXPERIMENTAL aircraft.  It
is incumbent on us, the builders, to do sufficent testing (that's what the
25 or 40 hour pahse I periodi is for) to prove that our aircraft are safe.
If that means flutter testing then so be it.


Testing does not prove a design is safe.  It simply proves, that at the test points tested, under limited repetitions, the design did not fail.  It adds some confidence that a design was correctly manufactured, and also that the original design calculations were correct.


Before testing can do any of this, you need a proper design.  This may include structural analysis, computer simulation, failure testing, etc.  For an unmodified kit, you are trusting that Van's has done this for you.  If you modify the kit, it is up to the builder to decide how much additional design work is required.  For simple, non-safety-critical things you can eyeball it.  For significant changes, you would probably be better off redoing the analysis and simulation work, as it may help catch corner cases which testing is likely to miss (or save you from a catastrophic test failure).


When I read Van's article, I simply read it as: "hey, if you modify our design this much you need to redo some of the design work to be safe.  Please either do the design work, or don't modify this much!"


Testing is rarely a good substitute for design.
 
Chris
(FWIW, I think the EAA has come down _way_ too hard on Greg.  But the resulting discussion this has spawned has been very interesting, and educational for me.)

[quote][b]


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dave.saylor.aircrafters(a
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 7:29 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

What Chris wrote is exactly right. I think the biggest issue is how
EAA, or SportAviation, seemed to throw Greg under the bus after
featuring him so prominently. Publishing Van's article kind of said
"What were you thinking?", without letting Greg respond. McClellan's
article kind of did the same thing, calling Van's response "one of the
most important commentaries on amateur-built and kit aircraft in many
years". Really? Like I said before, my respect for Van is enormous
and clearly he's protecting his product, and pointing out some gotchas
for future builders, but "one of the most important commentaries"? I
don't think so.

Dave Saylor
AirCrafters
140 Aviation Way
Watsonville, CA 95076
831-722-9141 Shop
831-750-0284 Cell

On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 7:55 AM, Chris Colohan <rv10(at)colohan.com> wrote:
Quote:
As an engineer, I have to be pedantic.  So I apologise if my response is
overly-pedantic...
On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 5:43 PM, Jack Phillips <pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net>
wrote:
>
>
>
> I agree with Dave.  I looked at Greg's airplane at OSH and was impressed
> with the workmanship.  I was a bit surprised to see that he had doubled
> the
> fuel capacity, but I feel that 60 gallons is a pretty minimal fuel load
> for
> such an airplane so I can understand why he chose to increase it.  Is this
> an unproven change?  Of course it is.  These are EXPERIMENTAL aircraft.
>  It
> is incumbent on us, the builders, to do sufficent testing (that's what the
> 25 or 40 hour pahse I periodi is for) to prove that our aircraft are safe.
> If that means flutter testing then so be it.

Testing does not prove a design is safe.  It simply proves, that at the test
points tested, under limited repetitions, the design did not fail.  It adds
some confidence that a design was correctly manufactured, and also that the
original design calculations were correct.
Before testing can do any of this, you need a proper design.  This may
include structural analysis, computer simulation, failure testing, etc.  For
an unmodified kit, you are trusting that Van's has done this for you.  If
you modify the kit, it is up to the builder to decide how much additional
design work is required.  For simple, non-safety-critical things you can
eyeball it.  For significant changes, you would probably be better off
redoing the analysis and simulation work, as it may help catch corner cases
which testing is likely to miss (or save you from a catastrophic test
failure).
When I read Van's article, I simply read it as: "hey, if you modify our
design this much you need to redo some of the design work to be safe.
 Please either do the design work, or don't modify this much!"
Testing is rarely a good substitute for design.

Chris
(FWIW, I think the EAA has come down _way_ too hard on Greg.  But the
resulting discussion this has spawned has been very interesting, and
educational for me.)



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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 7:39 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Chris, I was going to respond basically with the same idea, but
you said it far better than I could. I don't think there is
a right side or a wrong side in this debate, but that both
viewpoints have validity. But as you noted, just because
you fly 25 or 40 hours with something it isn't something I'd
consider as a valid test for any airframe change. Even with
good avionics, I felt that 100 hours was about right before
I'd trust the avionics and software....but truthfully, without
a real engineering analysis, a person hasn't even begun to
do the proper homework for a major change. And, if they want
to go by hours of flight as a data point for success of a
change, you really need thousands and thousands of hours
by a bunch of airframes before you can draw a conclusion.
What is structurally OK after 20 hours may not be after 200
or 2000, and without proper engineering analysis, I don't
think you can just call it good or successful without
thousands of airframe hours.

In fact, right now, with 300+ RV-10's flying, we STILL don't
have enough data to really prove without a doubt that the
airframe has had it's weak areas weeded out. There may
be some stress point that proves a problem but we don't
find out until we get some RV-10's with 5,000 hours on
the airframe. I'm not saying that what Greg did isn't
ok for him....it's just not something that Van's can ever
realistically be OK with. The good side is that Greg has
the choice, at least in today's environment.

I do agree with those who think that the EAA and Sport
Aviation went to far, and especially that dope Mac who's
now writing for them. I loved Flying magazine and he fit
in well there....but I just don't think he fits his role
at the EAA. They do us all a disservice by putting him
in that spot. If I were the EAA, I'd tell him to pick up
a rivet gun and build an RV wing, and then get out there
and fly 100 hours in a variety of homebuilts before you
come write for us. He simply doesn't have the perspective
needed for that job. It's apparent when you read that
ridiculous rehash of Greg's plane that is all just
written regurgitation, and see how he says that OTHER
pilots he knows say RV's fly nice. Get off your butt and
fly in some of them Mac...

So I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with either side, just
pointing out again that really, both have realistic
viewpoints for the most part...but that said, you can't
say that the changes were "engineered" properly or that
the have had the requisite amount of testing needed to
really prove that without a doubt they aren't additional
failure points. People take "testing" too lightly
I think sometimes. I laugh my butt off when I see someone
post that "I've flown with this now for 25 hours and
it appears that the software issue is fixed and it's now
rock solid". "Rock Solid" is something that is unlikely
anyway...but 25 hours doesn't make anything rock solid.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD

On 8/19/2011 9:55 AM, Chris Colohan wrote:
Quote:
As an engineer, I have to be pedantic. So I apologise if my response is
overly-pedantic...

On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 5:43 PM, Jack Phillips <pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net
<mailto:pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net>> wrote:


<pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net <mailto:pietflyr(at)bellsouth.net>>

I agree with Dave. I looked at Greg's airplane at OSH and was impressed
with the workmanship. I was a bit surprised to see that he had
doubled the
fuel capacity, but I feel that 60 gallons is a pretty minimal fuel
load for
such an airplane so I can understand why he chose to increase it.
Is this
an unproven change? Of course it is. These are EXPERIMENTAL
aircraft. It
is incumbent on us, the builders, to do sufficent testing (that's
what the
25 or 40 hour pahse I periodi is for) to prove that our aircraft are
safe.
If that means flutter testing then so be it.
Testing does not prove a design is safe. It simply proves, that at the
test points tested, under limited repetitions, the design did not fail.
It adds some confidence that a design was correctly manufactured, and
also that the original design calculations were correct.

Before testing can do any of this, you need a proper design. This may
include structural analysis, computer simulation, failure testing, etc.
For an unmodified kit, you are trusting that Van's has done this for
you. If you modify the kit, it is up to the builder to decide how much
additional design work is required. For simple, non-safety-critical
things you can eyeball it. For significant changes, you would probably
be better off redoing the analysis and simulation work, as it may help
catch corner cases which testing is likely to miss (or save you from
a catastrophic test failure).

When I read Van's article, I simply read it as: "hey, if you modify our
design this much you need to redo some of the design work to be safe.
Please either do the design work, or don't modify this much!"

Testing is rarely a good substitute for design.
Chris

(FWIW, I think the EAA has come down _way_ too hard on Greg. But the
resulting discussion this has spawned has been very interesting, and
educational for me.)

*
*


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msausen



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 559
Location: Appleton, WI USA

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 7:54 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

In addition to the public flogging, I am very disappointed that you now have to have a Facebook account to leave comments. And yes, there are still people holding out from Facebook. Very Happy

Michael

--


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msausen



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 559
Location: Appleton, WI USA

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 7:56 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Doh! Never mind.

--


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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:12 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Smile I'm one too Michael...we're maybe some of the last
ones left.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive
On 8/19/2011 10:51 AM, RV Builder (Michael Sausen) wrote:
Quote:

Sausen)"<rvbuilder(at)sausen.net>
And yes, there are still people holding out from Facebook. Very Happy


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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:38 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

True, it's text messages for all the quick stuff.
But, I'm not interested in the privacy/identity theft and many other
risks that are coming from some of the vulnerabilities of these
social media sites.

http://windowssecrets.com/top-story/privacy-smackdown-facebook-versus-google/

The above is worth reading, but here's an interesting
clip:

"Right now, if an advertiser bids on the AdWord phrase auto insurance
price quotes and someone clicks on a Google-generated link to the
advertiser’s site, the advertiser pays U.S. $54.91. For one click. No,
that isn’t a typo. Bid on the phrase consolidate graduate student loans,
get a click, and it’ll cost $44.28. Alcohol rehab center runs $33.59.
Cord blood bank goes for $27.80. WordStream has an excellent quick
overview of the way Google AdWords works, listing the going rate for top
phrases."

I'm not interested in being heavily marketed to, either:

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/retail/2011-07-27-new-technolgies-for-marketing-to-kids_n.htm

I personally believe that while these social media sites are
great for some of the interpersonal connecting, if people
really knew what's being shared by them and what's happening
to their data, they would choose to pay DOLLARS for a site
that does NOT do this stuff. Make no mistake...the reason
these sites are cheap or free is because you, your identity,
your habits, and your data are things that other people
are willing to PAY for...and I'd like to contribute
as little as I can to those companies databases.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive
On 8/19/2011 11:17 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
Quote:
Don't tell me you guys still rely on e-mail? That's gone the way of the
pony express!

Phil


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Mauledriver(at)nc.rr.com
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 9:23 am    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

To Mac's credit, he didn't pretend to know more than he did - he just
regurgitated what he had heard and reasoned based on some trusted
sources. Given the state of public discourse, that's not bad.

I was checking closely because I too liked Mac over at Flying and agree
that the EAA seems like a misfit. Corporate shakeups too often badly
shuffle the talent.

Bill

On 8/19/2011 11:37 AM, Tim Olson wrote:
Quote:

Aviation went to far, and especially that dope Mac who's
now writing for them. I loved Flying magazine and he fit
in well there....but I just don't think he fits his role
at the EAA. They do us all a disservice by putting him
in that spot. If I were the EAA, I'd tell him to pick up
a rivet gun and build an RV wing, and then get out there
and fly 100 hours in a variety of homebuilts before you
come write for us. He simply doesn't have the perspective
needed for that job. It's apparent when you read that
ridiculous rehash of Greg's plane that is all just
written regurgitation, and see how he says that OTHER
pilots he knows say RV's fly nice. Get off your butt and
fly in some of them Mac...



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rv10flyer(at)verizon.net
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 12:05 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

I have a daughter and the media has done a great job putting fear about
pedophiles finding young lads on Facebook.
Needless to say no Facebook, twitter or other.
If I need an account to give my feedback than I question if they really
care.
I'm with you Michael!
Pascal

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pitts_pilot(at)bellsouth.
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 12:11 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

I left a comment without logging on to Facebook. All the way at the
bottom of the comments is an entry form.
Linn

On 8/19/2011 4:01 PM, Pascal wrote:
[quote]

I have a daughter and the media has done a great job putting fear
about pedophiles finding young lads on Facebook.
Needless to say no Facebook, twitter or other.
If I need an account to give my feedback than I question if they
really care.
I'm with you Michael!
Pascal

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Kelly McMullen



Joined: 16 Apr 2008
Posts: 1188
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 12:31 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

Me too....refuse to let Van's or anyone else tell me that I have to communicate via Macebook, Twooter, or Linkdpin. They may think their information is better, but IMHO the RVator was a better communications medium.

On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 9:10 AM, Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)> wrote:
[quote] --> RV10-List message posted by: Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)>


Smile I'm one too Michael...we're maybe some of the last
ones left.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD

do not archive


On 8/19/2011 10:51 AM, RV Builder (Michael Sausen) wrote:
Quote:
-->  RV10-List message posted by: "RV Builder (Michael
Sausen)"<rvbuilder(at)sausen.net (rvbuilder(at)sausen.net)>

 And yes, there are still people holding out from Facebook.  Very Happy

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philperry9(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 1:18 pm    Post subject: the story of Gary's RV-10 continues Reply with quote

I can appreciate and tend to agree with nearly 100% the reasoning.  But I also have a dose of the real-world syrum to inject into the mix.
 
The world is going to go on and there is nothing we can do about it.  We can hold off as long as we want.  That's like saying you refuse to use debit cards, or make purchases online, or do online banking, or to interact with an ATM machine.  At one point we all were skeptical and stood our ground in those areas, but the world we live in pulled us along.
 
I refused to use Facebook, Twitter, or MySpace too.  But at some point you have to come to the realization that no matter how determined you are, you aren't going to change the world and you're simply going to be pulled along by the currents of the world.
 
So you might as well learn to swim now.  It's comnig.
 
It's just the world we live in today.....
 
Phil
 
 
 
 
On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 11:34 AM, Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)> wrote:
[quote] --> RV10-List message posted by: Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)>


True, it's text messages for all the quick stuff.
But, I'm not interested in the privacy/identity theft and many other
risks that are coming from some of the vulnerabilities of these
social media sites.

http://windowssecrets.com/top-story/privacy-smackdown-facebook-versus-google/

The above is worth reading, but here's an interesting
clip:

"Right now, if an advertiser bids on the AdWord phrase auto insurance price quotes and someone clicks on a Google-generated link to the advertiser’s site, the advertiser pays U.S. $54.91. For one click. No, that isn’t a typo. Bid on the phrase consolidate graduate student loans, get a click, and it’ll cost $44.28. Alcohol rehab center runs $33.59. Cord blood bank goes for $27.80. WordStream has an excellent quick overview of the way Google AdWords works, listing the going rate for top phrases."

I'm not interested in being heavily marketed to, either:

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/retail/2011-07-27-new-technolgies-for-marketing-to-kids_n.htm

I personally believe that while these social media sites are
great for some of the interpersonal connecting, if people
really knew what's being shared by them and what's happening
to their data, they would choose to pay DOLLARS for a site
that does NOT do this stuff.  Make no mistake...the reason
these sites are cheap or free is because you, your identity,
your habits, and your data are things that other people
are willing to PAY for...and I'd like to contribute
as little as I can to those companies databases.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive



On 8/19/2011 11:17 AM, Phillip Perry wrote:
Quote:
Don't tell me you guys still rely on e-mail?  That's gone the way of the
pony express!

Phil





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