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Fri, Feb 05, 2016

AeroSports Update: EAA Chapters & Schools Building Together

When Local Communities And Those Who Love Recreational Aviation Get Together, Good Things Can Happen

In a recent posting on The Zenith Aircraft Builders And Flyers Blog, Rebecca Riley posted a story about an EAA chapter that is working with their local school to share their love for recreational aviation. We thought we should share the story with our AeroSports Update readers.

Some people say they have been involved in aviation for as long as they can remember. Wouldn't it be great to be involved in something that would help give today's children the opportunity to say the same thing in the future? Some schools are doing just that by partnering with their local EAA Chapters to make it happen and building their own Zenith Aircraft!

Fuqua School located in a small town of approximately 8,000 residents in Farmville, VA have created what they call their "Zenith Class". Their local EAA Chapter 1202 approached the school about building a real airplane as part of their learning process.

Fuqua was enthusiastically interested, and the rest, as they say, is history. Members of the EAA Chapter were tasked with selecting which airplane to build, and chose a Zenith CH 750 CRUZER as the airplane best suited for the project. Chapter President, Morgan Dunnavant, noted that this plane offered a combination of a proven non-complex design with construction requirements suitable for first-time builders.

Members of the EAA Chapter provides technical guidance and mentoring to the students who will be the actual builders of the airplane. Jim Willis, another pilot and EAA Chapter member, explains that, "the building part of the program will introduce the students to sheet metal work, avionics, instrumentation, power plant, upholstery, electrical circuitry, and in many cases using tools they have never heard of." Chapter President Dunnavant states, "This is a tough course, but one that will last the students the rest of their careers. The vision of the class is to assist in reinforcing STEM course curriculum at Fuqua."

They have 10 students involved in the program each semester. The class is being accomplished by integrating three days each week of online aviation training using Embry Riddle curriculum with two days each week and one Saturday each month spending time in the bus shop (as Dean, Susan Carden, calls it, "our airplane factory") building the aircraft with EAA Chapter volunteer instructors. The course extends into the summer months for aviation camp at Fuqua School and lasts a week. The students are graded based on their quiz scores from the online curriculum and by the EAA Chapter members based on their participation and presentation skills with the hands-on portion of the building project.

Dunnavant said, "Currently, the first semester students have completed the horizontal stabilizer, elevator assembly, rudder, and part of the fuselage for the plane."

The Zenith Aircraft kit sections have been funded through donations given toward the project, including the startup donation of approximately $2,500 provided by EAA Chapter 1202. In the near future, Fuqua School will be meeting with area business owners and local individuals explaining how they can sponsor a part of their plane.

Fuqua School is obtaining an individual parts price list for the CH 750 CRUZER from Zenith Aircraft and this will give more sponsors the opportunity to get involved without having to make a donation for a complete kit section. This is a great way to gain more community involvement with the project and allows the sponsor an opportunity to see the part of the plane they donated and, depending on the case, maybe even the opportunity to put their name to it.

"After construction of the plane is complete, it will be sold and proceeds will go into a fund to provide a new airplane construction kit for Fuqua students," Dunnavant said.

FMI: Original Source

 


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