Serious question. You've made a lot of allusions to your role in the certification process, but you've never explicitly said what it was. What was it?
There is no benefit to me giving out that information and plenty to lose. I had a dog in this race, it came in first, and I didn't need to convince anyone on here of anything to get my point across. Plenty of learned and public figures have done that for me, and they've done so much more politely than I care to.
There is more than enough information out there for people to make up their own mind. My jeering from the stands only serves to make the die hards more defensive and hardened. At first the result is frustrating, I realize that many times in life people don't use their heads making decisions. Their other methods of arriving at a conclusion may vary widely, but the result is the same. I find no use arguing with walls especially when the war is over and (old?) Eclipse lost. Now there's a new chapter. Can Eclipse shirk it's old company culture or is this new product simply going to be more of the same? I don't believe that Eclipse has completely transitioned to a new way of doing business at this time, but you wouldn't know it from the sales pitches. It's offensive.
For those who read this and say, ya know I just never paid any attention and never read much into this huge Eclipse thing, can you break it down for me? Long story short, the result of the
whistleblowers probe is out there and it chronologically and categorically reviews flaws in the aircraft and the FAA's inability to make Eclipse comply. It also, I believe, gives too much coddling to the FAA's chronic attitude and motto that "*sniffle* this is too complicated and I just don't understand any of it so I'm just gonna cover my ears, lay my head on the table, and hope it all works out." The FAA is allowed plenty of seminars and classes each year which "bring them up to speed" however the paid for seats are traditionally half full. Worse yet, there is a wide and happy network of individuals who can get you the skinny because the industry is so small, and to not even do that is simply mind-numbing. To have such lackluster performance, and then to squash complaints of senior members who do know what they are doing and attend those classes? If it were up to me I'd take a flamethrower down there, but I'm too old, too damn tired, and too blind. Eclipse got it in the pooper, and that is the most important thing.
My favorite line in the 25 page report is:
Based on the results of our investigation to date, the conclusions in FAA’s lessons-learned review, and—most importantly—the problems that continue to impact pilots, we believe that FAA should have exercised greater diligence in certifying the EA-500 design.
I think that's a fair critique and why a lot of us will be forever biased. The process was ok, the FAA just didn't care enough, and local FSDO's like ABQ who screamed bloody murder were told to shut their mouths. Even the Dallas FSDO, who took them next, was awash in confusion over how Eclipse was allowed to continue production. Also an airplane was allowed half assed certifications to better benefit the sales department but in no way reflected an adequate certification level for anything other than day vfr in the pattern.
The real rub here is the FSDO's had tons of qualified and influential people who wanted the job to be done right. Somehow, their qualified objections were shouted down by morons who knew nothing, and just wanted this VLJ market to takeoff because the benefits outweighed the drawbacks. I would ask the people who worked for years under this theory, where is the economic boom? For screwing around with a safety process, where are are the thousands of 500's flying around making money and saving congested airspace? Where is the win-win? The answer is: there never was any such thing. Some people bet on the wrong horse and sacrificed safety for some magic beans. This report, I feel, gave them a pass too. However, I do enjoy the wording in the report that politely says this 10 or 15 year old project was simply too fast paced for FAA to keep up with. My God that's hilarious. The only thing that went fast was the shell game of avionics systems, the plane was terribly slow in development and the FAA guys who called the shots couldn't keep up. I guess, maybe, you do have to pity them a little bit. You can't fix stupid.
Never fear though, Eclipse is "under new management" now and things can only get better, but simply because they couldn't possibly get any worse. I think a couple nagging questions are left; is the FAA's house finally in order? Why would someone take such a worthless turd (the 500) and try to polish it up? Are they just trying to sell off the rest of the planes and then focus in on MX as was originally the plan? Do we have another convert in the VLJ paradigm?
Whatever the case, we have plenty of converts left in the industry, and plenty who are willing to give Eclipse and the FAA a pass on their stupidity and sloth.