Great point Randy!
I thought about this for several hours tonight while working on the GB resurection. As of this point I really dont have any profound thoughts, just random ones. I wanted to post before I lost them.
I guess airplanes have been a part of my life since I can remember. whether its plastic models, cox RTFs, or my first balsa beastie. Even just standing outside watching the rare airplane fly overhead to land at our tiny municipal airport would give me shivers. Finally I got to a place where I could reactivate my passion for planes. Stunt is perhaps the only event that feeds my passion so completely, the beautifull airplanes where appearance is a premium, and the mental challange of trying to learn how to trim them , design them, and fly them precisely are equally mixed. Scale intrigues me, carrier intrigues me, combat intrigues me, but none capture me like wathcing a meticulously built and trimmed aircraft "defy" the pavement strutting its stuff. I tend towards being very competative, I have bowled comptativly, (highest average was 210) in tournements, I raced stock cars, Played softball, but these are all competitions against someone else. While it is true that we compete "agaionst" someone in this sport, for me, I compete against myself and the others are a measuring stick of sorts to allow me to see how much I have or havent progressed. That progress is in the flying, but as much as that its in creating the tool I fly with. I lust to build and design true "competition" level planes. Alas for now its enough to create tools that allow me as much flying time as possible while still feeding the creative side, hence my Gee Bee. I drive myself very hard and am extremely critical of everything I do. This sport allows me to feed that extreme competative drive without it becoming about BEATING joe pilot, though I wont disallow that a certain rivalry exists between myself and several of my peers. I cant think of anything else I have done that allows me to push myself to the very limit of my ability, (albeit at this stage my limit is a touch lower than a good many) but then turn around and truly enjoy watching my peers outperform me. My weekends at contests allow me to rub shoulders and exchange ideas with others. Heck I even get positive feedback from my lurching progress. To say that going to contests is the goal misrepresents the true reason I go to contests. Yes it is a competition, but!!!! without the acceptance and exchange of ideas and information as well as the just plane good times, the contests wouldnt be enough were they soley existant to putting in those 4 or 6 judged flights. As Randy says, I dont really have the money, time or consistant flying spot, not to mention a good coach, close by to expect to compete at a high level, but, rest assured, I will compete as intensly as my skill allows, (ok so it could be argued I perhaps fly a bit beyond my skill at times,, sigh,, nothing a touch of CA and some epoxy cant fix though right?) My goal, aside from the great companionship, is to be able to progress to the expert level and whenever one of them "real hotdogs" slips up, I want em to know that Im hangin right there ,, Perhaps in some years, and gallons of fuel, I shall get there, but I have no fear that I will ever reach the point that I satisfy myself completely, hence a lifetime sport. I like Randy have several ideas floating about in my head that I want to try, the next "revolution " right Randy lol,,, so I cant see gettign bored, heck I have about 5 different planes I want to build before next year! At the rate Im going I probably should build all 5 too!
I hope some of the thoughts make sense, not sure I got my fellings across but hey, thats where it stands for now.
great topic Randy, really did make me think about the "why"