Hi Wayne;

You've grasped the main concept of my inquiries.  This forum in and of itself 
is a conduit among owners and enthusiasts and any type club would be 
overwhelmed to utilize it as another resource.  Look at the member numbers!  I 
just keep asking myself why a plain old Yahoo Group has more to offer than a 
type club?  It's the times, they are a-changin'.  And don't worry.  The EOC 
sees everything that's here. 

Some will take offence at the comparison but on the independent Bonanza email 
list, the society president, a few directors and one staffmember are regular 
contributors.  They participate as friends and colleagues to all, which they 
are, no different.  No dictators there, they aren't tolerated.  If the mother 
club is slammed, which happens whenever deserving, the exec is right there 
explaining or disputing and fully expects to take her lumps when necessary.  No 
holding back, no problem, no retaliation, let's meet for coffee after the 
discussion ends.  When we want to be left alone and discuss things, she's 
informed and respects the wish.  (We like to think we chased her away, but we 
know better!) 

If you're new to this type of media, the message is that these lists equal 
power and the smart entities see the need not only to monitor and react but to 
respect the momentum they carry.  It's a byproduct of the internet age.  Don't 
forget about the story of the great French bridge builder!  

There are different strokes (interests) for different folks.  Mechanical for 
Wayne, social for others but what's the difference?  A good club should be many 
things for many types of people.  If one is happy with it's operation, then one 
continues their support and renewals.  If not and adjustments can't be made, 
then the support is just turned off.  I can call a spade a spade and admit that 
asking "How does this benefit me" before sinking dollars into anything, 
including pizza.  Nothing personal, just business. 

Here's a valid question for folks.  Just personal opinion so go ahead and try 
to post an answer.  Would you rather work with the old club toward real genuine 
improvement or would it be better at this point in time to begin with a fresh 
face and a new mission statement more aligned to what the owners now want 
(which may be the same as what they've always wanted)?  Not a solicitation, 
just looking for opinions.  

I'm not afraid to kick it off.  My own feeling is that I would like to see the 
old club enter the new year properly.  But, if real progress wasn't 
demonstrated in a reasonable amount of time, I would have no qualms about 
supporting a brand new one that is more attuned to modern ownership.  One that 
would be willing and able to capitalize on the fantastic opportunity that has 
been presented.  

I'll also say that Al DeMarzo has little faith in the ability of the current 
type club to be able to initiate change based on what's been I've seen over the 
past number of years.  That's why DeMarzo isn't a member.  Maybe I'll once 
again give the benefit of the doubt and ante up, I haven't decided.  See, this 
discussion may even get me to open the wallet for another chance! 

And I'm also curious about the number of list members who are following this.  
Knowing that the large majority are here for the education and would rather not 
post, I see we're missing some of the regulars in this discussion.

Al DeMarzo
Visit the Ercoupe Swap Page - Free and Easy
http://www.ercoupeowners.com/swap/swapbook.htm





  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2008 7:25 PM
  Subject: Re: [ercoupe-flyin] EOC



  In a message dated 1/1/2008 5:41:53 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:
    I do not find it strange that there is seldom if ever input by any EOC 
officials.  
  Lee,

  I, for one, find it very strange.  From what I can tell, this Yahoo mailing 
list is "the" means of communication between Coupe enthusiasts.  Certainly 
there is more up-to-date technical information, questions, news, advice, etc, 
etc, distributed through this mailing list than by any other means.  I would 
think that anyone who was publishing a monthly Coupe newsletter would be 
monitoring this list, participating in it, soliciting more information for 
inclusion in the monthly newsletter, asking people to write articles about 
their recent projects or flying experiences, etc.  I would think that when 
someone mentions that they just upgraded their original Goodyear brakes to 
Clevelands, or replaced all the Plexiglas in their plane, for instance, that 
person might be contacted by the newsletter editor(s) and asked to write up the 
details of that little project, or at least provide all the details so that a 
good informative article could be written in the newsletter.  What did it cost? 
How many hours did it take, where did the parts come from?  How happy are you 
with the results? Why did you decide to upgrade?  Etc, etc.

  I'm no expert on Coupes, but over the past several years I've done a few 
things on my plane (like 1800 hours worth of labor on a complete restoration) 
that I've mentioned more than once on the mailing list, and nobody from the 
newsletter has ever contacted me or asked me to contribute a thing to the 
newsletter.  Maybe it's due to some other reason, but I've interpreted this as 
a general lack of interest.  Either not enough interest to read the mailing 
list, or not enough interest to follow up on anything that's posted.  Yes, I 
know, I could write an article and send it in, and I've done that, but why 
isn't this type of info actively pursued by the editor(s)?  I honestly don't 
know the answer to that question, and it is not my intent to bash or attack the 
editor (or editors).  Like I said before, Coupe Capers has been around for 
years and years, and I applaud anyone who has the stick-to-itiveness to publish 
a monthly newsletter for that length of time.  I've always believed that if 
you're not doing at least what the next guy is doing, then you don't have the 
right to complain about what that guy is doing or not doing.  And I sure don't 
have 50 or 100 extra hours a month to publish my own newsletter, as much as I 
would like to. 

  My original point was, and continues to be, that I'm just not interested in 
paying $30.00 a year to get a newsletter that doesn't hold my interest any 
more.  And it's not the $30.00.  I'll probably spend $30.00 tomorrow just to 
have $10.00 worth of gaskets sent to me by overnight mail so I can go flying on 
Saturday.  

  There's been a whole lot of discussion about this subject over the past few 
days, and prior to that it has been discussed on and off for years.  My 
interest in the EOC newsletter has been fading over the past several years, and 
it's to the point now where I'm just not interested in renewing.  I have to 
admit that I'm more interested in technical content than social content - I 
guess that's just the engineer in me - and many people might not have any 
interest at all in technical info.  So it may be that the current newsletter is 
fulfilling the needs of the majority of its readers.  

  If the EOC adds some good tech info, adds some features like a detailed 
"plane of the month" article, adds some real reporting on upgrade projects and 
rebuilds, etc, to Coupe Capers I'll happily continue (and contribute) with 
that.  Heck, I think I've been reading Coupe Capers for 30 years now.   It 
would be a shame to quit now.


  Best Regards,

  Wayne DelRossi
  Alon N5618F
  Hours logged since restoration: 347.5

  "Nobody has ever scientifically proven that life is supposed to be serious."






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