Wow, quite a few responses ......
I was actually thinking of starting this conversation in a more general sense. As I have worked through things lately for myself I was wondering, in general, what people's perspective was. Though it looks like things took a turn square towards me

'sok I dont mind so much.
So a few bits of information in responses to questions, etc.
- Patti, as can be read above, is on board with just about any and all decisions, so spousal unit approval is almost a given.
- Finances, while always something that needs to be minded, isn't a primary factor in this conversation, for us. I know it plays a huge role in the entire journey of home building, but it isn't what has us here, today.
- We have no intentions of doing anything to the detriment of RB (in case you were wondering). For us, this place is about family way more than it is about aircraft.
- My current project, with exception to priming the interior access panels, is ready for initial mounting of the wings which I will push off until at the airport. That leaves me getting ready to install the gear weldments and mount the tail. Finish Kit in hand, wings wired, roll servo, AOA sensors, landing/taxi lights are in, yadda yadda yadda. I believe that leaves me at 60% done and 140% to go.
- I appreciate the offer Chad, as selfish as it might have been
. But if I end up with a 2 seat RV it will be the one currently in my basement. 
- I very much enjoy building. Its therapeutic, frustrating, rewarding, and cool, all rolled up into one.
- I enjoy flying more.
Ill try to give you guys some history, and though I tried to keep it brief, its a bit of a read. It might be more than you want to know, but hey, I want this to be a place where builders and prospective builders can see all sides of this addiction, even the un-glorified portions.
I got the bug at my first Oshkosh experience, in '01, with my father. Patti and I were dating, but not yet engaged and I had just recently entered a partnership around a really nice 172. I knew a couple of guys building RV's an they were kind of neat planes. Driving out Dad and I talked about building a plane. It was definitely something that I was interested in and I was on a mission to find out more. The RV's were cool, but I fell head over heels in love with the Kitfox Series V. By the end of the show John McBean (working for skystar at the time) almost put me on staff because I was visiting their display so much. I liked the RV's, but the Series V was pure romance. The darn thing haunted me.
Fast forwarding 3 years to '04 puts Patti and I at Osh looking around. I was bent on building a plane. I had a bit of time in an RV and knew how nice they flew and as such spent a bunch of time looking at the 9. I don't really care about going upside down or losing my lunch. I got into flying because of the freedom of travel and with the intent of getting the IA rating to facilitate that (which I have since done). With neither Patti or I wanting children a 2 seat touring machine, such as the 9A, made perfect sense. No, it wasn't romance, and it didn't get my blood rushing like that Kitfox did, but it was a great compromise and made sense. Being backed by the biggest name in the business didn't hurt either. After Ken Scott said the most ridiculous, sensible, and perfectly coined marketing blather to me at their tent (I hear he is good at writing too

) I went home with the preview plans. The tail kit came a few months later at Thanksgiving. RB came a month or so after that.
Things change ...
Turns out, that after denying reality, God built Patti and I with biological clocks after all, they just didn't tick. They rang, but they didn't tick. It kind of caught us off guard. Honestly, we are tickled pink on the backside of that revelation, but it was a bit, uh, ground shaking.
Two years ago I got out of the 172 as that partnership had run its course and I wanted to jump start my build again, especially with a potential family to start (it took us a *LONG* time to get preggers). It worked. My progress has (with the exception of the last trimester "nesting" phase) been fantastic and enjoyable. However, I do miss flying, I miss the regiment and challenge of IFR procedures, and I miss hopping in the plane with Patti and meeting friends for lunch and breakfast.
Last year I started a business with a friend that has so far done quite well. This wasn't a spur of the moment thing, its been a life long dream, and I took the opportunity when it came. The downside has been less spare time.
Wow, this is starting to read like a bad novel.
Today ......
The arrival of Carrie kills the compromise of the RV. Its no longer the touring plane that can take the family to visit my parents, or go 3 states away for Niagra Falls visits, etc. Things that I used the Cessna for. It also doesn't invoke the passion that other planes invoke. (That stinking Rotec version of the Kitfox just hurts to look at.

) Don't get me wrong, the RV is a great plane, but not one that I day dream about very much.
The best I can figure first flight is still 2+ years off (assuming pre-baby build rate and some luck), and quite frankly, I don't think I want to wait another that long to get back to owning. I like flying too much, and staying IFR current by renting is a tough and expensive proposition. With that said I am exploring putting together a partnership around a plane and some trustworthy individuals, most likely involving a Cardinal RG. This solves the 3 seat problem, gets me flying with a good performer, for a ton less money than a soley owned EAB.
What I wrestle with is continuing to build the RV or go a different direction and have a project that truly keeps my blood flowing once the build is over. There is enough in common between the 9A and the Cardinal that I am not sure I see the sense in having both, and my ledger sheet says that the Cardinal fits the bill better for my desires in ownership. And boy does putting around after work with the windows open and smelling the honey suckle sound attractive. Thats what a second airplane is about. Thats romance. The other side to the coin is that I am this far down the path, might as well finish it (though as Patti suggests that this might be a poor reason to keep going and I suspect she is probably correct) The kit is some ways past quick build stage, and yeah I could lose a few thousand if I sell it, but I am not sure I care. Cheap price for 6 years of education and entertainment. And if I am going to get out makes sense to do it before I drop another $45K to finish.
I am not making any decisions until Carrie is here, taxes are done, yadda yadda yadda. I might hit Osh and do a bit of research on other planes, or maybe buy an RV engine, you never know. My point being that as I mentioned originally, I am going through some introspection in light of the cool things life has thrown at us. I have no regrets regarding the project, I am just trying to figure out if that direction is still the one that I want to be paddling in.
Spike