I flew in a Ford Tri-Motor (way in the back) out of Put-in-Bay Ohio many years ago. I was so impressed. Well, here is your chance to stop traffic at every airport you visit. A much better use for your $3M than some VLJ or turboprop turbotrash.
You have to see the site just to admire the beauty! -- http://www.ipass.net/ginkgo/N9612home.html
About Me
- Derf
- I live in the Florida Keys. I've been in the military and worked inside the Beltway. I've had 22 technical books and two novels published. I fly, boat, dive, shoot, and swim pretty damn well.
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
A BEAUTIFUL Ford Tri-Motor REady two fly -- $3M
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
beautiful airplane,
Flying,
Ford Tri-Motor
Saturday, August 25, 2007
F-22 Bubble Check at Elmendorf
In the good old days we called it a "Bubble Check". The interceptors we were controlling would buzz the radar site to see if the bubble was in place. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Garrett Hothan)
In this case it's a bit of an optical illusion. This F-22 is taking off from Elmendorf AFB in Alaska and passing next to the RAPCON radar bubble. Not really GCI (ground control intercept), but a cool picture.
The event was the 90th Anniversary of the 90th fighter squadron. According to the USAF news release, the 90th was activated on Aug 20, 1917 and in their history they've flown about everything from the Sopwith TF-1 to the B-25, to the F-22. . See THIS LINK for more info on the 90th from the USAF. Update: More here
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
Air Force,
F-22 Raptor,
Flying,
USAF
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Dave's Batplane Flies Again!
A Really Nifty
Plane
It looks a lot like Batman's personal Batplane. You might have seen a sister ship in the EAA magazine and in other publications. N18DW, a JD-2 Dyke Delta, was built and recently rebuilt by Dave Williams who is a member of EAA Chapter 1241 in the Florida Keys.
It looks a lot like Batman's personal Batplane. You might have seen a sister ship in the EAA magazine and in other publications. N18DW, a JD-2 Dyke Delta, was built and recently rebuilt by Dave Williams who is a member of EAA Chapter 1241 in the Florida Keys.
N18DW first flew in April of 1972 and in the 70s, wearing yellow and black colors, it was on the covers of several books and magazines. The aircraft had been in storage since the 1980's, but Dave decided a little more than a year ago to get her back into the air. This time it is fitted with a 210 HP Lycoming IO-390-X that is 30 more HP than the original configuration. He added a three bladed MT Constant Speed Propeller. The target cruise for this retractable is 195 mph and a range of 900 miles or more.
Dave had help from Tom Bauer in Sabastian for some well needed assistance for the flight. Tom built his Delta a few years ago and his has over 2000 flight hours in it. Tom’s Delta was shown at Sun and Fun two years ago.
Dave took the airplane up to Immokalee in a trailer for the initial test flight. The open airspace and two long runways have a lot of appeal for this kind of activity. Here is Dave's description.
“I think that the initial flight of an experimental aircraft can best be compared to being locked into a confined space with all your ex-wives and girlfriends, all at the same time…………It will either be one of the best days of your life or the last day of your life!
Wooh Hoo!! Last Saturday was definitely one of the very best days I have ever known. Thanks to Tom Bauer's help, N18DW flew for the first time in 28 years. The remaining taxi tests were completed between rain showers at ambient temperatures of 98 to 108 degrees F. The temperature in the cock pit likely topped 120 degrees F. from run up to runway exit when I was able to open the canopy as I exited the runway. This really slowed me down. In fact, we shut down the taxi tests early on Friday because the OAT indicated 108 degrees F in the run up area and I thought I could easily make a bad mistake under those conditions.
The first flight went like this: The aircraft took off and climbed out just like old times. The conditions were turbulent from the heat generated thermal activity and the turbulence lasted until 3500 feet. I climbed out to 5000 feet, above the first layer of broken clouds to feel the aircraft out.
The primary purpose of the exercise was to determine the stability and get the approach and rotation speed of the aircraft. I tested the turn and roll rate at various air speeds and then determined that I would use 120 indicated for the downwind leg, 110 indicated for the base leg and 105 indicated for the final approach speed. I could have come down final at 100 but there was a lot of turbulence over some trees on the approach end of runway 9. I always add a few mph in turbulence. Please note that I don’t yet know what the airspeed indicator error is and the speeds were determined without prior experience biases. The speeds were determined by how the aircraft felt and a generous margin above stall speed for the first final approach.
After making the decisions on the pattern speeds, I dropped down in 1000 foot intervals to 1000 ft and felt the aircraft out in the above context at each 1000 ft interval. When I got down to pattern altitude I shot three or four twenty-foot high approaches to determine the power settings required to fly in the pattern and have good control of the rate of decent.
During taxi testing, I lifted off and flared to land so I already knew how the aircraft would behave after touchdown. The only missing component of the first landing that I had not yet experienced was the actual screech of the wheels at touchdown so it was time to make the first full stop landing. The first landing went well but I dropped the aircraft in the runway a bit hard. No cigar, but a good landing anyway.
Consider what happens with a constant speed prop when the engine can not make up the set point rpms. The governor causes the pitch to go flat in order to allow the engine to speed up and make the set point rpms. Also when the pitch goes flat there is a lot more drag and the aircraft will slow down quickly. If the aircraft slows quickly the rate of decent will increase and cause the aircraft to land hard and bounce. That is exactly what happened. The solution I discussed with Tom Bauer was very simple……SQUEEZE THE POWER OFF GENTLY AND YOU WILL GET A NICE L O N G S C R E E C H AT TOUCHDOWN..
When I rebuilt the airframe in the early 1980s I added an airspeed brake under the main spar which I removed in January of 2006 because I felt it would be unsafe because it would cause an unwanted downward pitch during deployment. I felt bad about removing it but the drag was below the center of lift and center of gravity and it would not have worked as desired. Had I been able to use the drag brake, I thought I could reduce the landing distance by 20 percent.
Lady luck was on my side however, because it is possible to use the constant speed prop as a drag brake simply by pulling the power completely off after flair and I can actually feel the deceleration. This will make for a significant reduction in the landing distance. It is too soon to tell but I may have achieved the effect of the drag brake by accident with the constant speed prop. I am excited to explore this aspect of the performance.
I won’t bore the group with the remaining flights, but they consisted of gear retractions, low approaches, crosswind landings and touch and goes. Turbulence was always there on approach, but then I learned to fly on the desert in El Paso, TX so it was more of a nuisance than a deterrent. The most critical part of a flight is after the flair and just before touchdown and the turbulence is 500 feet behind the approach end of the runway. I departed Immokalee on Monday for the 175 mile tow back to Key Largo. Towing the aircraft 350 miles to and from Immokalee was uneventful.
Special thanks to Tom Bauer for spending the week in Immolakee with me and N18DW. I really needed someone to bounce thoughts and ideas off and I could not have picked a better person then Tom Bauer. THANK YOU AGAIN TOM !
If anyone is going to test fly a Delta be sure that you bring along another Delta pilot, not just any airplane pilot. Although I have 500 hours of delta flight experience, I found Tom’s presence both helpful and reassuring. Twenty eight years is a long time to remember everything about handling the JD-2. "
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
Dyke Delta,
EAA 1241,
experimental aircraft,
Flying
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Russian Bear TU-95 Rousts the New Typhoon
Some brand new and shiny British Typhoons intercept an old cold and drafty Russian TU-95 Bear that is older than its pilots.
Hey guys, we used to intercept Bears with single engine mach .82 F-102s flying out of Alaska. This wasn't much of a stretch for a mach 2 Typhoon, but I guess it was a kick for the kids flying them.
What the Russians got out of this was a nice traditional "PARPRO" (Peacetime Aerial Reconnaissance Program) response. The Russians got to use old cheap assets to snoop on the newest tool in the British air defense ground environment system. No, the Russians weren't intimidated... instead they learned something and won the game. See the whole report. See how the British "talking heads" really don't have a clue as to what the operational probe was all about.
Hey guys, we used to intercept Bears with single engine mach .82 F-102s flying out of Alaska. This wasn't much of a stretch for a mach 2 Typhoon, but I guess it was a kick for the kids flying them.
What the Russians got out of this was a nice traditional "PARPRO" (Peacetime Aerial Reconnaissance Program) response. The Russians got to use old cheap assets to snoop on the newest tool in the British air defense ground environment system. No, the Russians weren't intimidated... instead they learned something and won the game. See the whole report. See how the British "talking heads" really don't have a clue as to what the operational probe was all about.
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
British Typhoon,
Flying,
Intercept operations,
TU-95 Bear
Congress Has (and deserves) Lower Ratings than the President
"Congress Approval Rating Matches Historical Low" Statistically, it can't go much lower without their own wives and kids voting against them. This low opinion is hard won and well deserved. It is clear that the folks in the House and Senate only care about power first and then about money for campaigns. It seems that the cesspool taints all that swim in it.
I sympathize with the states which wanted to establish term limits of their own. But, I've read the Constitution and the Supreme Court got it right. See this link to appreciate how our politicians rate.
I sympathize with the states which wanted to establish term limits of their own. But, I've read the Constitution and the Supreme Court got it right. See this link to appreciate how our politicians rate.
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
Congress,
popularity,
Senate
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
The Global Warming Hoax
First, let me start out by stating that I firmly believe we should reduce our consumption of oil for very sound political and economic reasons. We need to get away from foreign crude, get the hell out of the Middle East, and focus more on Mexico and the countries South of us and on China. I believe we should research and develop alternative energy sources -- although I also believe that Ethanol has more downside than upside.
So, in that, I am one with the Global Warming wackos in the need to reduce oil consumption. However, I don't subscribe to their religion in any other way. The concept that our smoke stacks and tail pipes contribute more to any possible global warming than the output of a single large volcano is just pseudo-scientific garbage.
Al Gore's charts are crap. They would prove again the old truth that "correlation does not mean causality" (memorize it... use it!) but, his charts don't really even show a correlation!
There are some pretty good updates on the hits the Global Warming fascists have taken at this blog and at one of my favorite Websites (highly recommended) TCS Daily. Follow the "Related Articles" links on TCS Daily for an education from some very bright (and non-wacko) folks.
So, in that, I am one with the Global Warming wackos in the need to reduce oil consumption. However, I don't subscribe to their religion in any other way. The concept that our smoke stacks and tail pipes contribute more to any possible global warming than the output of a single large volcano is just pseudo-scientific garbage.
Al Gore's charts are crap. They would prove again the old truth that "correlation does not mean causality" (memorize it... use it!) but, his charts don't really even show a correlation!
There are some pretty good updates on the hits the Global Warming fascists have taken at this blog and at one of my favorite Websites (highly recommended) TCS Daily. Follow the "Related Articles" links on TCS Daily for an education from some very bright (and non-wacko) folks.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
A "Doing Okay" Person's Charter Service SATSair
I love this idea. SATSair (Small Aircraft Transportation System) is a charter service for those of us who aren't rich enough to rent a jet, but are doing well enough to want to avoid the 3-7 hour road trip. One pilot in a nice new Cirus SR22 comes to get you and two of your friends, family, or co-workers. The pilot has a commercial rating and at least 1200 hours of flight time.
You buy a block of time and use them as you need. A block of 10 hours is $500 an hour.
Let's do some numbers on the back of an envelope. My Zodiac cost me $90K. In five years it will be worth $45K. So that's $9K a year. In five years I'll pay $10K for insurance, $8000 for tie down, $3000 in annuals (that's low for a reason), $4000 in maintenance, and about $16,000 in gas and oil. So, that's about $86K to fly 500 hours or $172 an hour. So, I'm ahead! (Yes, I know I ignored the cost of money and some of my costs are pretty low). If I had started out with a $250K airplane sitting in a hangar, the numbers would be different.
Honestly, when I started the figuring I didn't think I'd beat the rental Cirrus. Oh yes, he has an IFR capability and that thing called "payload", but don't bust my bubble.
I still like this SATSair idea. Honestly, it would make the commute between Tampa and the Keys a WHOLE LOT better! Check it out here.
You buy a block of time and use them as you need. A block of 10 hours is $500 an hour.
Let's do some numbers on the back of an envelope. My Zodiac cost me $90K. In five years it will be worth $45K. So that's $9K a year. In five years I'll pay $10K for insurance, $8000 for tie down, $3000 in annuals (that's low for a reason), $4000 in maintenance, and about $16,000 in gas and oil. So, that's about $86K to fly 500 hours or $172 an hour. So, I'm ahead! (Yes, I know I ignored the cost of money and some of my costs are pretty low). If I had started out with a $250K airplane sitting in a hangar, the numbers would be different.
Honestly, when I started the figuring I didn't think I'd beat the rental Cirrus. Oh yes, he has an IFR capability and that thing called "payload", but don't bust my bubble.
I still like this SATSair idea. Honestly, it would make the commute between Tampa and the Keys a WHOLE LOT better! Check it out here.
Der Spiegel says "The US military is more successful in Iraq than the world wants to believe."
I find it hard to believe that Der Spiegel, always my candidate for "The Only Paper That Hates America More Than the New York Times", has found lots of good things to say about US Forces in Iraq. Wow. Click here.
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
Der Spiegel,
good news,
Iraq
An Excellent roundup of VLJ info
James Fallows posted an excellent roundup of Very Light Jet information. See this link. It's better than I could have done.
Flying, General Aviation, florida, Frank Derfler,
Flying,
James Fallows,
Very Light Jet,
VLJ
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