Monday, December 28, 2009
3 for 3
I Flew a Cessna 172 today. Breakfast At Hoquim , less than 2hrs round trip in a plane, over two hours each way by car.It is just great, From the coast, see the ocean, and back to Seattle in less than an hour. The view from a plane is good anyway, but here in the Puget Sound that is magnified. Today there was a lot of low fog , it covered most of the inlets in the S. Sound area, it only added to the beauty of the scene. Of course Mt Ranier looms over all, & St Helens, Adams & Baker are all visible on the horizon. Three days, Three different planes. That I could not do if I owned only one. I might fly a different one tommorow, but the weather doesn't look like it will be ok. The 172 was cruising at 120mph @ 2500'. Not as fast as the Cherokee, but it burns less than 8 Gallons per hour.The Cherokee uses@10gph. the c150 @6gph.The Cherokee was busy today, it was taken all day before I could book it. I had to return the 172 for another club member. It had a small fuel leak from the LF wing tank sump(drain). Not a safety of flight issue. Not enough leak to affect the range, or to be a fire hazard. But I just called Tom, the maintanence officer, reported it, and advised the next pilot of the situation. We will try to burn off most the fuel in that tank & Tom will fix it or have it fixed. If I were the sole owner I would be cold & dirty, wet with fuel, to fix it myself. Yea, I think the Clubs are working well for me.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
It's not fast.
It's not fast. Especially after a month of flying the Cherokee. I flew 12J today. My favorite little plane, the Cessna 150 that I trained and tested in. I mostly stayed near the airport, doing landing practice. I did power off simulated engine out landings, no flap landings spot landings even cut power on take off landed then exited the runway. It sure was not the power house the Cherokee is.. but it is a lot lighter on the controls than either the C-172 or PA28-180. As long as I am solo the 150 is fun to fly, not so good if you're in a hurry, but fun. And 12J is my favorite. 98J has a fresher engine and better radio's, I even think it it a tad faster. 12J likes a lot of right rudder at times, but it is friendly and easy to fly. Steady and predictable. I at one time departed the pattern S toward Auburn, but the closer i got the hazier it became at Auburn. I heard someone doing T&G's but could not see them, I turn bact to BFI about 3 miles out. The fog/Virga seemed to be coming closer to Boeing. I beat it to BFI , did a T&G then a full stop & taxied to parking, I sat it out but the haze never quite reached BFI & after a while it dissipated. It was clear again, I had time so up I went for some more laps. I flew over an hour before heading home to do the shopping.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
It's Huge!
For my birthday, TJ, Lauri & I flew to Mc Minnville, Or., from Auburn, Wa.. In the Cherokee180 it took a mere hour & a half. The Museum built a second building as big as the first and added an Imax theater between them. The Building is barely bigger than Hughes Spruce Goose, But that is still HUGE. A B-17 parks under the right elevator. Under the right wing is a collection of WW2 & cold war fighters. Way bigger than a scarebus380. I was thrilled to see they had added Six. Having worked on the F-106 During my service, (attack radar tech),I am a big fan. It is still to this day the fastest Single engine Jet on record. 100 mph faster than the F-104. 1525mph. The plane they used was one stationed at McCord. The second building is a Space museum. It has all three type capsules, Mercury. Gemini, & Apollo. + moon buggy's a simulated missile silo, w/ a missile . You can activate s "launch sequence". The Imax was Fighter Pilot, about a F-15 jock at red Flag at Nellis. Great ! The Cherokee really hauls the mail. We had to go over 6500' to find smooth air, and the Cherokee loved it, cruising 135= @ 75%. It really made me think about buying and what I would give up. Now I can fly a variety of planes. 3-C-150, 4- C172, Pa28-180, C-182. I am not even checked out in the 182 yet. I need to fly more of these first. If I bought that Tri-Pacer, sure I would "own " a plane. And a fairly nice little PA-22. In 5-6 yrs it would have a runout engine and the skin would probably be shot from being old & outside. It burns maybe 6-7 GPH, & flys maybe 120. Nice for two, with room for baggage, cramped taking three golfers to Lopez. And, I have the risk of a breakdown. In the club, I don't have to work on it, if it breaks I call the club Maintenance officer. All I need is dry weekends. I hope I can fly on my week off between Giftmas & Debbie's birthday(New Years).
Saturday, November 28, 2009
almost pulled the trigger
I fell sleep Early Thanksgiving evening (can we say tryptophan?), and so awoke about 2:30AM, saw this on Barnstormers; Piper 1955/56 PA-22-150 2685TT 1375SMOH VAL 760 com Transponder and Intercom Auto Fuel STC Very Clean, Located in Battle Ground, WA $13,000 firm • By noon I had called the guy, talked to a Tri-Pacer owner I know from S50, and been approved at the bank for a signature line of credit to cover it.The $'s at 90-100hrs per yr SEEMs to be a push. but No, I just am not ready, I am not sure about an older rag wing and storing it outside. But the Tri-pacer does fill my mission needs by just barely being a 3 person aircraft, yet still able to use smaller & grass airports. Looks like a sweet plane, very basic (all I need), but nice looking. Anyone in the market for a tri-pacer? I am going to save up and look for metal wings, like a 172. I like the Piper, as much for the 180 as it's a piper, but my wife cannot enter the cockpit without serious gyrations. I think I do want to own my own, but my current plan is by age 60(at 60) & I'm almost 56. The club will allow me to continue to get training, and to fly different planes. With a mere 200+ hours I am still finding what works for me. Ideally a 180 hp 172, but the $ means a 150 hp w/1000+/-SMOH, is more my price. Edit: TriPacer is sold 12/4, one week, It was a good deal, someone snatched it up.
Friday, November 6, 2009
The Cherokee
Our flying club has a Piper Cherokee 180. I have wanted to get checked out in it for a while. weather & maintainance kept me out of it in October, but on November 1, I finally passed the check ride.On the first takeoff i pulled back firmly like it was a 172, promptly over rotated and nearly stalled . After the usual stalls turns and slow flight we returned for a few landings mostly T&G's. the final no flap one was the only greaser. The CFI signed my log & recorded 8 landings. Tuesday evening , needing to pay dues at both my flying clubs i drove to S50 , left and envelope in the box, then grabbed the Cherokee keys. Wary of the powerful 360 mill up front, I used 25 degree flaps and was very gently pulling the bird off the runway. After establishing a stable climb @ 300 fpm for about a second as it gathered speed, I eased the yoke back a bit and was rewarded with 1000 fpm climb @ over 100 mph. I had been wary of the winds, Sea was 12 knts RNT 11 knts, but BFI only 3, S50 6 and PLU calm. I figured there were winds just above the surface that seatac got cause it is up on a plateau, and RNT is on the water and gets a lot of wind. Things were smooth up to about 900', then it started really rockin'. There must have been shear layer between the calm surface and the aloft winds. Holding back, I throttled down to about 120 mph , made my radio calls and was told I was number two, for a straight in on 31R. I was a bit high at 1/2 mile , but the sink rate of the Cherokee corrected that for me and I added a touch of power to reach the numbers. I love those manual flaps, why did they go to electric I wonder? I made A-4 and called for NE parking. When I fired up after paying my tab at Alt Air, I noticed I was still on tower. HMMM ,... He did tell me to contact ground, I had selected 121.9, but i forgot to punch the flip flop. the Controller was nice, when I called in on tower he cleared me to taxi without a reprimand. Using a regular takeoff I again gently broke ground then steepened the climb, the power of the 180 had me 200 feet high entering the downwind at 120 mph. I was the only one around, it was late so the altitude was buffer to the neighbors below. Making a Valley departure I found myself at 1200' over Southcenter mall at nearly 140mph, needing to slow for the rough air. a year ago I would have been a stressed out white knuckled wreak. Now I guided my craft with my fingertips of one hand, as it rocked and yawed, only concerned that the general direction was south bound. I have always been a high wing guy, but that is by default. I had never flown in a low wing single. I like the Cherokee, but it might be the horse power more than the position of the wing.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
not so chicken anymore
Since chickens don't fly in clouds, & because I wlll be ranging much further from the'coop'. I have deleted the Chicken pilot reference from my forum posts. As an IFR pilot I am less of a chicken pilot. IFR training is not for the faint of heart. One must steel their mind against the messages from the middle ear. It is like a deadly game of blind mans bluff, the gauges are guiding us thru the dark. Failing to 'pin the tail' results in death. A steady hand and a quick eye keep things smooth & stable. The reward comes at the MDA, when upon removing the hood, a beautifull row of brilliant runway lights guide me to a safe landing . DaveR
Sunday, August 9, 2009
The Oly Loop
The Oly loop is one more of the milestones of flying I can now claim for my own. The fog on the coast forced us to fly north to Jeffco for breakfast at the Goose. then off to Neah Bay. the coast & beached we clear, just barely, Tatoosh Island was fogged in./ the fogg enveloved the coaast just past Lake Ozette. We landed st forks for Gas, and found the gas was over at Quilliute, UIL. After a quick hop over there we gassed and explored the old base that yrs ago was our front line coastal air defence against Japanese invasion.. After lunch at Lana's we returned to the smoggy city leaving the pristine coaastal areas behind.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
the Iron Dog
Every pilot dreams he is a fighter-jock. Very few ever fullfill that dreamby flying a war bird. So the hypotheticall queation is what would I fly if i won the mega million jack pot . The P-39. I would fly the 'Iron Dog'. The truth is that below 12,000 the aircobra could hold it's own with almost anything. RAF testing proved it would best a BF-109 at low altitude, a ability the Russians exploited the the max. As a pleasure pilot most my fun flying is at low altitudes, where the P39 excells. Besides it is so sleek & cool looking, with those doors and roll down window. It's tricycle gear, a plus for me, yet off field rugged. With built in ox it can still cruise in the VFR altitudes with ease & blow off the fastest Mooney. 300+ knts . Too bad all the two seat variants i have seen are so butt ugly.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Across the Rocks.
Other pilots have been encouraging me to tuff it out and make the flight to the dry side. So sunday morning I hopped in 34H and departed S50 @8:45. I climbed up as far as the class b ceiling allowed, shooting thru the gapp at Tiger Mt. to I-90. Flying east now along the freeway I held 500fpm climb @ 85knts. Issaquah disapeared behind me, and I topped out over North Bend at 9500'.I could see Cle Elum aheah as Iflew over the ski summit and lake Eaaston. I spotted the grass runway at easton then both the runways at Cle elum. I had seeen the flat bowl that contains Ellensburg, and the airport soon materialized out of the haze. I was so high , and I had begun a decent as Cle Elum had passed beneath the wings. A few miles past KELN I turned back and finally made pattern altitude as ai made the call on the 45 to downwind. Runway 7 led me to the transient parking, where a lineman from a local FBO pointed out the EAA hanger down the way. The EAA guys there were real nice and showed off their aircraft. Allong with a few small fast home built singles was also a Pitenpol tandem.. nice plane. It was getting too hot for me , at 10:30 AM! So I thanked my hosts and said goodby. It took a few munuites but I programed Aubuen into the Gps then took of on 29 , with a slight cross wind from 330 at 8knts. No problem. The fields were heating uo and I could feel the rising air. They had a density alt warning and I circled the valley once to gain altitude( this is why I am the Chicken pilot, I like the safety of the extra altitude over the mountian terrain.) then coasted across getting Flight following from the summit on. I did notice that all me traffic was way below me. I might try lower altitudes next time. The GPS track took me across Stampede Pass coming back.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Nine tenths
The flying club requires each member either fly an hour per month or pay for an hour. I fly at least 3 hrs a month with that club, but with the really crappy weather her in march i have had to cancel every flight so far this month. So , today when it was rather pleasant , bright and dry all day,Chyanne & I went up for an hour. The clouds were 6 to 9 thousand feet, while we never exceeded 3. There was a lot of haze . Normally the Seattle skyline is visible from above Auburn, but not this evening. We cruised around over Auburn and south to Buckley before turning west to do a landing at Thun. After a taking off of 34 we departed the pattern NE to the valley.All the while Chyanne sings little songs to keep me entertained. I climbed a bit more than needed so I pushed the nose down till we were doing 120 knts, descending to 1500 for a straight in approach to Auburn. It was a nice controlled decent with a smooth touchdown. I knew it was not close to a hour yet and taxied back to the end of 34. By now it was dark. On the next circuit I turned to early and over flew the runway at 1000'. then next time around I extended to about where the new trains depot is and had a good approach & landing. The Hobbs meter that clock the time was hard to read with my red light. It had the last tenth number in red. Finally after 34H was tied down, with a white light, it read off .9 hours .
Sunday, March 15, 2009
me
This is my first blog. I am not even sure why I am blogging. Anyway, I am Dave ,the Chicken Pilot. It is not that I am scared, well I am afraid of heights, But that I'm a Cautious pilot, and like a chicken i always come home to roost in the same coop(hangar).I learned to fly in 2007, I guess the dirt bikes finally got to much effort. I did ride the Baja 500 race course on a "trail boss tours"(.com) adventure for my 50th birthday. I wasn't the fastest guy on that ride of ten bikes, but one of the only three who were faster broke a hand on the second of 3 days and didn't finish. Doesn't that make me 3rd?So now I fly, riding the air like I once rode the trails. The bad part is that it is march in Seattle( everywhere really) & the weather sux. Clouds and wind ground the small GA aircraft I fly. I belong to two flying clubs, one at BFI,Boeing field, and one at S50, Auburn Muni. This allows me access to 8 planes, only two of which have not yet flown. All Cessna 172's& 150's. A 172 is a bit bigger faster and had 4 seats, the 150 only seats a cramped 2. But the smaller plane is more fun to fly solo , as long as I am not in a hurry to get anywhere. Like comparing an old MG to a sedan. The sedan is faster and more comfortable, but the two seater has a "fun factor". I have about 170 hours of time logged so far, and the longest trip so far was to Eugene Or.. Hopefully this yr, I can blog about crossing the mountains east & circling the Olympic Mountains. I have a lot of places to fly. Dave, The chicken pilot
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