No....the corner of my iPhone was not the problem. It was boggy and not running up the ar$e of the other moth was paramount.
He did protest a little on short final when I was looking out the left side too :ugh:........now I know better, but the urge to know where you are lined up to is sometimes hard to beat.:ouch: The first of a few...when its finished processing :rolleyes: Try now...this should be the first one |
EXACTLY!!!
But we had LOTS of fun:E |
I'm not gonna call the name I did yesterday Chuck.....but you know I'm thinking it :}:ok:
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And some more.........
FUN.....we did discuss at dinner time how it was better than r:mad:ing, and all you need was to pump some more Avgas in her and go again :} |
Same vid Jaba:hmm:
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So it seems........COPY and PASTE is a technical challenge :sad:
So here it is again for those too lazy to click back a page ;) One more to load up yet! |
Chimbu was that you cruising around near the Caboolture Markets at around 1.oopm on Sunday?
If so, my son wants words with you. I was goal umpire for his AFL game and watching a yellow bi-plane made me miss a goal... Lucky there were 200 other parents who weren't so interested in dreaming about flying :uhoh::\ |
A real tiger (tail skid!)
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That would have been the all yellow Tiger based at YCAB. It was doing joy flights around 1pm.
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Thanks for that Jaba, since I have now been banned from further umpiring duties I will have some free time at the next Caboolture game so will have to give them a call...
it was a very long drive home... |
Not me-but if you live between Lakeside Raceway and Lake Samsonvale you could be forgiven for thinking, on Sunday, you were on the Western Front and it was 1917:E
Beware the Hun in the sun:ok: They're both real Tigers. |
pure fun! |
Spitfire at Tocumwal
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Awesome pic there allthecoolnamesaregone.:ok:
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Thanks Chuckles,
you might like this line up:ok: http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5143/...dd817e54_z.jpg |
And these..
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Why is the last post on this thread on Page 415 yet the thread is shown to be up to Page 418?
When I click on the other pages I always get back to Page 415. |
I also wondered why..... Must be the software unable to cope with the large thread size. It mucks up searches also.
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Yeah,its been like that for a few weeks. There are just some things a fella is not going to understand....like why does an aircraft go u/s overnight when all systems are off,or why does the fueller get held up on the other side of the field when you are running late,or why we have to maintain best possible speed to the holding pattern.
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I'm only on page 208 :oh:
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It is affected by the number of posts per page you have set under your user options.
40 posts per page - 208 pages 20 posts - 418 pages etc (there are other settings). |
Come along there now Fathom, you're also on 415, I can see you there, two posts ahead of me.. :\
(Don't you just luuuuuurve Wibbles..) Aye Ess, funny how life's like that.. |
I noticed it seemed to happen after someone had a tanty and asked all their posts be removed. Since then it has been out of whack. Seems like it is keeping a track of posts somewhere and not discounting the deleted ones. :8
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Geeez...those mangroves have grown off the approach end of 07....what's the go? Someone blocked a drain to keep the water level up?
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No Oz, what you have there is another clear sign of Global Warming.
Or is it Global Cooling now??? Please don't hurt me Jaba, I is just joking, I promise...:}:} |
You would think all the extra CO2 causing plant growth would keep the greenies happy.......:rolleyes: more mud crab habitat! :)
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Avocet
Did the Avocet fly in? Last I heard it was still doing taxi trials. Pretty nifty looking machine, has a lot of Jabiru influence in it's design.
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Yep, it flew in and out. did Jabiru influence the design? or was a Jabiru sacrificed under the cutting wheel! dont know how he will go with the Jab engine oil lower fuse lubrication system when its up top! though it did win the Scott Winton Memorial shield for the most innovative design.
http://www.recreationalflying.net/at...44/?embedded=1 |
Did the Avocet fly in? Last I heard it was still doing taxi trials. Pretty nifty looking machine, has a lot of Jabiru influence in it's design. Looks like a roomy machine......interesting concept. |
Finally got around to editing some video from the C195 trip. Its not great video because I wasn't very focussed on videoing and the 195 is a little short of places to mount a video. I took so long because I am slack and not very clever with the editing software so every time I edit a vid is like the first time. A flatlined learning curve.:suspect:
JTM is a 1952 model C195 fitted with a Jacobs 330hp L6MB engine swinging a Hamilton Standard CS prop. It develops that 330hp at 26/2250 so you don't just shove the throttle all the way in on takeoff 'cause you will REALLY over boost the engine. The nice part of that is that it can maintain 300hp (24/2100) up to about 8000' - its sorta like a poor mans turbo. Normal cruise is 21/1900 and that gives around 136KTAS/60 liters/hr. It can go faster but the FF goes faster too. You could probably get 145KTAS if you put the spurs to her at altitude but the FF would be horrendous. She holds just over 300 Litres so has fair legs. The fuel system is simplicity itself with a OFF/LEFT/BOTH/RIGHT selector on the left sidewall. Starting the engine is pretty easy if somewhat more complicated than a modern flat engine. The Jacobs is unusual in that it has a coil (probably out of a 1938 Ford) instead of a left mag. The key is marked Off, Start, Mag. Both. The engine is started with the prop in full coarse, mixture idle cutoff and the throttle cracked the usual amount. During the preflight you pull the prop through 14 blades to check for hydraulic lock and to get some oil up into the top cylinders. I have read people suggest 5 blades is enough and I have read 10 blades is enough. I figure with a 4 stroke cycle 2 blades/cylinder covers all bases. The rest of the walk around is utterly unremarkable. Entering the aircraft is via a single door adjacent to the rear bench seat on the starboard side and as you open it a chrome step folds down out of the belly (very cool). Recessed in the rear door jam is a button that opens the baggage door (very cool) but the actual baggage compartment is a little on the small side - surprisingly. Clambering up between the front seats you slide into the left seat and, once seated, its a VERY roomy office - gotta be 6-8 inches more elbow room than a Bonanza, easily. There is a window winder for opening the small window on the left (very cool). The windscreen goes back over your head...good vis in a turn....wear a hat. There is a row of chrome 'piano key' switches either side of the throttle - left to right is Battery Master/Radio master/pitot heat/forgot --- Flaps/beacon/left landing light/right landing light. Throttle set, prop coarse, mixture idle cut off, carby heat cold - 5 or 6 shots of prime cold, 3 or 4 hot - the primer has a HUGE stroke. Master on, left index finger on the starter button and count 7 blades. Right hand selects 'Start' and when she rumbles into life mixture rich then select 'BOTH'. Check oil pressure and when everything stable full fine on the prop. Then sit back and wait - no more than 1000 RPM until you have warmed her up - 100F on the CHT. She is easy to taxi but very blind - it was great having FTDK in the right seat to stop me taxiing into stuff...like buildings. The run ups etc are unremarkable. The controls are like a Twin Otter with a large Y arrangement coming out of the floor - all the trims are at the top of the vertical part of the column. Its actually a very ergonomic cockpit - much nicer than C180/185s - everything falls to hand beautifully. Takeoff is a real event - awesome sound and that big radial drags her into the air in no distance at all...I would think 400 metres tops. JTM also climbs VERY well - you'd easily average 1000'/min to any typical cruising altitude. Flying wise it flies nicely enough - the only slightly discordant note is you have to fly it ALL the time. She cannot be trimmed out hands off in pitch. Without constant attention from the pilot she will gently wander up and down several hundred feet/minute - you actually see this in the vid when I fck around with stuff. The 195 would be very tiring to fly IFR without an autopilot. No autopilot in JTM but she is VFR only. Basically she burbles along like a single engined DC3...which is VERY cool. Landing wise its typical large Cessna taildragger - and she is certainly LARGE - except for the flaps. The flaps are useless but the 195 has LOTS of wing and will happily land slow and stop quick - if off a flatter approach than your typical C180/185 pilot is used to. I did a really nice tail low wheeler at Aldinga on grass into about 15kts from slightly right of the nose and was very impressed with how quick she stopped. Tim reckons its easier to land than a C185 but I am not sure I see much difference. One of the other C195 owners at YECH used to own a Harvard and reckons the Harvard is easier to land. Basically she is just a lovely old girl who will constantly challenge you just enough to make you know you're alive. C195s have a bit of a bad ground loop history but I bet that is mostly in latter years. The pilots of the 1940s/50s would have felt utterly at home and at ease in the C195 - they didn't need much of a view straight ahead and were used to big/heavy/directionally unstable aircraft - not so modern pilots trained in utterly stable nose draggers.:yuk: Here is a link to a pic taken by one of the spotters at YECH as I taxied in after arriving back from Essendon with a VERY jetlagged Tim/Jen. What classic lines. The first Cessna designed post WW2 and the last aircraft certified with a radial engine in the US.:ok: Aircraft VH-JTM (1952 Cessna 195 Businessliner C/N 7752) Photo by Nick Dean (Photo ID: AC592229) |
Very good discription and vids, thanks chuckles. A pilot can get a feel for it from that. Wouldn't mind one myself..
So that is the helmet cam - worked good. Off to the march, to honour the 500 of the war that was lost, and the others from other wars. We should have sent the politicians that sent them. |
Haven't watched the video yet but that was a very interesting read - always thought the 190/195 series looked like good machines; certainly beautiful to look at!
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Some interesting tailwheel technique there Chuckles! You maybe should have explained that shoving the yolk all the way forward unlocks the tailwheel.
Bit of a contrast between the vintage C195 and the pilot with his iFad. :E Dr :8 PS: Lucky I had the G495 going into Essendon (it actually works! - unlike the iFad) - but that's another story. |
Still reckon that is very weird...Ipad GPS locks up Southbound and then starts working again at the same point in space Northbound...and worked perfectly ever since.
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Still reckon that is very weird...Ipad GPS locks up Southbound and then starts working again at the same point in space Northbound...and worked perfectly ever since. |
Mexican Zone of Death?:E
That'll learn us to go south of the border:ouch::ooh::{:} |
Of course the owner of the Avocet has been building quality Jabirus for years so it made sense to use those bits and pieces as a base. Designed by him and his son who is doing his aeronautical engineering degree. My only concern was the angle of incidence of the horizontal tailplane, it looked to be commesurate with the angle of the fuselage leading up to the rear. Took about 500-600 meters to lift off. Guess they are still getting comfortable with it. I am worried about them using a Jabiru as a pusher. It has never been overly successful without additional cooling fans. Time will tell.
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Chuckles what app is that your running on the ipad?
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Air Nav Pro.
As soon as the fellas at Ozrunways bring out their charting app I will be changing to that as I believe a/. it will be better and b/. its home grown and c/. cheaper. Air Nav Pro is pretty good but not great. If you're looking for a charting app I would wait a couple of months for Ozrunways...and in the meantime download their current app (DAPS/AIP/ERSA):ok: |
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