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-   -   Quickies while Flying (https://www.pprune.org/private-flying/258745-quickies-while-flying.html)

tiggermoth 6th January 2007 11:14

Quickies while Flying
 
Jeyes Quickies remove permanent marker from Charts

My wife was cleaning off her nail varnish on the sofa with little pads from a pink container. What on earth are they? "They're Quickies". Quite simply, they are cotton pads impregnated with acetone (nail varnish remover).

http://www.jeyes.co.uk/images/brands/Quickies-Range.jpg

So as quickly as she said "get off" I got one of those permanent CD/DVD marker pens, put a mark on my 1:500 000 chart, and then with one wipe of one of these Quickies. The box it comes in is in a hideous pink box, so chaps hide these deep in your flight bags. The box does reseal, and I can resuse a pad several times (it comes with 20 pads inside). They cost about the same as a pint, available (I'd imagine) in most high street chemists and superstores.

I've tried dry whiteboard type pens which just wipe off, but they wipe off a bit too easily, and I've also used the technique of writing over permament marker with a dry wipe marker too (works well). I've also used nail varnish remover and a kitchen roll which is fine too, but can be a bit messy and smelly and it may not get past security.

No, I don't work for Jeyes, and no I don't wear nail varnish as a rule!

tiggermoth 6th January 2007 11:25

I've just done a search about and find that Numark and Superdrug do their own brand of pads too, which I'd imagine work just as well.

DX Wombat 6th January 2007 12:16

May I suggest you be VERY careful when using acetone / acetone impregnated tissues in a closed environment it is an extremely flammable substance and can also give you nasty headaches (amongst other things). You could always get some non-acetone nail varnish remover, make your own pads and keep them in a leakproof, airtight container. They would probably be a bit cheaper too and the lads wouldn't need to worry about what colour the container was :O as they could choose their own. :E

dublinpilot 6th January 2007 13:16

These seem to work quite well too. The white one, is an eraser....you simply shade over your existing line, and then wipe it off with a cloth.

A lot cheaper than permanent pens in the aviation shops too.

dp

BRL 6th January 2007 13:59


Quickies while Flying
Am I the only one who expected a thread about joining the mile high club in a small aeroplane!!!!!!!!! :D

Bahn-Jeaux 6th January 2007 14:03


Originally Posted by BRL (Post 3053977)
Am I the only one who expected a thread about joining the mile high club in a small aeroplane!!!!!!!!! :D


Guilty as charged M'Lud

Whirlygig 6th January 2007 14:52


Originally Posted by BRL (Post 3053977)
Am I the only one who expected a thread about joining the mile high club in a small aeroplane!!!!!!!!! :D

Nope! I was looking forward to smutty banter involving joysticks and cyclics :O

However, back to the subject; surgical spirit works and is dead cheap!

Cheers

Whirls

ShyTorque 6th January 2007 15:29

Whirls, I think you've been warned before about not spilling your drinks on aviation charts. :E

Whirlygig 6th January 2007 15:41

'SOk, now that I carry a small bottle of white wine with me, I can easily get rid of the red wine stains on my charts!

And if you want to get rid of tea stains in your mug, use a steradent tablet but never use bleach as it destroys the structure of fine bone china!

Cheers

Whirls - Queen of the handy household hints!

Whirlybird 6th January 2007 15:47


Am I the only one who expected a thread about joining the mile high club in a small aeroplane!!!!!!!!!
Moi??? Would I have even thought of something like that, when I hurriedly clicked on this thread immediately after returning from a long day getting soaked at the airfield? Err...do I even know what you mean? ;)

However, I have kept Tesco's nail varnish remover pads in my flight bag for years and years. Doesn't everyone?

davidatter708 6th January 2007 16:40

Permanent markers, kitchen roll, spray bottle with meths in works just fine.
David

englishal 6th January 2007 16:50


My wife was cleaning off her nail varnish on the sofa
I hate it my wife does that.....Especially as I get a b*llocking for not taking my shoes off when I put my feet up on the sofa....

Lister Noble 6th January 2007 17:49

[QUOTE=tiggermoth;3053722][B]
e). They cost about the same as a pint, available (I'd imagine) in most high street chemists and superstores.
QUOTE]
Tigger,
Where do you live,it sounds quite interesting?
Lister:D :D ;)

mad_jock 6th January 2007 18:59

I am willing to bet a fiver that these things will never catch on in PFA circles.


Mind you I have yet to see a member put a line on a chart. If the CAA made the bold step forward of putting real ale pubs symbols on the charts it could possibly double the number of members that carry an up todate chart. And half the number that become unsure of thier position. ;)

Cusco 6th January 2007 20:44

I still have a coupla boxes of medi-swabs left over from the part-time job when I retired a year or so ago. (you know - the individually wrapped 2cm square swabs impregnated with iso-propyl alcohol that your doc -or usually nurse nowadays- cleanses the skin with prior to taking blood)
They work well, don't fill the cockpit with fumes and when sealed seem to stay moist for ever...........
Safe flying
Cusco;)
Should have added that they get chinagraph marks off a treat too...............

ShyTorque 6th January 2007 20:45

From a few years of experience, I've noticed that brown coloured permanent pen marks are the most easily erased. Conversely permanent blue marks can stain the film covering forever, if left on the chart too long and will not come off, even with a solvent, because the ink actually combines with the plastic.

Having said that, I've got a little cardboard box containing almost a gross of brown chinagraph pencil lead refills in my personal stash, so I don't use permanent marks very often these days.

I use mainly just track lines marking the chosen route, sometimes with miles to go leading to the turning points, if I've got time.

scooter boy 6th January 2007 21:21

I have never felt the need to draw a line on any chart ever (except during PPL training).

The GPS draws it for me,:E


SB

BEagle 6th January 2007 22:17

Good old chinagraph pencil - comes off with a damp cloth!

And you're right about brown permanent marker. But it looks like sh..!

But these days, it's just a quick chinagraph line on the chart, measure the track and distance and MDR the heading and time. Put the waypoints in the GPS, confirm the CDI bar is centered, look out and enjoy the view!

Whirlygig 6th January 2007 22:43


Originally Posted by scooter boy (Post 3054562)
I have never felt the need to draw a line on any chart ever (except during PPL training).

The GPS draws it for me,:E


SB

...and what happens if your GPS fails? :}

I've only used GPS once; I still do me nav the old fashioned way - hence the reason I have tried all sorts of dangerous substances to remove my track lines from my charts (and the red wine stains!!).

Cheers

Whirls

mad_jock 6th January 2007 22:52

I think the shops are the worst though for some of the nonsense out there.

I have heard the sales spiel in that spotter shop in Leeds and in transair in London about pens and charts.

In fact someones dad asked me in Transair while I was waiting with my ickle red day log book and a couple of black chinas. What the hell the guy was on about. I really didn't have a clue why you would need even 5% of what the guy was on about. The sales persons heared me and in a very sarcastic tone asked me what I knew, seems you need about 2 charts, a pack of permant OHP pens, a pack of none permant OHPs, some gizzmo to work out circuit directions, a thing which was mask for fan lines and circle thingy's, vor thing's which you stick on the chart, a normal square, a foldy ruler thing and a postitive flight bag full of !!!!e which I wouldn't use.

My reply of 700 hours as an instructor and all you need is a china graph, a thumb which god gave you anyway, a chart, a square and a stopwatch if you were gay didn't go down to well. The dad had a laugh though just cut his CC bill down from 125 quid down to 25 quid.

BEagle 7th January 2007 07:09

Which brings me on to b£oody 'kneeboards' and 'PLOGs'.....

I just use an A5 spiral top notebook with a biro shoved though the spiral. It'd be nice if someone sold a small, basic aluminium board which held a standard (e.g. WHS) A5 book and a pen or two and had a proper leg strap, not a weedy piece of elastic and velcro. All you can find in the Wannabe shops is either hinged padded foldy-uppy things with plastic insert pages, morse code and quadrantal diagrams, stopwatch holders etc - and those overcomplicated 'PLOG' forms. I do the planning on the ground, then china the leg headings and times and visual fix times, plus average w/v and max drift onto the chart. Work out any revised ETA in flight using the laminated back of the checklist (which also has a half-mill scale on one edge) and a chinagraph.

I hate those awful permanent pens with removable tops. They require 2 hands - what do you do with the top in flight? I've seen students try to stick them in their mouths - which guarantees a radio call.....:rolleyes: Chinagraph or clicky ballpoint (especially the WHS ones with a rubber grip which is exactly 10 miles on a half-mill!) are both topless.

Topless is the only way - which, I guess, brings us back to 'Quickies while flying'...:E ?

Bertie Thruster 7th January 2007 08:12

Like Shytorque I too have a stash of chinagraph leads from a previous existance, but the present job often gets messy and I need a permanent marker for my kneepad, but one without a top!

Sharpie RT: its a clicky permanent felt tip. Most office stores stock them.

mad_jock 7th January 2007 10:55

BEagel why don't you go into production? Or point an FI in the direction of some extra cash.

Local fabricators with a flow cutter and get them to cut out 10 or more rounded rectangles of your design (more you do the cheaper it is). Remembering a couple of slots for some manly elastic.
If you really want to go for it get them to cut and bend some plate to form a surface for your thigh with the elastic holes in it instead.

Rivet the thigh bit on underneith.

Rivet a suitable clip to the top of it.

Using the handel of a McFLurry spoon, cut the spoon off then glue the handel to the top or underneith what ever takes your fancy, left or right handed versions are dead easy. Thats your pen holder if you want more pens eat more ice cream.

Then ask a girl whats the best way of attaching the elastic.

Depending what buckles etc you use with the strap I can't see it costing more than 35 quid.

Metal 10 quid
Flow jet and bending 15 quid each.
Rivets, clip etc 5 quid
McFlurry 1.50 (the ice cream is a bonus)
Elastic velcro etc 5 quid.

If you use hillwalking quick releases instead of velcro maybe 35-40. And its got to be better than the 20-40 quid plastic jobs which fall to pieces after 6 months.

Then flog them in the club or on ebay for 50 quid or paint them mat green and flog them for 60 quid (you could do a special pink one for a certain person.). I sould imagine there might be quite a market for them especially as they might help rotary pilots as well.

If you don't want to do it and there is PPL out thier that owns a Fabrication shop I will be quite happy to knock some drawings up for 2 quid to the Poppy appeal per unit. There is also a need for just a plain AL A4 board with a clip on the top for IR work.

BEagle 7th January 2007 11:06

What's a 'McFlurry'?

chevvron 7th January 2007 11:12

Sorry, saw the title 'Quickies while Flying' and got completely the wrong impression! (thought it was something to do with the 5 Mile high' club)

mad_jock 7th January 2007 11:18

Thinking about it.

I will nip down to a sheet metal shop tomorrow and price it out making some A5 ones with a thigh form on the bottom. And also some plain metal A4 IR knee boards.

Whats your wish list for it?

How thick do you want the strap?
Do you want elastic and velcro or webbing with a quick release?
How much grip do you want the clip to have?
What surface do you want? Dipped in plastic or plain metal?

A McFlurry is something that the peasants eat in McDonalds. It comes with a tapered plastic spoon which is hollow. It is the perfect size for a pen holde. I can't claim the invention rights for using them for this. They have been glued to various aircraft I have flown.

BEagle 7th January 2007 11:44

Webbing with a quick release sounds good! :E

Clip should be a u-shaped spring thing to trap the spiral:


(That's my old one before I got fed up with it and the feeble 25mm knicker elastic and velcro strap fell apart! You can see I ripped the useless bits off!
Roughly 150 mm wide if you include some sort of pen grip thing (single or double), by about 230 mm high.

Plastic dipped - blokish black or princess pink would be fine. Strap about 40mm wide?

tiggermoth 7th January 2007 11:57

I believe it's frozen stuff resembling ice cream. The spoon that comes with it is used for 'dosing' things into it.

An Alternative from Boots at £1.40

An update on Quickes again, we went into Boots yesterday to look to see if there are any other alternative products. The "Quickies" sold in the particular Boots were at £1.99, but they sell their own brand "Conditioning Nail Polish Remover Pads" (15 Pads) at £1.40.

I bought some of the Boots pads (or should I say, I slipped them into my wife's basket :rolleyes: ). Just tried them on my chart, and the pads are about half the area of the Quickies, and they seem 'over wet' so they do wipe away the permanent marks on the chart brilliantly, but then you need something else to mop up the inky solution.

Not Flammable

A correction to my original post the Quickies (and the Boots equivalant by the way) are both "Acetone Free" and contain Butyrolactone. Butyrolactone is a common industrial solvent which is stable, low odour (low volatility) and is not classed flammable (by the US classification, "Flammability 1") unless heated. It is obviously wise to take as much precaution with these products as the ladies who use it (and some gents I'm sure) by making sure you have adequate ventilation for health reasons.

As I'm still a boy at heart, I lit one of these, and I was very unimpressed. Granted, the vapour was probably above the HEL (Higher Explosive Limit).

mad_jock 7th January 2007 12:15

And the strap?

Do you think one thick one would be best say 40mm or one top and one bottom at 15mm?

I will suss out 3 options,

A plain one without any thigh form and strap/s? attached underneith with the pen holder on top. I will make the pen holder bit and the clip multi handed with holes to suit both handed people. And just leave it so the user bolts the bits on how they like with M3 grip nuts and bolts. Also allows people to replace bits when the springs go on the pen holders or the clip goes. I can also put a couple of holes down the side in case people want to side grip thier paper.

A thigh form one strap/s through the form and pen holder underneith again with the holes to suit either hand.

And a A4 drilled for sideways or up down with again some holes for a pen clip either side.

H'mm just to note if I do start making these things a suitable cut of any profits will go to the poppy appeal or the RNLI or we can make them officail PPrune products and Danny can have his cut.

tiggermoth 7th January 2007 12:32

Do you need a strap at all?

I just glued (With Uhu glue) some of that anti-slip rubbery matting stuff to the underside of my ordinary A4 clipboard, my pen clips (using its own clip) on the bit that sticks out for the clipboard used for hanging it up.

The non-slip bit, available from the RNIB (for example) or on good sized rolls from the likes of Woolworths, and if you have them in your neck of the woods Wilkinsons.

The clipboard doesn't shift for me during normal or utility manoevers (not tried it for spins though).

My stop watch I attach to the clip bit of the clipboard with a loop of elastic material.

mad_jock 7th January 2007 12:45

Thats a good idea.

I might be able to dip the whole thing in something similar.

Whats it like to write on?

tiggermoth 7th January 2007 12:54


Originally Posted by mad_jock (Post 3055505)
Whats it like to write on?

I only glued the back of the clipboard with it, so your'e writing on essentially a normal clipboard.

mad_jock 7th January 2007 13:07

Can you just flip it over and try writing on it.

The boards are going to be plate metal. And its easier to have both sides covered with the same stuff. Also means that if the covering wears out on one side you can just take the bolts out and flip it over and start afresh.

tiggermoth 7th January 2007 13:18

No mine is the "bobbly variety" of non-slip map (it's got holes in it) a bit like this:

http://img.alibaba.com/photo/1008504...i_slip_Mat.jpg

The RNIB link was for a Dycem material which is smooth it appears which also I suppose would be easier to write on

tiggermoth 7th January 2007 13:39

Mad_Jock,

From RNIB website:

Dycem non-slip mats help children to concentrate on the academic or fun elements of activities eg. Stabilising writing paper, toys, games or puzzles as well as avoiding sliding elbows during play or writing.
This implies that this Dycem stuff is fine for writing on. :)

http://onlineshop.rnib.org.uk/local_...33uy8163gy.jpg

mad_jock 7th January 2007 13:56

Right thats sorted then.

I am quite looking forward to getting it sorted tomorrow.

Think I will suss out the two easy ones first.

An A4 board covered both sides for IR. (Because thats the one I will be using)

An A5 with 40mm web strap covered both sides so it sticks to your trousers so the strap won't have to cut your blood off to keep it in one place.

Any ideas how many of them I should make? I will see how much it is to setup the flow jet I have a suspiscion that once it's ready to go each one will be buttons on top of the metal.

I can't see them being more than 25 quid for the A4 board and 30quid for the A5.

matelot 7th January 2007 14:12

I can't believe there's two pages of thread here on the nitty-gritty of bugger all! :ouch:

G-SPOTs Lost 7th January 2007 14:17

MJ - Excellent
I can see the ad campaign now:
Designed by instructors For future instructors......
or
It looks crap but it works.............
or if transair end up selling it.
"Never get lost again....."
or
"Now modified to include the GPS mounting bracket and handy fire extinguisher holder" :rolleyes:
The schools are just as guilty of selling sh1te to students, they all get their monthly visit from pooleys to stock up on "Circuit pattern joining computers" I suppose if people arn't flying their aircraft they need to make a few quid somewhere

BEagle 7th January 2007 14:43

madjock - those prices are way too high. Reckon on around half your figures - including a £1 donation to RNLI or PPRuNE.

mad_jock 7th January 2007 14:43

Sourced some of the high stick stuff in sticky back roll. Sent an email to try and get a sample. Looks like its going to be royal blue or yellow.

pen clip holders are a piece of piss.

Nuts and bolts will be dealt with locally.

Need to find a decent spring clip for the top.

Might have to do a special instructor/captain version with a bead around the outside so you don't cut the students/FO to the bone when when you belt them with it.

BEagle they will be the top end prices. The problem is the setup costs of getting the sheet cut. Once I have done it once it will cost alot less.

The webbing and clip will cost 2 quid, pen clip 3 quid, 4 quid for the covering, document clip for the top 2 quid. The rest is the setup costs and metal. I very much doudt though we can do it for 15 quid.


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