Well, I'm Goose, not Maverick, so that actually doesn't allow me to fly anything, in and of itself. It makes me really really really good at everything other than actually flying the airplane--that sounds dumb to a non-aviator, but the stick & rudder is only one piece of what makes a good aviator. It's nice to have a 500 knot mind in a 100 knot aircraft, and a bunch of experience in all kinds of situations. It's nice to understand the theory behind aerodynamics and aircraft performance in dynamic situations--a lot of private pilots don't really have any exposure to that. My actual stick & rudder skills--the hand/eye/"seat of the pants" coordination, fine-motor skill stuff--are what they are, though...that of a plain old civilian pilot with 55 flight hours, haha. I'll even say that they're at the very top of the heap of civilian pilots with 55 hours (and only about 5 of it in the last 5 years), but that isn't saying much at all. Something like a Cub presents stick and rudder challenges that a tactical jet just doesn't. It gets bounced around by the wind, it actually needs rudder to turn (to say nothing of taking off and landing), it has left-turning characteristics due to the propeller (you can jam the throttle on and off with a jet, and it has no effect on yaw), and the taildragger thing is a little more challenging and a new skill set. A tactical jet goes where it's pointed and does what it's told as long as you keep some speed on it (old, non-fly-by-wire stuff like an EA-6 will snap out of a turn if you really pull like hell or don't have enough speed--I don't think a Cub would ever do that unless you were severely deficient in your abilities to control it). You can "land" a Prowler at a maximum of 1300 fpm of descent rate, hahahaha (i.e., fly it into the ground at ~150 knots, no flare). In a light civil airplane, we would refer to that as a "crash".The challenges are just different. The taildragger gear wasn't too tough even on my first flight in it on a calm day. I went out in it again yesterday, though, and bounced way more landings than I stuck due to strong, gusty crosswinds (2 other instructors at the flight school couldn't believe we even went flying; I was actually glad to see marginal conditions, because that's the only way to learn to fly in them). I also have a problem adjusting to the smaller size and lower speed--I tend to flare the landings too early (being used to much bigger 20,000-55,000 lb airplanes, not 1000 lb airplanes), and it's uncomfortable to fly so slow on final (a Sabreliner lands at about 115-125 knots; a Prowler at 134-175...the Cub only goes about 85-90 kts with the throttle wide open, hahaha. Final approach is at about 50, bleeding down to probably 35-40 by touchdown). I'm also used to big, wide open airports with 5-10k' of runway...not little 1000-2000' grass strips with trees all around them.
10/31/2013 11:13:39 AM
http://www.today.com/news/skydivers-planes-collide-mid-air-helmet-cams-capture-fall-8C11531939Pretty good crash footage, most of the skydivers were wearing helmet cams
11/5/2013 12:05:40 PM
Pretty crazy footage there. I would like to see the whole damn thing without Matt Lauer editing it to hell and blathering all over the audio. Wish this had gotten on Youtube or online in some form before NBC got its "exclusive license" on the video. Ugh.
11/5/2013 1:03:03 PM
11/6/2013 2:54:11 PM
i enjoy taildragger's too, grew up with a Luscombe 8
11/6/2013 3:05:00 PM
Never been in a taildragger; grew up in a Beechcraft Bonanza.
11/7/2013 8:21:30 AM
I have a taildragger in the garage. It doesn't have wings on it.
11/7/2013 9:51:25 AM
What is it?
11/7/2013 10:27:03 AM
PA-12. Needs to be reskinned and an engine overhaul. Pretty major restoration, so she won't fly for years, unless I hit the lotto.
11/8/2013 9:27:08 AM
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/11/17/business/dubai-airshow-emirates-airbus-quest/index.html
11/17/2013 5:32:15 PM
Looks like somebody wanted to out fuck up the pilot who put a C-17 down at Knight's Airport in downtown Tampa instead of MacDill:http://www.kansas.com/2013/11/21/3132439/dreamlifter-lands-at-jabara-airport.html747 Dreamlifter accidentally lands at GA aiport in Kansas City![Edited on November 21, 2013 at 9:38 AM. Reason : ]
11/21/2013 9:37:51 AM
And the tug sent to turn it around broke down on the way:https://twitter.com/KWCH12NDBrian/status/403432811442364416/photo/1
11/21/2013 9:39:02 AM
Yeah, apparently they didn't have a GPS in that one Seriously.
11/21/2013 9:52:30 AM
Here is the ATC recording as it happened. It doesn't really start up until 17:30, so skip ahead.http://archive-server.liveatc.net/kiab/KIAB-Twr-Nov-21-2013-0300Z.mp3
11/21/2013 10:04:48 AM
Live feed for the takeoff of the Dreamlifter:http://www.kwch.com/news/local-news/boeing-dreamlifter-lands-at-jabara/-/21054266/23081256/-/oma90hz/-/index.html
11/21/2013 1:15:45 PM
Lighting the engines up now. Its almost go time!
11/21/2013 2:04:12 PM
these two commentators on the stream are a little too excited
11/21/2013 2:05:58 PM
HE GONE![Edited on November 21, 2013 at 2:17 PM. Reason : ]
11/21/2013 2:17:12 PM
Hey, Duke...did you hear about the Marine corp major that recently crashed his personal plane around Camp Lejeune? It's been all over the news around here, and I thought you said you were briefly stationed at Lejeune or Cherry Point. It was a sad story. He was on his way to Detroit to attend a fallen fellow Marines funeral.
11/26/2013 11:25:08 PM
damn, no i didn't hear about that. just googled his name...didn't know him.
11/27/2013 12:25:46 AM
http://www.wendoverairbase.comHadn't heard of Wendover before. Sounds like a cool historic site to check out.
12/11/2013 11:10:19 AM
12/11/2013 11:41:24 AM
so like once you understand that the driver is the most dangerous part of the system...isnt that how Sam Walton's billionare kid anf John F Kennedy devided by zero?
12/11/2013 1:38:46 PM
Well, they say something like 90% of all aircraft accidents are pilot error. I don't find much solace in that statistic, realizing that we are far from perfect and make mistakes every day. I think the saying is supposed to mean 'It was their own stupid fault most of the time,' but that really is just a cop-out. We aren't perfect. We make mistakes no matter how prepared we are. And as pilots, we've likely made a mistake that in the right circumstances would have killed us. One of the reasons I got out of flying. Much less risk tolerant than I used to be. I get a lot more enjoyment out of the boat
12/11/2013 2:00:14 PM
A boat is probably not as expensive either, although it's still like throwing money into the water.
12/11/2013 2:05:47 PM
Its not. It was always funny when someone, prior to buying it, would ask me if I had any idea how expensive it would be to own... I'd say "Less expensive than 1/4 of a 30 year old airplane' I loved flying, but for me, flying was/is a utility. I would use it to fly to Atlantic City, to go to football games, to go places like the OBX/Martha's Vineyard, but then you'd end up spending more money once you were there. It compounded the expense. With boating, we are normally doing the entertainment at the same time we are burning gas. Much more enjoyable, and I don't need to worry about everyone in the boat getting killed if the engine stops.In fairness, we do spend more now on the boat when you add in all the gas we blow in the summertime. But the expense 'per hour' of use is a lot lower.[Edited on December 11, 2013 at 3:25 PM. Reason : .]
12/11/2013 3:17:47 PM
12/11/2013 10:26:16 PM
12/12/2013 9:31:34 AM
Yep. I don't get why any airplane would ever be built without them.
12/12/2013 10:23:48 AM
I'm actually pissed it isn't on our boat. The boat sucks down about as much fuel as the plane, and when cruising, I want to know what is the most efficient setting. The people on the boat forums (mainly idiots) think its ridiculous why I'd want to know that... Yeah, its stupid to know how to optimize your fuel economy on a boat that holds 72 gallons of fuel, of which, on some days, I've came really close to sucking it dry.
12/12/2013 11:37:17 AM
Anyone know Wes Van Dorn, from the H-53 crash a few days ago? He was from Greensboro. http://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=78530[Edited on January 14, 2014 at 10:04 PM. Reason : .]
1/14/2014 10:03:47 PM
Didn't know any of those dudes.Also, I ALMOST ground-looped a Cub today.In happy news, my FBO is adding a brand-new Super Decathlon to their rental fleet.
1/14/2014 10:19:16 PM
How easy is it to ground loop a tail dragger?
1/14/2014 11:02:14 PM
Pretty easy.
3/11/2014 9:13:09 PM
Been working in the Boneyard all week at Davis Monthan AFB. Its been great to see all the acres and acres of retired aircraft. Haven't had a chance to see the C-27s that flew straight in from the OEM
3/12/2014 9:03:13 PM
I'm bringing a Sabreliner there in a couple of months.
3/12/2014 9:06:32 PM
^^^^ It's pretty easy. Basically, the CG is behind the landing gear (by necessity; otherwise it would rest on its nose, not its tail), which makes it inherently directionally unstable on the ground. You have to constantly be on the rudder, and generally, when you apply it in one direction, you have to follow it up with an application in the other direction, and so on, to actively dampen out diversions in the yaw axis. Applications of throttle, changes in pitch attitude (i.e., rotation, or the tail settling on landing rollout) all also generate yaw reactions due to gyroscopic effect of the crankshaft/propeller...and heaven help you if you touch down crabbed into the wind or being blown across the runway due to crosswind on landing...it's wing down/top rudder all the way, landing on one wheel, pointed straight down the runway, and with no wind drift side-to-side. You might get away with some on a grass runway, but it will go all over the place if you screw that up on pavement.In that particular case, I was too slow with a rudder correction on landing rollout, and I ended up with full left boot and the airplane still pointing right (and turning further and further to the right). I pulled the stick into my lap to drive the tailwheel down harder and hopefully gain a little more yaw authority Likely the only thing that saved me was the instructor in the back jamming left heel brake (for wheel brake differential braking) to straighten it back out. It's not that hard, but it takes some practice. I've been flying it once or twice a month for several months now. It took about 50 landings before I started being consistently good at it.
3/13/2014 6:41:20 PM
Hopefully I'll have my tailwheel endorsement in 2-3 more lessons! I think I'm close to them signing me off to solo in the Cub, and they want you to get 80 landings for the endorsement (I think I'm at mid-upper 50s now).Hey, one thing I learned the other day from someone else's mistake. Stay way the fuck far away from helicopters...especially big ones. That rotor wash is a no-shitter. particularly when they're hovering.http://fox10tv.com/2014/03/10/fairhope-plane-crash-still-under-investigation-by-faa/As you can see, there's not much left. It was a C-172, and he apparently got too close to a hovering CH-53 (which is a giant monster of a helo...I've been on one with a couple dozen loaded-down Marines when the help had an engine failure. Nobody in the back even knew until we landed.)FYI, the pilot lived, albeit with some significant injuries.
3/23/2014 11:30:16 PM
Yeah. We were down there when that happened. He flew right into the rotor wash of one of our shitters.[Edited on March 24, 2014 at 6:39 AM. Reason : glad he's ok. ]
3/24/2014 6:38:35 AM
I parked a T-34 between two Army H-60s at some field in TX, and two CWOs found me (only navy guy around) to make sure I knew I'd have to move it for them to taxi. They said they'd flip my plane over. I couldn't imagine what a 53 would do (until I saw the video)
3/24/2014 2:16:52 PM
Yeah, I've seen Shitter (CH-53) pilots pull collective to take off right after people ran off the ramp, and blow people down, hahaha.
3/24/2014 6:14:06 PM
That's apparently a trick they play on new guys on Amphibs. They tell you to walk toward the landing Shitter to greet the crew, and everyone else bends down and holds the Pad-eyes.
3/26/2014 6:32:14 PM
Ouch, that would suck to get blown down onto nonskid.
4/11/2014 11:29:36 PM
Lots of cool shots/info herehttp://home.comcast.net/~bzee1a/Edwards09/Edwards09.html
4/19/2014 6:17:49 PM
Flew a Cub today in some pretty strong/gusty/turbulent winds...it was sort of a handful, but I'm finally really getting the hang of the taildragger thing where I can consistently control it pretty well even in poor conditions. Having such light wing loading makes the Cub get tossed around a LOT. You have to keep a good bit of speed (by Cub standards, that is) on it and fly it all the way to the ground for a wheel landing (on the mains).
4/20/2014 2:00:03 AM
Logged a 0.9 in the Cub on Saturday, with 15 landings (!) at two different airports about 10 miles apart, with 3 (or 4?) practice engine-outs (idle to low approach in farm fields or abandoned airfields) during the transits.
5/5/2014 10:28:15 PM
5/7/2014 4:55:21 PM
I heard a similar story about an SR71 asking for flight level 600, being told that it was theirs if they could climb that high, and responding that they were descending to FL600.
5/7/2014 5:04:25 PM
Yeah I've heard that one before. No idea if it's true, but only 51% of a good flying story need to be true.
5/7/2014 10:36:25 PM
Attended a 1.5 hour presentation by Willy Driscoll today.
5/9/2014 6:32:58 PM