jrh
Well-Known Member
Are you talking about the plane at carmi?? Eeesh that one was scary!
Nope, different DZ. Although there are probably many jump planes out there with similar stories to mine.
Are you talking about the plane at carmi?? Eeesh that one was scary!
I didn't know this was a trend. There were two more I flew down in Austin before I started flying other things...a 152 with the Sparrowhawk and a 152 Aerobat and neither of those had that issue. But, a) my instructor DID teach me to lean it out for taxi - about an inch or more as I recall, and b) I'm guessing that's how they were teaching it down in AUS when I moved there.
Good to know, though.
Ok, I give kudos to that, same as the panel falling out.
But the fact remains, your buddy *flew* from point A to point B. He beat the Wright Brothers for goodness sakes.
Unless somebody gets stranded in the middle of nowhere and burns their plane to the ground in one final act of disgust, I probably won't be impressed.
What was cracked then, because that's what I heardIf you're referring to the Bluebird, the part that was cracked was not the spar, not even close.
I've flown quite a few 55's, and there was one I flew which was especially crappy. I was almost to V1 speed taking off at Midway and the entire 65 pound instrument panel fell onto my shins. I mean literally the whole dash fell out. All 7 camlock screws had broken or stripped out. I had to have the other guy taxi in because I couldn't move my legs or feet to steer. There were plenty of other problems too, I never had a flight in that thing where something didn't go wrong. Freaking N95WK.![]()
BE99. All of them.
It's a toss up for me, but the plane I got stuck flying at Picto would be the winner. Old beat up, underpowered 150hp skyhawk that had mowed the sky for who knows how long. First official day on the job while surveying, the engine decided it was hungry and ate a valve. 5 months later the same thing happened in the same cylinder. So 2 emergency declarations in a 5 month period is my record so far. I swear the radios were the prototypes from Cessna, because every time I had an avionics tech look at them, they would laugh and say "Boy those were old when I started working, and I've been doing this for 30 years!". It got to the point early in the season where I needed to listen on comm 1 and transmit on comm 2. Every time I hit the PTT switch, the VOR needles would center. The few times I shot an approach, I would be intercepting a radial or a loc, have to read back a clearance and in doing so, screw myself up because the needle would center and then eventually wander back to where it should be. It didn't fly straight, it was beyond drafty, even for a 172, which made sitting in it for 8 hours a day an absolute joy when I got stuck in New Jersey in January. The engine also liked to hiccup a lot on takeoffs, which is such a confidence builder for a young, dumb pilot.
All AMF Navajos -310.
I loved the 99s compared to the 'Jo's.
Chico tower literally said to TC, "...You're left engine is smoking worse than your right engine."
There are some very nice 1900s in the system the RZ's are the best. Will be interesting if we do get those four other 1900s over seas how they pan outEverything from AMF.
HAHAHAHAHA!!! Lovely
I flew "butt hole" yesterday and I guess I'm just jaded coming from FLX because it wasn't THAT bad. I don't hate the 99 at all.