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TRANSCRIPT
VOL 31 NO6 JUNE 2003
2 VAA NEWSHG Frautschy
4 AEROMAIL
5 MYSTERY PLANE
6 JOHN MILLER RECALLS A UNIQUE FORCED LANDING IN 1934John Miller
8 8 RIBS ANYONE
How MANY ARE NEEDEDlTed Teach
10 SUN N FUN CELEBRATING FLIGHT
16 THE HOFFMEYER T-CRAFT JUST ANOTHER FORM OF THERAPY Budd Davisson
20 AIRCRAFT TIEDOWNS HG Frautschy amp Joe Dickey
22 THE VINTAGE INSTRUCTOR TAILDRAGGERS - HAVE YOU FLOWN A FORD LATELY Doug Steward
24 PASS IT TO BUCK
26 NEW MEMBERS
27 CALENDAR
29 CLASSIFIED ADS
Publisher TOM POBEREZNY Editor-in-Chief scon SPANGLER Executive Editor MIKE DIFRISCO News Editor RIC REYNOLDS Photography Staff JIM KOEPNICK
LEEANN ABRAMS TRISHA LUNDQUIST
Advertising Coordinator JULIE RUSSO AdvertisingEditorial Assistant ISABELLE WISKE Copy Editing COLLEEN WALSH
KATHLEEN WITMAN
VINTAGE AIRPLANE
Executive Director Editor HENRY G FRAUTSCHY VAA Administrative Assistant THERESA BOOKS Contributing Editors JOHN UNDERWOOD
BUDD DAVISSON Graphic Designer OLIVIA L PHILLIP
FRONT COVER The brothers Hoffmeyer fly their dads resurrected Tayshylorcraft Ron Hoffmeyer rebuilt the airplane after it had been destroyed by a fire set by vandals It was selected as the Best Cusshytom Classic of Sun n Fun 2003
BACK COVER Seen in the light of dawn over the shoreline of Floridas Lake Hancock the Best Fabric Amphibian of Sun n Fun 2003 was Brad and Glen Larsons Cessna Airmaster mounted on a pair of Wipline amphibious floats VM photo by HG Frautschy EM Cessna 210 photo plane flown by Bruce Moore
STRAIGHT Be LEVEL
I have been signing thank-you letters to be sent to members who have participated in the Friends of the Red Barn program for this year Once again many of our loyal members have chosen to help out and we re pleased to see some new members have also come on board This financial commitment by these members is much apprecishyated by the Vintage Aircraft Association and will enable us to better serve the total membership during our annual convention I would also like to say a personal thanks to these members I hope to see you all at Oshkosh this year
Having the Friends of the Red Barn fund has also given me the chance to discuss with members different subjects regarding the structure and operation of the Vinshytage Aircraft Association
Im often asked about the nashyture of the relationship between the Vintage Aircraft Association and the Experimental Aircraft Asshysociation Well in a nutshell heres how I view this subject
The Vintage Aircraft Association (VAA) is a Wisconsin corporation with its own bylaws and treasury It might be noted here that this is the case with the other two EAA divisions Warbirds of America and the International Aerobatic Club The National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI) is not an EAA division it is an affiliate organizashytion
The VAA has a letter of agreeshyment with the EAA as to how this relationship is carried forward on a daily basis The subjects of this agreement include the rendering of services to the VAA and what services VAA provides to EAA From
BY ESPIE BUTCH JOYCE PRESIDENT VINTAGE ASSOCIATION
EAAand VAA
the beginning of the division in 1972 we at the VAA (back then the Antiq ueClassic Division) agreed that to be a member of the division a member would also be a member of EAA This still applies today as well Its good for both parties Every time VAA gains a new member so does EAA That new member has access to the broader range of information and services that EAA can offer Strength in numbers also helps VAA particu larly with regard to government issues
Strength in
numbers also helps
VAA particularly with
regard to government
issues
By having a close working partshynership between VAA and EAA we bring EAA close to 10000 VAA members and VAA gives EAA a broader interest base wi t h memshybers interested in vintage airplanes EAA brings to VAA and VAA memshybers the support and voice of a larger membership-based organizashytion Membership in VAA gives members a common flag to rally aro und for a number of reasons including challenging over-regulashytion by the government technical issues and opportunities for socia l interaction at fly-ins and Chapter meetings This re lationship allows the VAA to play an important ro le during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh each year Our operation of the Vintage area of the convention
grounds gives each member both VAAer and the overall EAA memshybership the opportunity to see firsthand how much the VAA does to make yo u r stay for the week more en joyable Plus our presence at the convention serves to edushycate the public about our aircraft and the men and women who fly them We can only hope that in the future the VAA and EAA relashytionship wi ll remain as close as it has been during the past 32 years
Your Officers the Board of Dishyrectors HG Frautschy our Executive Director and Editor Theresa Books our VAA Adminisshytrative Assistant EAA Pres ident Tom Poberezny and all of the EAA staff continue to work hard to provide you the VAA member our best efforts to make being a VAA member a valued relationshyship As a member I ask each of you to ask a friend to join with us as a member so that he or she too can enjoy the VAA
As a final thought I would like to take a moment to express how proud I am of all of the mi li tary personnel of the United States and its coalition forces The bravery and commitment you have shown in your military mission and your dedication to the American people is without question the greatest I am proud to be an American
Lets all pull in the same direcshytion for the good of aviation Remember we are better together Join us and have it all ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE
VAA N EWS
VAA ELECTIONS In the center spread of this issue
youll find candidate biographies and a ballot for this years VAA elecshytions which will be ratified at the annual business meeting held durshying EAA AirVenture Oshkosh
Notice is hereby given that an anshynual business meeting of the members of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be held on Monday August 4 2003 at 930 am CDT in the tent next to the VAA Red Barn Headquarters during the 51st annual convention of the Experimental Airshycraft Association Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconshysin Notice is hereby further given that the annual election of officers and directors of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be conshyducted by ballot distributed to the members along with this June issue of Vintage Airplane Said ballot must be returned properly marked to the Ballot Tally Committee Vintage Airshycraft Association PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 and reshyceived no later than July 24 2003 The Nominating Committee subshymits the following list of candidates for vice president George Daubner for treasurer Charles W Harris for directors (eight total) David Benshynett Bob Brauer John S Jack Copeland Philip Coulson Roger Gomoll Dale A Gustafson Eugene E Morris and Wes Schmid
EAA AIRVENTURE PLANNING The Internet has allowed us to
streamline planning for your trip to EAA AirVenture Visit EAAs ofshyficial convention website at wwwairventureorg for up-to-date inshyformation regarding convention highlights and events including the 100th anniversary of flight celebrashytion A complete schedule of forums is also presented throughout the week New features and tools are being added to the website on a regular basis so be
JUNE 2003
sure to check back often Also use the EAA Flight Planner to flight plan your trip You can access it through the VAA website at wwwvintageaircra(t01g
FRIENDS OF THE RED BARN We are pleased to announce that
many of you have responded to the VAAs annual appeal for help with funding VAA activities during EAA AirVenture In the July issue well be publishing a list of volunteers who have participated in the VAA Friends of the Red Barn Remember any funds sent and received prior to July I 2003 will be applied to the 2003 campaign and those received after that date will be placed in the fund for 2004 with any benefits then available during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2004
See page four for more details on the VAA Friends of the Red Barn
CALL FOR VAA HALL OF FAME NOMINATIONS
If you wish to nominate an indishyvidual who you believe has made a significant contribution to the adshyvancement of aviation between 1950 and the present day please go to wwwvintageaircra(torgprogramsho(J ormhtml and download the nominashytion form Add supporting material and send it to
Charles W Harris VAA Hall of Fame PO Box 470350
Tulsa OK 74147-0350 Be as thorough and objective as
possible Attach copies of materials you deem appropriate and helpful to the committee
The person you nominate can be a citizen of any country and may be living or deceased The nomishynees contribution could be in the areas of flying design mechanical or aerodynamic developments adshyministration writing some other vital and relevant field or any comshybination of fields that support aviation To be considered for inducshy
tion into the VAA Hall of Fame durshying 2004 petitions must be received by September 30 2003
If youre unable to access the Inshyternet call VAA Administrative Assistant Theresa Books and ask her to fax or mail you a copy of the form She can be reached at 920shy426-6110
NOTICE OF ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING
In accordance with the fourth restated bylaws of the Experimenshytal Aircraft Association Inc (Article Seven Section I) Notice of all meetings shall be mailed by first class mail to each member or pubshylished in any publication of the corporation which is mailed to all members or to all families particishypating in a Family Membership Program and such notice shall be sufficient if the mailing is made at least twenty (20) days before the scheduled meeting
Notice is hereby given that the Annual Business Meeting of the members will be held at the Theshyater in the Woods on Sunday August 3 2003 at 100 pm (CDT) at the 51 st annual convention of the Experimental Aircraft Associashytion Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconsin
Notice is hereby further given that the election will be held as the first item on the agenda at the business meeting
Five Class II directors (three-year terms) and one Class III director (one-year term) shall be elected In accordance with the fourth reshystated bylaws of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc (Article Eight Section IV) II All nominees whether properly nominated by petition or by the Nominating Committee shall have their names presented to all members no later than sixty (60) days prior to the Annual Membership Meeting
2
VAA VOLUNTEER INFORMATION FOR EAA AIRVENTURE 2003
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003 will be held at Wittman Regional Airshyport in Oshkosh Wisconsin from Tuesday July 29 through Monday August 4 Volunteers will again be needed to staff the many different committees in the Vintage area
If you are going to attend EAA AirVenture 2003 and would like to participate in activities as a volunshyteer drop a note to the chairperson of the area in which you would like to volunteer It would be helpful to the chairperson in his or her planshyning for the event if you could also include your previous experience or training and the dates of your arrival and departure
The following committees will use volunteer help
PAST GRAND CHAMPIONS Steve Krog 262-966-7627 sskrogaolcom
SECURITY and FLIGHT LINE Geoff Robison 260-493-4724 chief7025aolcom
TYPECLUBHQ Roger Gomoll 507-288-2810 rgomollhotmailcom
VAAPARKING George Daubner 262-673-5885 vaaflyboyaolcom
OTHER CONTACTS Teresa Lautenschlager Operation Protect Our Planes tlautenschlagereaaorg
Anna Osborn Volunteer Center annajohnktccom
Butch Joyce President 336-393-0344 windsockaolcom
HG Frautschy Executive Director 920-426-4825 hgfrautschyeaaorg
The Nominating Committee has submitted the following candishydates
Class II John Baugh Jack Harrington Verne Jobst Bob Reece Alan Shackleton Frank P Sperandeo III
Class III Paul D Seehafer Barry Valentine
Alan Shackleton Secretary EAA Board of Directors
GREAT WEBSITES Dave Bahnson is an avid pri shy
vate collector of World War I wooden airplane propellers and
he recent ly started a website wwwwoodenpropellercom dedishycated to that pursuit
The site contains information about identifying propellers as well as some facts about design and conshystruction Hes continually adding photos to the site to help others identify their propellers
Have you ever wondered just what was going on inside a roshytary engine while it was running So did Matt Keveney A mechanishycal engineer hes been fascinated with the workings of various powerplants To help him visualshyize the process he created web-based animations of both inshyternal combustion and steam engines Spend a few moments at wwwkeveneycom and enjoy the work Matt put into each of his anshyimated illustrations
PETER BOWERS Were sorry to report that Peter Bowers EAA 977 and VAA 7563 passed
away on April 27 2003 Its hard to categorize Petes contributions because his work was so wide ranging you hardly knew where hed pop up next An avid model airplane builder and designer as a young man he quickly took to full-size aircraft and spent 36 years as an aeronautical engineer at Boeing But there were plenty of other things to do and Pete wrote the arshyticles drew the plans and spoke on the subject he knew best-airplanes You may think of him as the designer of the Fly Baby winner of EAAs deshysign competition in 1962 Or perhaps youve read one of the dozens of authoritative books written by Peter over a half-century Petes paSSion was accuracy and many of us prevailed upon him to check out the facts on a little-known airplane or aviator He seemed to always have the right anshyswer and to know where to direct us for more information I cant recall anyone who knew more about airplanes than Peter Bowers did His freshyquent notes and contributions to Vintage Airplane and in particular our Mystery Plane column will be sorely missed Our condolences to his wife Alice and to his many friends and fans
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 3
~~8 AERO M A IL
Young Eagles I received a very interesting and
pleasing Christmas gift from my granddaughter and I thought you might be interested Her fourth grade class had the usual project to write about their summer experiences To my surprise she wrote about her Young Eagles flight with me I didnt realize the flight made such a memorable imshypression I have enclosed a copy of her report As you can see the computer skills of my 9-year-old granddaughter are much better than mine
Bob Hollenbaugh Middletown Ohio
Up Up and Away
By Natalie Young
For my wonderful Grandpa The summer of2000 was a summer [ will
never forget We did a lot ofexciting things such as going to Canada and seeing Niagara Falls but one of the most memorable things we did that year was going to Ohio and visitshying my grandparents My grandpa is a pilot and owns a small yellow Aeronca Chief which he rebuilt himself My grandpa had inshyvited my sister Chelsea and me to take a ride in his plane
We went to the airport on a sunny clear day [ couldnt wait for him to take me up in his plane The small plane could only fit one passenger and the pilot so Chelsea and [ had to take rums [ went first
My grandpa took me all around the plane checking the parts to see if they were working right and showing me what they were He called it a safety check Finally he told me [ could climb in [ felt excited yet nervous as [ climbed into the plane My grandpa handed me a pair of headphones that kept out the noise but still let us talk to each other I pulled on my headphones and my seatbelt and we were off
We rolled down the runway for a short amount of time and then we took off into the sky It was so much fun [ looked out the winshydow amazed [ could see for miles I could see lakes and rivers and trees [ could see cars and houses and if[ looked really hard I could even see tiny people Once my grandpa even
JUNE 2003
let me steer the plane [ liked it so much that when the plane landed [ asked if[ could go aga in the next day He said we could if the weather was okay
The next day we did go again even though it was a little cloudy and that time we even flew over their house We had another great flight and [ got a Young Eagles certificate
[ think that was the best summer Ive had so far
John Millers Poppy Drop I love those old stories of pilots
dropping stuff ou t of airplanes for whatever reason or occasion Apparshyently back in the olden days it was not a violation of any government regulations to do so I have come across many stories like John Miller and his Poppy Drop of 1928 in the April issue I have come across several similar tales most of them involving Curtiss Robins
In the Life and Times of Clarence Kavale an autobiography Kavale tells of his experiences as a barnstormer (1932-1936) in an OX-S Curtiss Robin He ranged from the Dakotas to Texas One of his tales involved beshying approached by a Pather of the Bride who asked Kavale if he would drop rice on the bridal couple as they exited the church Kavale could not turn down the money that was paid in advance figuring that if he blew the job he would just fly on He pracshyticed the day before the event in order to be sure of the territory To make a long story short everything went well until the couple emerged from the church Kavales ticket seller who was riding in the back seat empshytied the bag of rice into the slipstream only to see the wind carry the grain at least a block from the church Kavale flew on
When I was researching my book Shadows of Wings An Aviation History of West Central Illinois Vol [1910shy1945 I found another story in the Avon Sentinel a weekly of Avon Illishynois (Pop-700) Frank Clugsten was a local Chevrolet dealer who also had a Curtiss dealership He had a 40-acre airfield on the edge of town On the other side of town was a small prishyvate man-made lake where the towns snooty citizens had a club called Avondale Each Fourth of July they
held a celebration wherein they opened the facilities to the public and held the usual festivities appropriate to the occasion Someone came up with a fund raising idea that would help offset the expenses of the annual fireworks display The story involves guinea hens
The celebration committee sold tickets that contained various numshybers Certain numbers were attached to the legs of about a dozen guinea hens The tickets cost $1 each The idea was that Clugsten would fly his OX-S Robin low over the crowd at Avondale and a helper in the back seat would toss the guinea hens out the airplane for the onlookers to try to catch and retrieve their winnings As in the case of Clarence Kavale all went well until the cargo was released from the airplane The guinea hens were released from the airplane dishyrectly over the crowd who were supposed to catch the prizewinners with the numbers The guinea hens surprised the committee with their amazing ability to fly and the last anyone saw of them they were wingshying their way out of Fulton County
On a more somber note I was told a story similar to that of John Millers only this one did not involve any derring-do It had to do with releasshying rose petals over the cemetery as the bugler played taps at a Memorial Day ceremony held in Monmouth Illinois shortly after World War II The Monmouth Cemetery was on the approach to Runway 36 at Monshymouth airport at the time The ceremony took place near the apshyproach end of the airport thus [this flight] was no different than any other aircraft on final According to the pilot who told of this incident everything went according to plan As the bugler started to play the Piper Cub quietly slid over the gathering and the back-seat passenger dumped a bushel basket of rose petals on the gathered throng Some eyewitnesses were said to be in tears as the petals silently floated down to the moaning of the music
Enough said Jim Haynes
4
BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
SEND YOUR ANSWER TO EAA
VINTAGE AIRPLANE PO Box 3086
OSHKOSH WI 54903-3086 YOUR
ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER
THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
SION IN THE SEPTEMBER 2003 ISSUE
OF VINTAGE AIRPLANE
YOU CAN ALSO SEND YOUR REshy
SPONSE VIA E-MAIL SEND YOUR ANshy
SWER TO vintageeaaorg
BE SURE TO INCLUDE BOTH YOUR
NAME AND ADDRESS (ESPECIALLY
YOUR CITY AND STATE) IN THE BODY
OF YOUR NOTE AND PUT (MONTH)
MYSTERY PLANE IN THE SUBJECT
LINE
In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
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attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
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STRAIGHT Be LEVEL
I have been signing thank-you letters to be sent to members who have participated in the Friends of the Red Barn program for this year Once again many of our loyal members have chosen to help out and we re pleased to see some new members have also come on board This financial commitment by these members is much apprecishyated by the Vintage Aircraft Association and will enable us to better serve the total membership during our annual convention I would also like to say a personal thanks to these members I hope to see you all at Oshkosh this year
Having the Friends of the Red Barn fund has also given me the chance to discuss with members different subjects regarding the structure and operation of the Vinshytage Aircraft Association
Im often asked about the nashyture of the relationship between the Vintage Aircraft Association and the Experimental Aircraft Asshysociation Well in a nutshell heres how I view this subject
The Vintage Aircraft Association (VAA) is a Wisconsin corporation with its own bylaws and treasury It might be noted here that this is the case with the other two EAA divisions Warbirds of America and the International Aerobatic Club The National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI) is not an EAA division it is an affiliate organizashytion
The VAA has a letter of agreeshyment with the EAA as to how this relationship is carried forward on a daily basis The subjects of this agreement include the rendering of services to the VAA and what services VAA provides to EAA From
BY ESPIE BUTCH JOYCE PRESIDENT VINTAGE ASSOCIATION
EAAand VAA
the beginning of the division in 1972 we at the VAA (back then the Antiq ueClassic Division) agreed that to be a member of the division a member would also be a member of EAA This still applies today as well Its good for both parties Every time VAA gains a new member so does EAA That new member has access to the broader range of information and services that EAA can offer Strength in numbers also helps VAA particu larly with regard to government issues
Strength in
numbers also helps
VAA particularly with
regard to government
issues
By having a close working partshynership between VAA and EAA we bring EAA close to 10000 VAA members and VAA gives EAA a broader interest base wi t h memshybers interested in vintage airplanes EAA brings to VAA and VAA memshybers the support and voice of a larger membership-based organizashytion Membership in VAA gives members a common flag to rally aro und for a number of reasons including challenging over-regulashytion by the government technical issues and opportunities for socia l interaction at fly-ins and Chapter meetings This re lationship allows the VAA to play an important ro le during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh each year Our operation of the Vintage area of the convention
grounds gives each member both VAAer and the overall EAA memshybership the opportunity to see firsthand how much the VAA does to make yo u r stay for the week more en joyable Plus our presence at the convention serves to edushycate the public about our aircraft and the men and women who fly them We can only hope that in the future the VAA and EAA relashytionship wi ll remain as close as it has been during the past 32 years
Your Officers the Board of Dishyrectors HG Frautschy our Executive Director and Editor Theresa Books our VAA Adminisshytrative Assistant EAA Pres ident Tom Poberezny and all of the EAA staff continue to work hard to provide you the VAA member our best efforts to make being a VAA member a valued relationshyship As a member I ask each of you to ask a friend to join with us as a member so that he or she too can enjoy the VAA
As a final thought I would like to take a moment to express how proud I am of all of the mi li tary personnel of the United States and its coalition forces The bravery and commitment you have shown in your military mission and your dedication to the American people is without question the greatest I am proud to be an American
Lets all pull in the same direcshytion for the good of aviation Remember we are better together Join us and have it all ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE
VAA N EWS
VAA ELECTIONS In the center spread of this issue
youll find candidate biographies and a ballot for this years VAA elecshytions which will be ratified at the annual business meeting held durshying EAA AirVenture Oshkosh
Notice is hereby given that an anshynual business meeting of the members of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be held on Monday August 4 2003 at 930 am CDT in the tent next to the VAA Red Barn Headquarters during the 51st annual convention of the Experimental Airshycraft Association Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconshysin Notice is hereby further given that the annual election of officers and directors of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be conshyducted by ballot distributed to the members along with this June issue of Vintage Airplane Said ballot must be returned properly marked to the Ballot Tally Committee Vintage Airshycraft Association PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 and reshyceived no later than July 24 2003 The Nominating Committee subshymits the following list of candidates for vice president George Daubner for treasurer Charles W Harris for directors (eight total) David Benshynett Bob Brauer John S Jack Copeland Philip Coulson Roger Gomoll Dale A Gustafson Eugene E Morris and Wes Schmid
EAA AIRVENTURE PLANNING The Internet has allowed us to
streamline planning for your trip to EAA AirVenture Visit EAAs ofshyficial convention website at wwwairventureorg for up-to-date inshyformation regarding convention highlights and events including the 100th anniversary of flight celebrashytion A complete schedule of forums is also presented throughout the week New features and tools are being added to the website on a regular basis so be
JUNE 2003
sure to check back often Also use the EAA Flight Planner to flight plan your trip You can access it through the VAA website at wwwvintageaircra(t01g
FRIENDS OF THE RED BARN We are pleased to announce that
many of you have responded to the VAAs annual appeal for help with funding VAA activities during EAA AirVenture In the July issue well be publishing a list of volunteers who have participated in the VAA Friends of the Red Barn Remember any funds sent and received prior to July I 2003 will be applied to the 2003 campaign and those received after that date will be placed in the fund for 2004 with any benefits then available during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2004
See page four for more details on the VAA Friends of the Red Barn
CALL FOR VAA HALL OF FAME NOMINATIONS
If you wish to nominate an indishyvidual who you believe has made a significant contribution to the adshyvancement of aviation between 1950 and the present day please go to wwwvintageaircra(torgprogramsho(J ormhtml and download the nominashytion form Add supporting material and send it to
Charles W Harris VAA Hall of Fame PO Box 470350
Tulsa OK 74147-0350 Be as thorough and objective as
possible Attach copies of materials you deem appropriate and helpful to the committee
The person you nominate can be a citizen of any country and may be living or deceased The nomishynees contribution could be in the areas of flying design mechanical or aerodynamic developments adshyministration writing some other vital and relevant field or any comshybination of fields that support aviation To be considered for inducshy
tion into the VAA Hall of Fame durshying 2004 petitions must be received by September 30 2003
If youre unable to access the Inshyternet call VAA Administrative Assistant Theresa Books and ask her to fax or mail you a copy of the form She can be reached at 920shy426-6110
NOTICE OF ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING
In accordance with the fourth restated bylaws of the Experimenshytal Aircraft Association Inc (Article Seven Section I) Notice of all meetings shall be mailed by first class mail to each member or pubshylished in any publication of the corporation which is mailed to all members or to all families particishypating in a Family Membership Program and such notice shall be sufficient if the mailing is made at least twenty (20) days before the scheduled meeting
Notice is hereby given that the Annual Business Meeting of the members will be held at the Theshyater in the Woods on Sunday August 3 2003 at 100 pm (CDT) at the 51 st annual convention of the Experimental Aircraft Associashytion Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconsin
Notice is hereby further given that the election will be held as the first item on the agenda at the business meeting
Five Class II directors (three-year terms) and one Class III director (one-year term) shall be elected In accordance with the fourth reshystated bylaws of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc (Article Eight Section IV) II All nominees whether properly nominated by petition or by the Nominating Committee shall have their names presented to all members no later than sixty (60) days prior to the Annual Membership Meeting
2
VAA VOLUNTEER INFORMATION FOR EAA AIRVENTURE 2003
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003 will be held at Wittman Regional Airshyport in Oshkosh Wisconsin from Tuesday July 29 through Monday August 4 Volunteers will again be needed to staff the many different committees in the Vintage area
If you are going to attend EAA AirVenture 2003 and would like to participate in activities as a volunshyteer drop a note to the chairperson of the area in which you would like to volunteer It would be helpful to the chairperson in his or her planshyning for the event if you could also include your previous experience or training and the dates of your arrival and departure
The following committees will use volunteer help
PAST GRAND CHAMPIONS Steve Krog 262-966-7627 sskrogaolcom
SECURITY and FLIGHT LINE Geoff Robison 260-493-4724 chief7025aolcom
TYPECLUBHQ Roger Gomoll 507-288-2810 rgomollhotmailcom
VAAPARKING George Daubner 262-673-5885 vaaflyboyaolcom
OTHER CONTACTS Teresa Lautenschlager Operation Protect Our Planes tlautenschlagereaaorg
Anna Osborn Volunteer Center annajohnktccom
Butch Joyce President 336-393-0344 windsockaolcom
HG Frautschy Executive Director 920-426-4825 hgfrautschyeaaorg
The Nominating Committee has submitted the following candishydates
Class II John Baugh Jack Harrington Verne Jobst Bob Reece Alan Shackleton Frank P Sperandeo III
Class III Paul D Seehafer Barry Valentine
Alan Shackleton Secretary EAA Board of Directors
GREAT WEBSITES Dave Bahnson is an avid pri shy
vate collector of World War I wooden airplane propellers and
he recent ly started a website wwwwoodenpropellercom dedishycated to that pursuit
The site contains information about identifying propellers as well as some facts about design and conshystruction Hes continually adding photos to the site to help others identify their propellers
Have you ever wondered just what was going on inside a roshytary engine while it was running So did Matt Keveney A mechanishycal engineer hes been fascinated with the workings of various powerplants To help him visualshyize the process he created web-based animations of both inshyternal combustion and steam engines Spend a few moments at wwwkeveneycom and enjoy the work Matt put into each of his anshyimated illustrations
PETER BOWERS Were sorry to report that Peter Bowers EAA 977 and VAA 7563 passed
away on April 27 2003 Its hard to categorize Petes contributions because his work was so wide ranging you hardly knew where hed pop up next An avid model airplane builder and designer as a young man he quickly took to full-size aircraft and spent 36 years as an aeronautical engineer at Boeing But there were plenty of other things to do and Pete wrote the arshyticles drew the plans and spoke on the subject he knew best-airplanes You may think of him as the designer of the Fly Baby winner of EAAs deshysign competition in 1962 Or perhaps youve read one of the dozens of authoritative books written by Peter over a half-century Petes paSSion was accuracy and many of us prevailed upon him to check out the facts on a little-known airplane or aviator He seemed to always have the right anshyswer and to know where to direct us for more information I cant recall anyone who knew more about airplanes than Peter Bowers did His freshyquent notes and contributions to Vintage Airplane and in particular our Mystery Plane column will be sorely missed Our condolences to his wife Alice and to his many friends and fans
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 3
~~8 AERO M A IL
Young Eagles I received a very interesting and
pleasing Christmas gift from my granddaughter and I thought you might be interested Her fourth grade class had the usual project to write about their summer experiences To my surprise she wrote about her Young Eagles flight with me I didnt realize the flight made such a memorable imshypression I have enclosed a copy of her report As you can see the computer skills of my 9-year-old granddaughter are much better than mine
Bob Hollenbaugh Middletown Ohio
Up Up and Away
By Natalie Young
For my wonderful Grandpa The summer of2000 was a summer [ will
never forget We did a lot ofexciting things such as going to Canada and seeing Niagara Falls but one of the most memorable things we did that year was going to Ohio and visitshying my grandparents My grandpa is a pilot and owns a small yellow Aeronca Chief which he rebuilt himself My grandpa had inshyvited my sister Chelsea and me to take a ride in his plane
We went to the airport on a sunny clear day [ couldnt wait for him to take me up in his plane The small plane could only fit one passenger and the pilot so Chelsea and [ had to take rums [ went first
My grandpa took me all around the plane checking the parts to see if they were working right and showing me what they were He called it a safety check Finally he told me [ could climb in [ felt excited yet nervous as [ climbed into the plane My grandpa handed me a pair of headphones that kept out the noise but still let us talk to each other I pulled on my headphones and my seatbelt and we were off
We rolled down the runway for a short amount of time and then we took off into the sky It was so much fun [ looked out the winshydow amazed [ could see for miles I could see lakes and rivers and trees [ could see cars and houses and if[ looked really hard I could even see tiny people Once my grandpa even
JUNE 2003
let me steer the plane [ liked it so much that when the plane landed [ asked if[ could go aga in the next day He said we could if the weather was okay
The next day we did go again even though it was a little cloudy and that time we even flew over their house We had another great flight and [ got a Young Eagles certificate
[ think that was the best summer Ive had so far
John Millers Poppy Drop I love those old stories of pilots
dropping stuff ou t of airplanes for whatever reason or occasion Apparshyently back in the olden days it was not a violation of any government regulations to do so I have come across many stories like John Miller and his Poppy Drop of 1928 in the April issue I have come across several similar tales most of them involving Curtiss Robins
In the Life and Times of Clarence Kavale an autobiography Kavale tells of his experiences as a barnstormer (1932-1936) in an OX-S Curtiss Robin He ranged from the Dakotas to Texas One of his tales involved beshying approached by a Pather of the Bride who asked Kavale if he would drop rice on the bridal couple as they exited the church Kavale could not turn down the money that was paid in advance figuring that if he blew the job he would just fly on He pracshyticed the day before the event in order to be sure of the territory To make a long story short everything went well until the couple emerged from the church Kavales ticket seller who was riding in the back seat empshytied the bag of rice into the slipstream only to see the wind carry the grain at least a block from the church Kavale flew on
When I was researching my book Shadows of Wings An Aviation History of West Central Illinois Vol [1910shy1945 I found another story in the Avon Sentinel a weekly of Avon Illishynois (Pop-700) Frank Clugsten was a local Chevrolet dealer who also had a Curtiss dealership He had a 40-acre airfield on the edge of town On the other side of town was a small prishyvate man-made lake where the towns snooty citizens had a club called Avondale Each Fourth of July they
held a celebration wherein they opened the facilities to the public and held the usual festivities appropriate to the occasion Someone came up with a fund raising idea that would help offset the expenses of the annual fireworks display The story involves guinea hens
The celebration committee sold tickets that contained various numshybers Certain numbers were attached to the legs of about a dozen guinea hens The tickets cost $1 each The idea was that Clugsten would fly his OX-S Robin low over the crowd at Avondale and a helper in the back seat would toss the guinea hens out the airplane for the onlookers to try to catch and retrieve their winnings As in the case of Clarence Kavale all went well until the cargo was released from the airplane The guinea hens were released from the airplane dishyrectly over the crowd who were supposed to catch the prizewinners with the numbers The guinea hens surprised the committee with their amazing ability to fly and the last anyone saw of them they were wingshying their way out of Fulton County
On a more somber note I was told a story similar to that of John Millers only this one did not involve any derring-do It had to do with releasshying rose petals over the cemetery as the bugler played taps at a Memorial Day ceremony held in Monmouth Illinois shortly after World War II The Monmouth Cemetery was on the approach to Runway 36 at Monshymouth airport at the time The ceremony took place near the apshyproach end of the airport thus [this flight] was no different than any other aircraft on final According to the pilot who told of this incident everything went according to plan As the bugler started to play the Piper Cub quietly slid over the gathering and the back-seat passenger dumped a bushel basket of rose petals on the gathered throng Some eyewitnesses were said to be in tears as the petals silently floated down to the moaning of the music
Enough said Jim Haynes
4
BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
SEND YOUR ANSWER TO EAA
VINTAGE AIRPLANE PO Box 3086
OSHKOSH WI 54903-3086 YOUR
ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER
THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
SION IN THE SEPTEMBER 2003 ISSUE
OF VINTAGE AIRPLANE
YOU CAN ALSO SEND YOUR REshy
SPONSE VIA E-MAIL SEND YOUR ANshy
SWER TO vintageeaaorg
BE SURE TO INCLUDE BOTH YOUR
NAME AND ADDRESS (ESPECIALLY
YOUR CITY AND STATE) IN THE BODY
OF YOUR NOTE AND PUT (MONTH)
MYSTERY PLANE IN THE SUBJECT
LINE
In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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Classified Display Ads One column wide (2167 inches) by I 2 or 3 inches high at $20 per inch Black and wh ite only and no frequency discounts
Advertising Closing Dates 10th of secshyond month prior to desired issue date (ie January 10 is the closing date for the March issue) VAA reserves the right to reshyject any advertising in conflict with its policies Rates cover one insertion per is shysue Classified ads are not accepted via phone Payment must accompany order Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426shy4828) or e-mail (classadseaaorg) using credit card payment (all cards accepted) Include name on card complete address type of card card number and expiration date Make checks payable to EAA Ad shydress advertising correspondence to EAA Publications Classified Ad Manager PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
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Gene Morris 5936 Steve Court
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Stoughton WI 53589 608-877-8485
daraprilairecom
Geoff Robison 1521 E MacGregor Dr New Haven IN 46774
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SH II Wes Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue
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Copyright copy2003 by Ihe EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association All rights reserved
VINTAGE AIRPLANE (ISSN 0091-6943) IPM 40032445 is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association of the Experimental Aircra~ Association ane is published monthly at EAA Aviation Center 3000 Poberezny Rd bull RO Box 3086 Oshkosh Wisconsin 54903-3086 Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh Wisconsin 54901 ane at additional mailing offices POSTMASTER Send address changes to EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Return Canadian issues to Station A PO Box 54 Windsor ON N9A 6J5 FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow alleast two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APC addresses via surface mail ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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VAA N EWS
VAA ELECTIONS In the center spread of this issue
youll find candidate biographies and a ballot for this years VAA elecshytions which will be ratified at the annual business meeting held durshying EAA AirVenture Oshkosh
Notice is hereby given that an anshynual business meeting of the members of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be held on Monday August 4 2003 at 930 am CDT in the tent next to the VAA Red Barn Headquarters during the 51st annual convention of the Experimental Airshycraft Association Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconshysin Notice is hereby further given that the annual election of officers and directors of the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association will be conshyducted by ballot distributed to the members along with this June issue of Vintage Airplane Said ballot must be returned properly marked to the Ballot Tally Committee Vintage Airshycraft Association PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 and reshyceived no later than July 24 2003 The Nominating Committee subshymits the following list of candidates for vice president George Daubner for treasurer Charles W Harris for directors (eight total) David Benshynett Bob Brauer John S Jack Copeland Philip Coulson Roger Gomoll Dale A Gustafson Eugene E Morris and Wes Schmid
EAA AIRVENTURE PLANNING The Internet has allowed us to
streamline planning for your trip to EAA AirVenture Visit EAAs ofshyficial convention website at wwwairventureorg for up-to-date inshyformation regarding convention highlights and events including the 100th anniversary of flight celebrashytion A complete schedule of forums is also presented throughout the week New features and tools are being added to the website on a regular basis so be
JUNE 2003
sure to check back often Also use the EAA Flight Planner to flight plan your trip You can access it through the VAA website at wwwvintageaircra(t01g
FRIENDS OF THE RED BARN We are pleased to announce that
many of you have responded to the VAAs annual appeal for help with funding VAA activities during EAA AirVenture In the July issue well be publishing a list of volunteers who have participated in the VAA Friends of the Red Barn Remember any funds sent and received prior to July I 2003 will be applied to the 2003 campaign and those received after that date will be placed in the fund for 2004 with any benefits then available during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2004
See page four for more details on the VAA Friends of the Red Barn
CALL FOR VAA HALL OF FAME NOMINATIONS
If you wish to nominate an indishyvidual who you believe has made a significant contribution to the adshyvancement of aviation between 1950 and the present day please go to wwwvintageaircra(torgprogramsho(J ormhtml and download the nominashytion form Add supporting material and send it to
Charles W Harris VAA Hall of Fame PO Box 470350
Tulsa OK 74147-0350 Be as thorough and objective as
possible Attach copies of materials you deem appropriate and helpful to the committee
The person you nominate can be a citizen of any country and may be living or deceased The nomishynees contribution could be in the areas of flying design mechanical or aerodynamic developments adshyministration writing some other vital and relevant field or any comshybination of fields that support aviation To be considered for inducshy
tion into the VAA Hall of Fame durshying 2004 petitions must be received by September 30 2003
If youre unable to access the Inshyternet call VAA Administrative Assistant Theresa Books and ask her to fax or mail you a copy of the form She can be reached at 920shy426-6110
NOTICE OF ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING
In accordance with the fourth restated bylaws of the Experimenshytal Aircraft Association Inc (Article Seven Section I) Notice of all meetings shall be mailed by first class mail to each member or pubshylished in any publication of the corporation which is mailed to all members or to all families particishypating in a Family Membership Program and such notice shall be sufficient if the mailing is made at least twenty (20) days before the scheduled meeting
Notice is hereby given that the Annual Business Meeting of the members will be held at the Theshyater in the Woods on Sunday August 3 2003 at 100 pm (CDT) at the 51 st annual convention of the Experimental Aircraft Associashytion Inc Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconsin
Notice is hereby further given that the election will be held as the first item on the agenda at the business meeting
Five Class II directors (three-year terms) and one Class III director (one-year term) shall be elected In accordance with the fourth reshystated bylaws of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc (Article Eight Section IV) II All nominees whether properly nominated by petition or by the Nominating Committee shall have their names presented to all members no later than sixty (60) days prior to the Annual Membership Meeting
2
VAA VOLUNTEER INFORMATION FOR EAA AIRVENTURE 2003
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003 will be held at Wittman Regional Airshyport in Oshkosh Wisconsin from Tuesday July 29 through Monday August 4 Volunteers will again be needed to staff the many different committees in the Vintage area
If you are going to attend EAA AirVenture 2003 and would like to participate in activities as a volunshyteer drop a note to the chairperson of the area in which you would like to volunteer It would be helpful to the chairperson in his or her planshyning for the event if you could also include your previous experience or training and the dates of your arrival and departure
The following committees will use volunteer help
PAST GRAND CHAMPIONS Steve Krog 262-966-7627 sskrogaolcom
SECURITY and FLIGHT LINE Geoff Robison 260-493-4724 chief7025aolcom
TYPECLUBHQ Roger Gomoll 507-288-2810 rgomollhotmailcom
VAAPARKING George Daubner 262-673-5885 vaaflyboyaolcom
OTHER CONTACTS Teresa Lautenschlager Operation Protect Our Planes tlautenschlagereaaorg
Anna Osborn Volunteer Center annajohnktccom
Butch Joyce President 336-393-0344 windsockaolcom
HG Frautschy Executive Director 920-426-4825 hgfrautschyeaaorg
The Nominating Committee has submitted the following candishydates
Class II John Baugh Jack Harrington Verne Jobst Bob Reece Alan Shackleton Frank P Sperandeo III
Class III Paul D Seehafer Barry Valentine
Alan Shackleton Secretary EAA Board of Directors
GREAT WEBSITES Dave Bahnson is an avid pri shy
vate collector of World War I wooden airplane propellers and
he recent ly started a website wwwwoodenpropellercom dedishycated to that pursuit
The site contains information about identifying propellers as well as some facts about design and conshystruction Hes continually adding photos to the site to help others identify their propellers
Have you ever wondered just what was going on inside a roshytary engine while it was running So did Matt Keveney A mechanishycal engineer hes been fascinated with the workings of various powerplants To help him visualshyize the process he created web-based animations of both inshyternal combustion and steam engines Spend a few moments at wwwkeveneycom and enjoy the work Matt put into each of his anshyimated illustrations
PETER BOWERS Were sorry to report that Peter Bowers EAA 977 and VAA 7563 passed
away on April 27 2003 Its hard to categorize Petes contributions because his work was so wide ranging you hardly knew where hed pop up next An avid model airplane builder and designer as a young man he quickly took to full-size aircraft and spent 36 years as an aeronautical engineer at Boeing But there were plenty of other things to do and Pete wrote the arshyticles drew the plans and spoke on the subject he knew best-airplanes You may think of him as the designer of the Fly Baby winner of EAAs deshysign competition in 1962 Or perhaps youve read one of the dozens of authoritative books written by Peter over a half-century Petes paSSion was accuracy and many of us prevailed upon him to check out the facts on a little-known airplane or aviator He seemed to always have the right anshyswer and to know where to direct us for more information I cant recall anyone who knew more about airplanes than Peter Bowers did His freshyquent notes and contributions to Vintage Airplane and in particular our Mystery Plane column will be sorely missed Our condolences to his wife Alice and to his many friends and fans
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 3
~~8 AERO M A IL
Young Eagles I received a very interesting and
pleasing Christmas gift from my granddaughter and I thought you might be interested Her fourth grade class had the usual project to write about their summer experiences To my surprise she wrote about her Young Eagles flight with me I didnt realize the flight made such a memorable imshypression I have enclosed a copy of her report As you can see the computer skills of my 9-year-old granddaughter are much better than mine
Bob Hollenbaugh Middletown Ohio
Up Up and Away
By Natalie Young
For my wonderful Grandpa The summer of2000 was a summer [ will
never forget We did a lot ofexciting things such as going to Canada and seeing Niagara Falls but one of the most memorable things we did that year was going to Ohio and visitshying my grandparents My grandpa is a pilot and owns a small yellow Aeronca Chief which he rebuilt himself My grandpa had inshyvited my sister Chelsea and me to take a ride in his plane
We went to the airport on a sunny clear day [ couldnt wait for him to take me up in his plane The small plane could only fit one passenger and the pilot so Chelsea and [ had to take rums [ went first
My grandpa took me all around the plane checking the parts to see if they were working right and showing me what they were He called it a safety check Finally he told me [ could climb in [ felt excited yet nervous as [ climbed into the plane My grandpa handed me a pair of headphones that kept out the noise but still let us talk to each other I pulled on my headphones and my seatbelt and we were off
We rolled down the runway for a short amount of time and then we took off into the sky It was so much fun [ looked out the winshydow amazed [ could see for miles I could see lakes and rivers and trees [ could see cars and houses and if[ looked really hard I could even see tiny people Once my grandpa even
JUNE 2003
let me steer the plane [ liked it so much that when the plane landed [ asked if[ could go aga in the next day He said we could if the weather was okay
The next day we did go again even though it was a little cloudy and that time we even flew over their house We had another great flight and [ got a Young Eagles certificate
[ think that was the best summer Ive had so far
John Millers Poppy Drop I love those old stories of pilots
dropping stuff ou t of airplanes for whatever reason or occasion Apparshyently back in the olden days it was not a violation of any government regulations to do so I have come across many stories like John Miller and his Poppy Drop of 1928 in the April issue I have come across several similar tales most of them involving Curtiss Robins
In the Life and Times of Clarence Kavale an autobiography Kavale tells of his experiences as a barnstormer (1932-1936) in an OX-S Curtiss Robin He ranged from the Dakotas to Texas One of his tales involved beshying approached by a Pather of the Bride who asked Kavale if he would drop rice on the bridal couple as they exited the church Kavale could not turn down the money that was paid in advance figuring that if he blew the job he would just fly on He pracshyticed the day before the event in order to be sure of the territory To make a long story short everything went well until the couple emerged from the church Kavales ticket seller who was riding in the back seat empshytied the bag of rice into the slipstream only to see the wind carry the grain at least a block from the church Kavale flew on
When I was researching my book Shadows of Wings An Aviation History of West Central Illinois Vol [1910shy1945 I found another story in the Avon Sentinel a weekly of Avon Illishynois (Pop-700) Frank Clugsten was a local Chevrolet dealer who also had a Curtiss dealership He had a 40-acre airfield on the edge of town On the other side of town was a small prishyvate man-made lake where the towns snooty citizens had a club called Avondale Each Fourth of July they
held a celebration wherein they opened the facilities to the public and held the usual festivities appropriate to the occasion Someone came up with a fund raising idea that would help offset the expenses of the annual fireworks display The story involves guinea hens
The celebration committee sold tickets that contained various numshybers Certain numbers were attached to the legs of about a dozen guinea hens The tickets cost $1 each The idea was that Clugsten would fly his OX-S Robin low over the crowd at Avondale and a helper in the back seat would toss the guinea hens out the airplane for the onlookers to try to catch and retrieve their winnings As in the case of Clarence Kavale all went well until the cargo was released from the airplane The guinea hens were released from the airplane dishyrectly over the crowd who were supposed to catch the prizewinners with the numbers The guinea hens surprised the committee with their amazing ability to fly and the last anyone saw of them they were wingshying their way out of Fulton County
On a more somber note I was told a story similar to that of John Millers only this one did not involve any derring-do It had to do with releasshying rose petals over the cemetery as the bugler played taps at a Memorial Day ceremony held in Monmouth Illinois shortly after World War II The Monmouth Cemetery was on the approach to Runway 36 at Monshymouth airport at the time The ceremony took place near the apshyproach end of the airport thus [this flight] was no different than any other aircraft on final According to the pilot who told of this incident everything went according to plan As the bugler started to play the Piper Cub quietly slid over the gathering and the back-seat passenger dumped a bushel basket of rose petals on the gathered throng Some eyewitnesses were said to be in tears as the petals silently floated down to the moaning of the music
Enough said Jim Haynes
4
BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
SEND YOUR ANSWER TO EAA
VINTAGE AIRPLANE PO Box 3086
OSHKOSH WI 54903-3086 YOUR
ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER
THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
SION IN THE SEPTEMBER 2003 ISSUE
OF VINTAGE AIRPLANE
YOU CAN ALSO SEND YOUR REshy
SPONSE VIA E-MAIL SEND YOUR ANshy
SWER TO vintageeaaorg
BE SURE TO INCLUDE BOTH YOUR
NAME AND ADDRESS (ESPECIALLY
YOUR CITY AND STATE) IN THE BODY
OF YOUR NOTE AND PUT (MONTH)
MYSTERY PLANE IN THE SUBJECT
LINE
In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
by shopping theSEE MANY ADDITIONAL ITEMS
AT THE VAA RED BARN DURING Vintage section of AIRVENTURE 2003 EAA Aeronautica
ORDER ONLINE hHpshopeaaorg
3-D VAA Patch VOO548 $399 This 3-dimensional patch is well tailored and will look great on your clothing and accessories
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
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Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
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VAA VOLUNTEER INFORMATION FOR EAA AIRVENTURE 2003
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2003 will be held at Wittman Regional Airshyport in Oshkosh Wisconsin from Tuesday July 29 through Monday August 4 Volunteers will again be needed to staff the many different committees in the Vintage area
If you are going to attend EAA AirVenture 2003 and would like to participate in activities as a volunshyteer drop a note to the chairperson of the area in which you would like to volunteer It would be helpful to the chairperson in his or her planshyning for the event if you could also include your previous experience or training and the dates of your arrival and departure
The following committees will use volunteer help
PAST GRAND CHAMPIONS Steve Krog 262-966-7627 sskrogaolcom
SECURITY and FLIGHT LINE Geoff Robison 260-493-4724 chief7025aolcom
TYPECLUBHQ Roger Gomoll 507-288-2810 rgomollhotmailcom
VAAPARKING George Daubner 262-673-5885 vaaflyboyaolcom
OTHER CONTACTS Teresa Lautenschlager Operation Protect Our Planes tlautenschlagereaaorg
Anna Osborn Volunteer Center annajohnktccom
Butch Joyce President 336-393-0344 windsockaolcom
HG Frautschy Executive Director 920-426-4825 hgfrautschyeaaorg
The Nominating Committee has submitted the following candishydates
Class II John Baugh Jack Harrington Verne Jobst Bob Reece Alan Shackleton Frank P Sperandeo III
Class III Paul D Seehafer Barry Valentine
Alan Shackleton Secretary EAA Board of Directors
GREAT WEBSITES Dave Bahnson is an avid pri shy
vate collector of World War I wooden airplane propellers and
he recent ly started a website wwwwoodenpropellercom dedishycated to that pursuit
The site contains information about identifying propellers as well as some facts about design and conshystruction Hes continually adding photos to the site to help others identify their propellers
Have you ever wondered just what was going on inside a roshytary engine while it was running So did Matt Keveney A mechanishycal engineer hes been fascinated with the workings of various powerplants To help him visualshyize the process he created web-based animations of both inshyternal combustion and steam engines Spend a few moments at wwwkeveneycom and enjoy the work Matt put into each of his anshyimated illustrations
PETER BOWERS Were sorry to report that Peter Bowers EAA 977 and VAA 7563 passed
away on April 27 2003 Its hard to categorize Petes contributions because his work was so wide ranging you hardly knew where hed pop up next An avid model airplane builder and designer as a young man he quickly took to full-size aircraft and spent 36 years as an aeronautical engineer at Boeing But there were plenty of other things to do and Pete wrote the arshyticles drew the plans and spoke on the subject he knew best-airplanes You may think of him as the designer of the Fly Baby winner of EAAs deshysign competition in 1962 Or perhaps youve read one of the dozens of authoritative books written by Peter over a half-century Petes paSSion was accuracy and many of us prevailed upon him to check out the facts on a little-known airplane or aviator He seemed to always have the right anshyswer and to know where to direct us for more information I cant recall anyone who knew more about airplanes than Peter Bowers did His freshyquent notes and contributions to Vintage Airplane and in particular our Mystery Plane column will be sorely missed Our condolences to his wife Alice and to his many friends and fans
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 3
~~8 AERO M A IL
Young Eagles I received a very interesting and
pleasing Christmas gift from my granddaughter and I thought you might be interested Her fourth grade class had the usual project to write about their summer experiences To my surprise she wrote about her Young Eagles flight with me I didnt realize the flight made such a memorable imshypression I have enclosed a copy of her report As you can see the computer skills of my 9-year-old granddaughter are much better than mine
Bob Hollenbaugh Middletown Ohio
Up Up and Away
By Natalie Young
For my wonderful Grandpa The summer of2000 was a summer [ will
never forget We did a lot ofexciting things such as going to Canada and seeing Niagara Falls but one of the most memorable things we did that year was going to Ohio and visitshying my grandparents My grandpa is a pilot and owns a small yellow Aeronca Chief which he rebuilt himself My grandpa had inshyvited my sister Chelsea and me to take a ride in his plane
We went to the airport on a sunny clear day [ couldnt wait for him to take me up in his plane The small plane could only fit one passenger and the pilot so Chelsea and [ had to take rums [ went first
My grandpa took me all around the plane checking the parts to see if they were working right and showing me what they were He called it a safety check Finally he told me [ could climb in [ felt excited yet nervous as [ climbed into the plane My grandpa handed me a pair of headphones that kept out the noise but still let us talk to each other I pulled on my headphones and my seatbelt and we were off
We rolled down the runway for a short amount of time and then we took off into the sky It was so much fun [ looked out the winshydow amazed [ could see for miles I could see lakes and rivers and trees [ could see cars and houses and if[ looked really hard I could even see tiny people Once my grandpa even
JUNE 2003
let me steer the plane [ liked it so much that when the plane landed [ asked if[ could go aga in the next day He said we could if the weather was okay
The next day we did go again even though it was a little cloudy and that time we even flew over their house We had another great flight and [ got a Young Eagles certificate
[ think that was the best summer Ive had so far
John Millers Poppy Drop I love those old stories of pilots
dropping stuff ou t of airplanes for whatever reason or occasion Apparshyently back in the olden days it was not a violation of any government regulations to do so I have come across many stories like John Miller and his Poppy Drop of 1928 in the April issue I have come across several similar tales most of them involving Curtiss Robins
In the Life and Times of Clarence Kavale an autobiography Kavale tells of his experiences as a barnstormer (1932-1936) in an OX-S Curtiss Robin He ranged from the Dakotas to Texas One of his tales involved beshying approached by a Pather of the Bride who asked Kavale if he would drop rice on the bridal couple as they exited the church Kavale could not turn down the money that was paid in advance figuring that if he blew the job he would just fly on He pracshyticed the day before the event in order to be sure of the territory To make a long story short everything went well until the couple emerged from the church Kavales ticket seller who was riding in the back seat empshytied the bag of rice into the slipstream only to see the wind carry the grain at least a block from the church Kavale flew on
When I was researching my book Shadows of Wings An Aviation History of West Central Illinois Vol [1910shy1945 I found another story in the Avon Sentinel a weekly of Avon Illishynois (Pop-700) Frank Clugsten was a local Chevrolet dealer who also had a Curtiss dealership He had a 40-acre airfield on the edge of town On the other side of town was a small prishyvate man-made lake where the towns snooty citizens had a club called Avondale Each Fourth of July they
held a celebration wherein they opened the facilities to the public and held the usual festivities appropriate to the occasion Someone came up with a fund raising idea that would help offset the expenses of the annual fireworks display The story involves guinea hens
The celebration committee sold tickets that contained various numshybers Certain numbers were attached to the legs of about a dozen guinea hens The tickets cost $1 each The idea was that Clugsten would fly his OX-S Robin low over the crowd at Avondale and a helper in the back seat would toss the guinea hens out the airplane for the onlookers to try to catch and retrieve their winnings As in the case of Clarence Kavale all went well until the cargo was released from the airplane The guinea hens were released from the airplane dishyrectly over the crowd who were supposed to catch the prizewinners with the numbers The guinea hens surprised the committee with their amazing ability to fly and the last anyone saw of them they were wingshying their way out of Fulton County
On a more somber note I was told a story similar to that of John Millers only this one did not involve any derring-do It had to do with releasshying rose petals over the cemetery as the bugler played taps at a Memorial Day ceremony held in Monmouth Illinois shortly after World War II The Monmouth Cemetery was on the approach to Runway 36 at Monshymouth airport at the time The ceremony took place near the apshyproach end of the airport thus [this flight] was no different than any other aircraft on final According to the pilot who told of this incident everything went according to plan As the bugler started to play the Piper Cub quietly slid over the gathering and the back-seat passenger dumped a bushel basket of rose petals on the gathered throng Some eyewitnesses were said to be in tears as the petals silently floated down to the moaning of the music
Enough said Jim Haynes
4
BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
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THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
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In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
(and those who love airplanes)
For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
FAA Certified Repair Station XHYR068L
Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
wwwradialexhaustsystemscom
Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
Paul Workman OHIO AIRCRAFT INTERIORS
Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
8007946560
The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
VIIiTAGE AERO fAPgtRICJ LTD PURVEYORS =
Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
Imported airualt Linen (beige and tan) German WW I Lozenge print fabril
Fabril tapes frayed straight pinked and early AmerilOll pinked Waxed nnen lacing lord
Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread
Vinloge Aero Fobrics lid 316 Creekwood Dr BOflklown KY 40004 lei 502-349-1429 fox 502-349-142B websile WWWOVclolhlom
Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
Greensboro NC 27425 Hartford WI 53027 336-668-3650 262-673-5885
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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~~8 AERO M A IL
Young Eagles I received a very interesting and
pleasing Christmas gift from my granddaughter and I thought you might be interested Her fourth grade class had the usual project to write about their summer experiences To my surprise she wrote about her Young Eagles flight with me I didnt realize the flight made such a memorable imshypression I have enclosed a copy of her report As you can see the computer skills of my 9-year-old granddaughter are much better than mine
Bob Hollenbaugh Middletown Ohio
Up Up and Away
By Natalie Young
For my wonderful Grandpa The summer of2000 was a summer [ will
never forget We did a lot ofexciting things such as going to Canada and seeing Niagara Falls but one of the most memorable things we did that year was going to Ohio and visitshying my grandparents My grandpa is a pilot and owns a small yellow Aeronca Chief which he rebuilt himself My grandpa had inshyvited my sister Chelsea and me to take a ride in his plane
We went to the airport on a sunny clear day [ couldnt wait for him to take me up in his plane The small plane could only fit one passenger and the pilot so Chelsea and [ had to take rums [ went first
My grandpa took me all around the plane checking the parts to see if they were working right and showing me what they were He called it a safety check Finally he told me [ could climb in [ felt excited yet nervous as [ climbed into the plane My grandpa handed me a pair of headphones that kept out the noise but still let us talk to each other I pulled on my headphones and my seatbelt and we were off
We rolled down the runway for a short amount of time and then we took off into the sky It was so much fun [ looked out the winshydow amazed [ could see for miles I could see lakes and rivers and trees [ could see cars and houses and if[ looked really hard I could even see tiny people Once my grandpa even
JUNE 2003
let me steer the plane [ liked it so much that when the plane landed [ asked if[ could go aga in the next day He said we could if the weather was okay
The next day we did go again even though it was a little cloudy and that time we even flew over their house We had another great flight and [ got a Young Eagles certificate
[ think that was the best summer Ive had so far
John Millers Poppy Drop I love those old stories of pilots
dropping stuff ou t of airplanes for whatever reason or occasion Apparshyently back in the olden days it was not a violation of any government regulations to do so I have come across many stories like John Miller and his Poppy Drop of 1928 in the April issue I have come across several similar tales most of them involving Curtiss Robins
In the Life and Times of Clarence Kavale an autobiography Kavale tells of his experiences as a barnstormer (1932-1936) in an OX-S Curtiss Robin He ranged from the Dakotas to Texas One of his tales involved beshying approached by a Pather of the Bride who asked Kavale if he would drop rice on the bridal couple as they exited the church Kavale could not turn down the money that was paid in advance figuring that if he blew the job he would just fly on He pracshyticed the day before the event in order to be sure of the territory To make a long story short everything went well until the couple emerged from the church Kavales ticket seller who was riding in the back seat empshytied the bag of rice into the slipstream only to see the wind carry the grain at least a block from the church Kavale flew on
When I was researching my book Shadows of Wings An Aviation History of West Central Illinois Vol [1910shy1945 I found another story in the Avon Sentinel a weekly of Avon Illishynois (Pop-700) Frank Clugsten was a local Chevrolet dealer who also had a Curtiss dealership He had a 40-acre airfield on the edge of town On the other side of town was a small prishyvate man-made lake where the towns snooty citizens had a club called Avondale Each Fourth of July they
held a celebration wherein they opened the facilities to the public and held the usual festivities appropriate to the occasion Someone came up with a fund raising idea that would help offset the expenses of the annual fireworks display The story involves guinea hens
The celebration committee sold tickets that contained various numshybers Certain numbers were attached to the legs of about a dozen guinea hens The tickets cost $1 each The idea was that Clugsten would fly his OX-S Robin low over the crowd at Avondale and a helper in the back seat would toss the guinea hens out the airplane for the onlookers to try to catch and retrieve their winnings As in the case of Clarence Kavale all went well until the cargo was released from the airplane The guinea hens were released from the airplane dishyrectly over the crowd who were supposed to catch the prizewinners with the numbers The guinea hens surprised the committee with their amazing ability to fly and the last anyone saw of them they were wingshying their way out of Fulton County
On a more somber note I was told a story similar to that of John Millers only this one did not involve any derring-do It had to do with releasshying rose petals over the cemetery as the bugler played taps at a Memorial Day ceremony held in Monmouth Illinois shortly after World War II The Monmouth Cemetery was on the approach to Runway 36 at Monshymouth airport at the time The ceremony took place near the apshyproach end of the airport thus [this flight] was no different than any other aircraft on final According to the pilot who told of this incident everything went according to plan As the bugler started to play the Piper Cub quietly slid over the gathering and the back-seat passenger dumped a bushel basket of rose petals on the gathered throng Some eyewitnesses were said to be in tears as the petals silently floated down to the moaning of the music
Enough said Jim Haynes
4
BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
SEND YOUR ANSWER TO EAA
VINTAGE AIRPLANE PO Box 3086
OSHKOSH WI 54903-3086 YOUR
ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER
THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
SION IN THE SEPTEMBER 2003 ISSUE
OF VINTAGE AIRPLANE
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SWER TO vintageeaaorg
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MYSTERY PLANE IN THE SUBJECT
LINE
In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
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FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
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continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
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28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
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SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
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bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
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BY HG FRAUTSCHY
MARCHS MYSTER Y ANSWER
The March Mystery Plane supplied to us by Alfred Fox of Gray Louisiana brought back a few memories for quite a few of you Heres our first letter with a bit of the history of Miles Aircraft and the Sparrowhawk
The Mystery Plane featured in the March edition of Vintage Airplane is a British aircraft one of the Miles designs Miles was a major producer of sporting light aircraft in Britain during the 1930s and for some time after the war
THIS MONTHS MYSTERY PLANE C O MES F ROM ANNA
PENNINGTON THE PHOTO WAS T A KE N I N 1940 AT
AN AIR SHOW BUT ANNA DIDNT H AVE A NY OTHER
INFORMATION ANNA HAILS FROM W ILMINGT ON
NORTH CAROLINA
SEND YOUR ANSWER TO EAA
VINTAGE AIRPLANE PO Box 3086
OSHKOSH WI 54903-3086 YOUR
ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER
THAN JULY 152003 FOR INCLU shy
SION IN THE SEPTEMBER 2003 ISSUE
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MYSTERY PLANE IN THE SUBJECT
LINE
In 1933 Fred Miles (known as EG) and his wife Blossom the design genius behind the partnership together with EGs brother George conceived a sleek low-wing monoplane design of allshywooden construction in direct competition to the contemporary bishyplanes of the time offering greatly enhanced performance and low cost
Unusually this first product the M2 Hawk powered by a 9S-hp upright fourshyin-line ADC Cirrus engine was built not by the Miles team itself but by a small firm Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd based at Woodley Aerodrome near Reading a town just a few miles west of what is now Londons Heathrow Airshyport The Miles design team eventually joined the company which was reshynamed Miles Aircraft Ltd in 1943 During the war Miles manufactured a range of training aircraft and set up an additional manufacturing facility near Belfast Northern Ireland
Most of Miles subsequent designs were named after raptors-Hawk Major (powered by the four-cylinder de Havilshyland Gipsy Major engine) Falcon Merlin Peregrine Hobby Nighthawk and more An exception was a one-off long-range aircraft to the basic Miles layout with a two-seat enclosed cockpit and powered by a Menasco Buccaneer commissioned by Charles Lindbergh for touring in Europe with his wife Miles named this design Mohawk in honor of his client and this actual aircraft has reshycently been restored for exhibition at Londons Royal Air Force Museum
Identification of the Miles aircraft featured is surprisingly difficult without a specific registration identity because many of the designs look superficially similar especially the many variants of the Hawk Major some of which were converted to Single-seat racing configushyration including also a special design powered by the 200-hp de Havilland Gipsy Six six-cylinder engine and called the Hawk Speed Six
However the short chord engine cowling identifies it as a Gipsy Majorshypowered model and a lowered fuselage decking suggests it is a Miles MS Sparshyrowhawk Close study of the picture appears to show large British-style regisshy
continued on the page 29
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
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Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
wwwradialexhaustsystemscom
Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
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Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
8007946560
The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
VIIiTAGE AERO fAPgtRICJ LTD PURVEYORS =
Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
Imported airualt Linen (beige and tan) German WW I Lozenge print fabril
Fabril tapes frayed straight pinked and early AmerilOll pinked Waxed nnen lacing lord
Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread
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Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
I t was a bright sunny mild and calm day January 26 1934 when I took off from Newark Airports gravelly surshy
face with a huge advertising banner to cover a specified course around the New York City area The 330-hp Wright engine had been overhauled only a few days before and I had full confidence that it would stand up under the hard tOwing job in the fairly cool air The aircraft was a Pitshycairn PCA-2 autogiro the forebear of todays helicopters and ideally suitshyable for the safe towing of banners It was my own aircraft I had no inshysurance It was simply not available in those days for that type of flying and even if it had been I could not have afforded it in the Depression which was still in full effect
The method of takeoff to tow a banner with an autogiro at that time was to lay it out on the ground with the last letter upwind and the first letter downwind then continue downwind with a 400-foot towing cord which was then attached to the release hook on the tailskid of the autogiro The takeoff was then made upwind directly over the banshyner so that gave 800 feet to get altitude and speed with the autogiro before the banner started peeling off of the ground This particular banshyner was the largest that I had ever seen towed It had 37 letters each one 9 feet high The letters were made out of red cloth and the nushymerous spreaders were made of bamboo poles I do not know its weight but it was plenty heavy and it took at least three men to carry 6 JUNE 2003
and unroll it To this day I dont
That banner inshy
stantly dragged me
to zero airspeed
dead stopped in
the air
know what it advertised That was normal for during a busy day of towing several banners in succession I had all I could do to re-fuel beshytween tows and study the road maps showing the routes I was to follow The banners did not belong to me I was merely towing them on conshytract by the hour
The takeoff went quite well in a light north breeze but the climb was laborious and slow with full power Flying north I finally reached 1200 feet altitude which put me only 1000 feet above the housetops of North Arlington New Jersey with another 800 feet to go to the specified altitude before turning 180 degrees to fly south along the east edge of the Hudson River to show the banner while circling Manshy
hattan Island I was carefully monitoring the enshy
gine cylinder head and oil temperatures and considering a slight reduction in power to try to get them down a little when the enshygine suddenly and positively stopped-dead still So did the airshyspeed That banner instantly dragged me to zero airspeed dead stopped in the air I knew that I had no hope for further power so I pulled the release lever to drop the banner to drape itself over the housetops of North Arlington Whatever hapshypened to it I know not to this day I suppose the kids tore it apart
When an autogiro engine stops and the autogiro stops dead in the air everything is silent and my autoshygiro entered a stable vertical descent at about 1800 fpm I heard my loud voice say Holy smoke and inshystantly I nosed down to gain a little airspeed for control at the same time looking quickly for some open place to land among all those houses There was no such space and by that time I was down to less than 700 feet above the houses but then behind me to the right I saw a cemetery so I made a 180 to head for it in a steep glide While doing this I heard a lot of factory whistles blowing but was too busy looking for a spot in the cemetery to realize that they were the customary noon whistles of that era Fortunately aushytogiros always make auto rotative landings and I had become very adept at that technique so was able to land on a tiny clear area in the cemetery at zero airspeed with
sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
by shopping theSEE MANY ADDITIONAL ITEMS
AT THE VAA RED BARN DURING Vintage section of AIRVENTURE 2003 EAA Aeronautica
ORDER ONLINE hHpshopeaaorg
3-D VAA Patch VOO548 $399 This 3-dimensional patch is well tailored and will look great on your clothing and accessories
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
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bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
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sands of hours of much of it by pilots who had no understanding of its aerodynamics or proper flying technique They crashed almost all
of them but walked away
tDI1IBgtlflnIIIn dimblng down from the cockpit to the ground I was surshyrounded by a mob of kids The
l~1tPl1il1illl mecnalntC had gotten the senations on top of each other instead of meshing properly When the engine got hot during the long climb the bolt expanded which let
autogiro was then in greater danger from them I was afraid it would be destroyed by the kids climbing on it
Then one kid yelled at me to aushytograph his school notebook and all the rest of them followed I sudshydenly remembered the proper procedure in such a case is to yell back at them to form a spiral around the autogiro so that I could write my autograph in turn A huge spiral of kids soon surrounded me and my precious autogiro while I autoshygraphed notebooks until the police arrived and chased them off to their homes for their lunches Remember how I said Holy smoke The landshying was made in the Holy Cross Cemetery a few seconds later
I had to hire off-duty policemen
the discs slip just enough to stop the engine We were able to push the autogiro to a little road trail through the cemetery and with a little breeze I took off in about 100 feet
In the first place I was very fortushynate to be flying an autogiro for an airplane brought to a sudden stop in the air by such a banner would instantly dive into the ground but an autogiro is still safe at zero airshyspeed and a controlled survivable crash can be made vertically even if there is not enough altitude to reshyga in a little airspeed to make a normal gentle landing
The early autogiros had each roshytor blade fixed both in position and pitch setting They had no collective or cycl iC pitch control as do helishy
without injury One notorious crash
was performed by Amelia Earhart who crashed into a chain-link fence then barely cleared over the heads of a crowd of people and crashed with full power into a group of parked cars fortunately vacant The autogiro and a number of cars were deshymolished but fortunately no fire occurred and she and her mechanic passenshyger walked away Now the only two surviving PCA-2s are in possession of the Henry Ford Museum and
Steven Pitcairn son of the original manufacturer
The one I owned serial number 13 was the first purchased by a prishyvate individual and first to be flown in each direction across the United States It was also the first rotaryshywing aircraft to perform aerobatics including loops and rolls at air shows the National Air Races 1932 at Cleveland at Los Angeles in 1933 the International Air Races 1933 at Chicago and many other smaller events Its final days were spent as a crop-duster but then it was deshystroyed by a hurricane in Florida when its pilot failed to tie down its rotor blades I had flown it safely crisscrossing the United States for six years 1931-1936 ~
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
VINTAGE TRADER
Something to buy sell or trade
Classified Word Ads $550 per 10 words 180 words maximum with boldshyface lead-in on first line
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Advertising Closing Dates 10th of secshyond month prior to desired issue date (ie January 10 is the closing date for the March issue) VAA reserves the right to reshyject any advertising in conflict with its policies Rates cover one insertion per is shysue Classified ads are not accepted via phone Payment must accompany order Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426shy4828) or e-mail (classadseaaorg) using credit card payment (all cards accepted) Include name on card complete address type of card card number and expiration date Make checks payable to EAA Ad shydress advertising correspondence to EAA Publications Classified Ad Manager PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE (ISSN 0091-6943) IPM 40032445 is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association of the Experimental Aircra~ Association ane is published monthly at EAA Aviation Center 3000 Poberezny Rd bull RO Box 3086 Oshkosh Wisconsin 54903-3086 Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh Wisconsin 54901 ane at additional mailing offices POSTMASTER Send address changes to EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Return Canadian issues to Station A PO Box 54 Windsor ON N9A 6J5 FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow alleast two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APC addresses via surface mail ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
How many are needed TED TEACH
Jack Tiffany of Leading Edge Aircraft had been looking for an autogiro for years At last he found his prize a 1932 Pitcairn PA-18 in Mojave
California While Jack has been restoring antique airplanes for years this one was going to be the real test It was a basket case with most parts there but in very poor condition
It was a prize in that while antique autogiros are rare this was to be the only remaining PAshy18 Only 19 PA-18s were built and sold in 1932 and 1933
The autogiro differs from the he licopter in that it flies on the same principle as an airplane An engine-driven pro-
One of the sign ificant restorashytion challenges was the rotor blades themselves The construction is similar to many aircraft wings There is a spar (simply a steel tube) ribs of 14-inch plywood a thin plywood covered leading edge and a formed sheet metal trailing edge strip Conventional fabric and dope cover the structure
peller pulls it forward The finished ribs are ready for shipment and due to the oncoming air stream and the angle of attack of the rotors they rotate rapidly creating lift at a very low forward speed its simply a rotating wing
JUNE 2003
The only salvageable component of the blades when received was the spar with rib attachment fittings With the rib spacing set at only 4
inches more than 300 ribs would be needed The precision needed was great as the chord is only 18-34 inches and rib depth about 2 inches
A local woodworker and aviation enthusiast Bill Weikert agreed to accept the challenge of building these ribs For earlier woodworking projects Bill had acquired an Onsshyrud Inverted Pin Router This type of machine was used in the aircraft industry for years mostly in the contouring of sheet metal skin and components
The inverted pin router has the motor driven bit mounted under the table and the bit raised up into the work with a foot pedal Operashytionally a template of the desired part is attached above and onto the material to be contoured This then is placed on the tabletop A guide pin of the same size as the router bit is directly above the bit The guide pin is lowered against the template the bit raised into the material and the pin guided around the template Thus the mashyterial is contoured to exactly the same shape as the template
The templates were made from 14-inch aluminum plate and comshyputer generated Bill then made a fixture that would attach the plyshywood to a plate that then attached to the master template With five different chord lengths using a common fixture to hold any of the
five was a productivity issue At the completion of the
project it was found that the cost of the rib shaping was far less than other methods (inshycluding laser cutting) and the accuracy to the work far better than the original
The inverted pin router is an ideal tool for shaping aircraft products in that it is qUick easshyily tooled and accurate Bill would be pleased to discuss this kind of project for others and may be contacted at
3000 Hampton Rd North Springfield OH 45502 937-964-8301 E-mail bgw3000junocom
8
Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
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attention makes AUA tops on our list
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800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
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Routing ribs on the Onsrud Inverted Pin Router Attaching the rib material to fixture
The finished rib ready to remove from fixture
Attaching the rib template to fixture
Breaking the rib away
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9
2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
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FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
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THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
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2003 HG FRAUTSCHY
An aerial reconnaissance view of a portion of the vintage aircraft parking area
o JUNE 2003
This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
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FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
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This striking custom version of the early Bonanza color scheme was disshyplayed during the early days of Sun n Fun by James Dixon of Bowman Georgia
The winner of an Outstanding Classic Aircraft trophy at Sun n Fun 2003 Bob Haas has plenty to smile about with his neat-asshya-pin Aeronca 7AC Champ
Bob Haas
The Sun n Fun Grand Champion Antique for 2003 Is Mlkael Carlsons Bleriot XI powered by a 60-hp Thullnshybuilt Gnome Omega rotary engine It was one of 23 Blerlots built under license by Thulin In Sweden
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 1 1
Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
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FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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Something to buy sell or trade
Classified Word Ads $550 per 10 words 180 words maximum with boldshyface lead-in on first line
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wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
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THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
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Paul Ericksons restoration of the last Sky King Cessna 310
N6817T pulled in a Contemporary Outshystanding In Type award at Sun n Fun
AEAA President Tom Poberezny hosts the opening of the Countdown to Kitty Hawk touring pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company The centerpiece of the pavilion is the accurate reproduction of the 1903 Wright Ryer built by Ken Hydes Wright Experience in Warrington Virginia The Ryers presence in the large tent was mesmerizing
Its hard to resist the call of a nice old biplane Dan Smith didnt have to travel far with his Brewster Aeet 7-he lives right
To get a firsthand feeling for what it felt like to pilot the Flyer EAA and Microsoft teamed up to create the Wright simulators which were very popular all day long
in Lakeland
The best fabric floatplane so judged at the Sun n Fun Splash-In was Stan Sweikars Taylorcraft BGS 120 which he flew down from Maryland Its seen here along the grassy shore at Browns Seaplane Base in Winter Haven Florida
12 JUNE 2003
()
2 laquo 0 co laquo z z ~ UJ------- --
~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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~ Thomas Lever brought his Moraine Saulnier 230 Et 2 to Lakeland for the last couple of days of the fly-in If it looks familshyiar to those of you who are aviation movie buffs that s beshycause this was the airplane used in the final scenes of The Blue Max and many years later in the Tom Selleck movie High Road to China One of only five that still exist and only one of three still flying Thomas Moraine even with its intimidating size is a tailskid no brakes airplane
1Registered to Barrels of Fun in Lebanon Missouri this Volpar V Beech 18 was judged the Best Twin in the Contemporary category
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13
The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
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The Rearwin 180F Skyranger (built by Commonwealth) is a rare sight these days but still a pretty airplane from the time just prior to World War II Doug Clukey of Dexter Maine brought this example to the event
AA family airplane it is and we saw a number of them at Sun n Fun with more than one tent pitched next to them The Cessna 170 is still one of the most desirable light planes that seat four people or two with a lot of camping gear Russ Farris and Shayla Reese are flying this nice-looking example
AVaughn Grasso of Oak Hill Florida brought a rare Helton Lark the last factory-produced version of the Culver Cadet Its powered by a Continental C-90
Can you tell whos an Auburn University fan John C Adams (class of 77 indusshytrial management) of Huntsville Alabama tools around in his Auburn Tiger Ercoupe His Coupe still has the original throttle V quadrant with mixture control
igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
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Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
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Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
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Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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igt The other spectacular bookend to Mikaels early aviation airshycraft is his reproduction of a Thulin Tummelisa a Swedish fighter aircraft originally built in 1919 and in service as late as 1934 Mikael built the Tummelisa from scratch and was able to power the diminutive airframe with a 90-hp Thulin engine another powerplant built by the company under license this time from LeRhone
~ Roughing it at Sun n Fun Bringing the V comforts of home seems to get easier and
easier these days
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 15
BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
by shopping theSEE MANY ADDITIONAL ITEMS
AT THE VAA RED BARN DURING Vintage section of AIRVENTURE 2003 EAA Aeronautica
ORDER ONLINE hHpshopeaaorg
3-D VAA Patch VOO548 $399 This 3-dimensional patch is well tailored and will look great on your clothing and accessories
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
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28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
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BY BUDD DAVISSON
s a breed Taylorcrafts are definitely coming into their own Even though they may have been one of the last
classics to hitch a ride on the restoration bandwagon more and more are showing up at fly-ins once aga in dressed in their Sunday-goshyto-meeting duds Ron Hoffmeyers 1946 BD-12D which was destined to be based on his farm in Evart Michigan is one of those However the little airplane had more than its share of lifes problems and the road it traveled to Sun n Fun 2003 was a rough one In fact both the airplane and Ron Hoffmeyer have stories to tell 16 JUNE 2003
Like so many others during the 1960s Ron was a member of the ROTC while in college at Michigan State He had opted to try for flight training which meant that during college he had to take thirty-five hours of flight training So even though he was bound for some sort of whiz-bang US Air Force airplane he took his first steps into the air in a Piper Colt A side effect of that kind of training was that rag and tube airplanes were central to his aeronautical core something that would surface many years later
As was the case with most pilots trained during that period it was only a matter of time before he found himself looking down at the jungles
of Vietnam However Ron had a great seat for the role he was about to play in the drama around him
When I graduated from flight school the usual pipeline was to fly one of the older airplanes then move up to the newer ones That changed just about the time I got my wings however because they put me right into an F-10S rather than having me work my way up through F-lOOs It was a terrific thrill to strap on a Thud Especially since I was a kid just out of flight school
I spent most of 68 and 69 flyshying out of Karat Thailand with the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron carshyrying the war to North Vietnam against some of the heaviest deshy
fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
by shopping theSEE MANY ADDITIONAL ITEMS
AT THE VAA RED BARN DURING Vintage section of AIRVENTURE 2003 EAA Aeronautica
ORDER ONLINE hHpshopeaaorg
3-D VAA Patch VOO548 $399 This 3-dimensional patch is well tailored and will look great on your clothing and accessories
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
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bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
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fended targets We were always dodging SAMs MiGs and triple-A I flew a total of 146 missions
As soon as he got out of the servshyice he started flying light airplanes again although he stayed in the Air National Guard for 28 years
In 72 I started flying for Eastern Airlines but was also working my way up through the Guard and made it sort of a side career
As part of that side career Ron became the squadron commander of an air-refueling unit first flying KCshy97s and then moving into KC-13Ss
During the first Gulf War we were flying out of Abbu Dabe We were constantly up there as a gas stashytion in the sky keeping everything else flying
My son Paul started showing some interest in flying when he was
fifteen years old so I used the GI bill to get my CFI so I could teach him We started looking around for litshytle airplanes including Champs and Cubs but in 1984 we bought our first T-craft a 1941 and Paul learned to fly in it
We had a farm and the pasture was our runway which was perfect for the TshyCraft That was my first taildragger and I
really came to love it I still think the Taylorcraft is the most under-apshypreciated of the classics It gives good cross-country performance and is faster than almost all of the 6S-hp airplanes I think its a great all-purpose flying machine
That first airplane was Franklin powered and was very smooth and nice flying but over the years it had been neglected Rather than change the engine or rebuild the airplane we decided wed keep that one flyshying but get another one to rebuild Paul did that first one a 46 model and he put it in my name
In 1993 I started going through chemotherapy which grounded me for a while and was pretty hard on my spirits I had to get my head into something so I decided Id rebuild a Taylorcraft for therapy and put the
airplane in Pauls name Somehow that just seemed fair
Taylorcrafts are apparently someshything of a family tradition because when Ron started looking for a projshyect airplane he had to go no further than a cousins garage
My cousin had the remains of a TshyCraft and I say remains because it had been burned At some pOint in its life it was sitting in an open hangar
and kids set fire to it just for the fun of it By the time the fire department showed up the only parts that were still burnshying were the tires It was a terrible mess
Ron trucked what was left of the airshyplane home and spread it out on the shop floor to survey what he had
The wings were toast The spars were
charred and the alushyminum ribs were
crystallized The heat hadn t been too bad so all the fittings were useshyable but the tank was also no good
It was obvious he was going to have to build new wings but he didnt even have anything to use as an accurate pattern so he started from scratch
I bought some wings off a wreck that needed spars and a bunch of the ribs rebuilt These were truss type ribs not stamped aluminum and I knew I could make those fairly easily What made building new wings an easy decision was that I had an extra set of brand new PMAd spar blanks ready to be trimmed and drilled
When I started on the wings I got a regular rib building routine goshying There are fifteen ribs per wing and Id do a wing a month so I was actually moving fairly quickly
Most airplane spars are nothing but boards with bolt holes in the appropriate places Taylorcraft spars however are a little more complicated
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 17
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
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Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
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Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
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Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
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The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
panel has a solid original feel but has
a few custom touches to suit
Rons taste
A lot of the spar bolts in a TshyCraft go through big phenolic bushings that are pressed into the spar to help spread the load I couldshynt find any new bushings and those I had were burned So once again we had to make the parts I used most of the steel fittings off the original wings but the aileron hinges came off the lawn-dart wings
The fire also warped the original wing struts so I had to make a new set I got some strut blanks from Univair I cut them and in about a week had the ends done and ready to have an approved welding shop TIG them together for me
Incidentally he says with a grin rebuilding a burned airplane isnt something Id do again and its defishynitely not something I recommend
Although the fuselage is largely steel that doesnt mean a fire doesshy18 JUNE 2003
nt wreak havoc with everything around it
All of the aluminum on the airshyplane was crystallized warped or melted I suppose I could have purshychased some of the sheet metal parts and saved myself a lot of time but I needed therapy so I built it all exshycept the nose bowl I rolled most of it but the bottom windshield lip was made out of dead-soft alushyminum and I stretch formed that
Obviously the fire eliminated the interior altogether and charred the floorboards so everything inside had to be new
Most of the interior is a light tan aircraft wool fabric over a thin foam which is attached to plastic or alushyminum backing The baggage compartment and seat sling came from AirTex For the seats side panels and glare shield I picked out the mate-
Back in the days before shielded plugs were widely available cans such as these were used with unshielded plugs to minimize radio interference These plug shields are pretty rare and gathshyering up a complete set of eight can be quite a challenge
rial and had an aircraft shop do the stitching and I did the installation
Originality is fine but for an airshyplane to be usable tOday the restorer has to deviate once in a while and this is usually in the area of radios and electrical systems However in Hoffmeyers airplane the deviations are hardly noticeable
The original Taylorcraft battery box is mounted ahead of the seats It is just the right size to mount a 12shyvolt motorcycle battery I use this to drive the nav lights and using an adapter it also powers my handheld radio and GPS I didnt try to put one of the old wind-driven generators on it because they slow you down about 5 mph in cruise I just attach a trickle charge to the battery when were not flying which works fine
The original instrument panel was also fire damaged so I found a beat-up instrument panel and welded patches in all the big holes Then I made up glove box doors in wood that matches the new floor boards
It goes without saying that the original instruments were totally
Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
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FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
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SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
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June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
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Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
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Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
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PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
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Ron Hoffmeyers sons David and Paul cruise along in their dads resurshyrected Taylorcraft
cooked in the fire so Ron had to do some high-end scrounging to fill the panel he had just made
I collected instruments for someshything like six years trying to get the right mix The oil temp is an origishynal with the Taylorcraft logo and the oil pressure gauge mag switch and airspeed are correct for the year of airplane I used a newer tachometer that has an hour meter in it and went to a three-pointer altimeter which needs to be really short in length to clear the fuel tank In genshyeral I think the panel has the right look to it
We finished the first Taylorcraft in dope but this time we went with Ceconite and SuperFlite s System 6 with urethane on top of that
liThe paint scheme isnt original but then we werent trying to build an original airplane We just wanted something that made us happy For that reason when we did the interior we styled it to match the outside
I also added a skylight which was done on a field approval This adds a lot of brightness to the inside and imshyproves visibility in turns
No part of the airplane escaped the fire which was constantly causing headaches right down to the wheels
liThe tires had burned hot enough that they actually melted the hubs and I had to find another set of origishy
nal wheels and brakes I was just glad the wheels werent fused to the axles
As Ron began working ahead of the firewall he found challenges that were even bigger than those beshyhind it
liThe cowling was hard but the aluminum heat shroud was the sinshygle hardest piece of the project Its formed in two pieces that were probshyably originally stamped at the factory I couldnt stamp them so I made a mold and formed the two halves into it They came out lookshying good and the heater works great The shroud alone took two months
II Although Im an A amp P you really cant do an airplane like this without friends and I had a couple of the best I built up both the engine and the wings at a friends house John Yost was not only my AI but also a friend and teacher He watched over and guided me every step of the way Unfortunately he suffered a fatal heart attack and never got to see the airplane finished
We started out with a pretty good engine but I went with a freshly overhauled crankshaft and cam because I was planning on takshying this airplane on a lot of cross countries In fact by the time we got to Sun n Fun which is a pretty long cross country in a Taylorcraft we had only fifteen hours on the enshy
gine Four hours of the trip was in light snow so we were sure glad to see the Florida sunshine
John Frieling another AI friend had done a lot of Taylorshycrafts and I went to him to help me with the covering and the paint He was a huge he lp and you learn so much faster when youre working with someone who has done it before Its diffi shycult to explain how much I learned from both John Yost and John Frieling I would never be able to thank them enough
When it came time to put a prop on the airplane I went with my heart not my head I knew a metal prop would give me more rpm and more performance but it just wouldnt feel right So I got a beautiful Sensenich wood prop Its so beautiful that my wife made me a prop cover for it to protect it when at fly-ins
liThe airplane spent five and a half years in my garage Some days Id make a lot of progress Some days none But I kept hacking at it and it was the best therapy I could have found
Ron did the first flight on the airshyplane and reports that it was nearly perfect with the wing rigging being almost right on After getting back from Sun n fun he did tweak one wing but that was it The little airshyplane accumulated 25 hours of flight time going to and from Lakeland
liThe little airplane cruises an honest 95 -100 mph which isnt bad for 65 hp and less than four gallons an hour
I was pushing hard to get the airshyplane ready to take to Sun Fun 2003 and barely made it However the airshyplane has been absolutely trouble free almost from the first time we fired it up I flew it a few hours and then we were ready to head south and escape what had been a bad winter Wed earned a little sunshine
Is he done restoring airplanes Hardly He says I think Id like to find an L-2M and restore it into its original military configuration
It looks as if Taylorcrafts have a way of becoming an addiction
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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Something to buy sell or trade
Classified Word Ads $550 per 10 words 180 words maximum with boldshyface lead-in on first line
Classified Display Ads One column wide (2167 inches) by I 2 or 3 inches high at $20 per inch Black and wh ite only and no frequency discounts
Advertising Closing Dates 10th of secshyond month prior to desired issue date (ie January 10 is the closing date for the March issue) VAA reserves the right to reshyject any advertising in conflict with its policies Rates cover one insertion per is shysue Classified ads are not accepted via phone Payment must accompany order Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426shy4828) or e-mail (classadseaaorg) using credit card payment (all cards accepted) Include name on card complete address type of card card number and expiration date Make checks payable to EAA Ad shydress advertising correspondence to EAA Publications Classified Ad Manager PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
WE PROBABLY HAVE YOUR AIRPLANE wwwairplanetshirtscom
1-800-645-7739
THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
(and those who love airplanes)
For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
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Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
The Golden Age of Aviation Series
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Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
All sizes in inches unless otherwise noted Fabricate from drawing dimensions shydrawings not to scale
Tiedowns have always elicited a bunch of opinions and one of my favorites is a compact set of tiedowns that Joe Dickey built up to secure his Aeronca Champ Joe uses them to supplement permashynent tied owns at airports other than his home field and as a sole means of constraint when he is at a fly-in He has had good success with them having never had them pulled out of the ground or breaking The same cant be said for the dog anchor types of tiedowns which have opened up and broken while Joe was tied down at a fly-in (Remember the big blow at EAA Oshkosh 82) The set pictured in the doodles on these pages have been used sucshycessfully in both rocky and loamy soil and have proven to be very damage resistant Small rocks are pushed aside and impacting larger rocks or boulders results in a reshysounding ring when the rod is struck by the hammer When that happens just move the tiedown A few whacks with the hammer will straighten the steel stake out Just follow the dimensions shown on the drawings and remember to always tie your light plane downshyit helps when someone decides to run up a helicopter jet or even anshyother prop driven airplane with the wind blast pointed right at your pride and joy Having your tail surfaces strained through a chain link fence will ruin a pershyfectly good summer not to mention your checkbook
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
(and those who love airplanes)
For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
FAA Certified Repair Station XHYR068L
Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
wwwradialexhaustsystemscom
Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
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Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
8007946560
The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
VIIiTAGE AERO fAPgtRICJ LTD PURVEYORS =
Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
Imported airualt Linen (beige and tan) German WW I Lozenge print fabril
Fabril tapes frayed straight pinked and early AmerilOll pinked Waxed nnen lacing lord
Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread
Vinloge Aero Fobrics lid 316 Creekwood Dr BOflklown KY 40004 lei 502-349-1429 fox 502-349-142B websile WWWOVclolhlom
Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
AIRPLANES WITH WELDED A GOOD HAMMER ON TIEooWN RINGSTIEDOWN BASE PLATES
(MAKE FROM 1 8 STEEL)
WI NG PLATE - 2 REQ
78 OR TO FIT FOR 3 8 U BOLT
1-1 8 R
13 32 DIA (2)
TAIL PLATE - 1 REQ 1 32 DIA (2)
OR TO FIT
--shy-shyltD lt-lt shylt-lt
j_1--- 9 32 0 (2) j I 4 2 ~I
BASE PLATE ASSEMBLY
TAKE ROPE THROUGH RING MACHINISTS MALLET WITH ONE AROUND STRUT AND BACK PLASTIC HEAD AND ONE STEEL USE RING ONLY TO KEEP HEAD DOESNT WEIGH MUCH ROPE FROM SLIPPING DOWN DRIVES T1EDOWN PINS PLASTIC
TENT STAKES AND THOSE WHO IGNORE PLEASE DO NOT
ANCHOR PINS - 8 REQ TOUCH SIGNS
- ~-----LL-~ MAKE FROM 1 4 SETTING ANCHORSSTEEL ROD
-t-f-f THREAD TOP TO
SUIT HARDWARE USED RUN BOTshyTOM NUT SNUG TO BOnOM OF THREADS ADD I WASHER (NEEDED I I I
C() TO PULL PIN) AND I I I oM TIGHTEN TOP NUT I
PEEN OVER TO I I I LOCK 1
DRIVE PINS IN ANGLED TOWARD1 CENTERL I II
I I I
I I 1-1 ~
TO REMOVE PINS
BASE PLATE TIGHTEN NUTS PEEN OVER TO LOCK
USE HAMMER HANDLE TO GRIP SLIP LOOP UNDER WASHER 450 LB TEST NYLON CORD WORKS WELL USE ONE FOOT TO HOLD BASEPLATE DOWN PULL STRAIGHT IN LINE WITH PIN
IMPORTANT SPREAD TIEDOWNS SO PULL IS NOT STRAIGHT UP YOU LL NEED LONGER ROPES BUT ANGLING THE TIEDOWN POINTS WILL INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO BEING PULLED OUT OF THE GROUND
~~~
THIS IS A MODIFICATION OF JOES ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BION MCPEAK - ELIMINATE THE u BOLT AND ON A NEW SET OF BASE PLATES CAREFULLY RADIUS THE NEW HOLE FOR THE ROPE TO PREVENT CHAFING THE HOLE SHOU LD BE A TIGHT FIT FOR THE ROPE KNOT THE ROPE AS SHOWN ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE BASEPLATE MELT OR GLUE THE KNOT TO BE SURE IT WILL NOT COME UNDONE THIS BASEPLATE IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR USE WITH POLYETHYLENE ROPE
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21
THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
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Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
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Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
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Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
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28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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THE VINTAGE INST UCTOR
Taildraggers
W ould you want to fly a Ford Tri-Motor if you had the
chance Sue Strehlow NAFI proshygram administrator asked gently nudging me in the ribs while her eyes twinkled even more brightly than they normally do My answer had something to do with what bears do in the proverbial woods
It was opening day of AirVenture 2002 and I had just been made an offer I couldnt refuse The reason I instruct in taildraggers is because I love flying them so much And now the opportunity to fly one of the 22 JUNE 2003
DOUG STEWART NAFI MASTER INSTRUCTOR
greatest taildraggers of all time had just become mine Do they call this pig heaven
At the appointed hour I boarded the shuttle van near the tower and rode out to runway 09 We waited in the van as that beautiful corrushygated airplane (beauty is in the eye of the beholder) taxied off the runshyway and onto the grass It was only as it got on the grass that the gear struts finally started to compress and as the 3-foot-thick wing gave up the lift it was still generating After the wonderful rumble of three round Pratt amp Whitney Rshy985 450-hp engines quieted from
three to two the passengers on the Ford airplane deplaned as we climbed out of the Ford van
I was the first of our group to board and I quickly went uphill to the cockpit Sitting in the left front seat was Sean Elliott not only presshyident of NAFI but also EAAs director of aircraft operations He had been my ticket to the right front seat which I now settled into Hanging my elbow out the open window to my right (hey this wasnt too unlike my Super Cruiser) I was in awe as I took in the sights and smells of this hisshytoric airplane
Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
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expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
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Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
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The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
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Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
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Once the remaining nine passhysengers were boarded Sean fired up the right engine and called for taxi We taxied to runway 09 and awaited takeoff clearance Getting that we pulled out onto the runshyway and applied takeoff power It seemed that as soon as the throtshytles were all the way forward Sean was pushing forward on the wheel (it is a wheel-a huge wooden steering wheel also found on Ford Model Ts) and the tail was up in the air With a short takeoff roll of less than 700 feet we were up in the air This old bird just wanted to fly Im talking about the airplane not me
We climbed out towards Lake Winnebago and Sean leveled off at 1000 feet AGL Accelerating to 90 mph indicated he set the power and trimmed it up Turning toshywards me he said Youve got it I had not expected to be flying this rare beast let alone with a cabin full of paying passengers If it drops a wing dont try to raise it with the aileron use your feet Sure enough we hadnt flown very far when the right wing started to drop As instructed I let the wheel be and applied pressure to the left rudder pedal The rudder pedals in this huge taildragger are humonshygous when compared to the small bars in my PA-12 And I quickly reshyalized why This was going to take a little more than some ankle deshyflection In fact it took the strength of my entire leg to push hard enough on the rudder pedal to pick the wing up And Sean had said use my feet hah by the time we were lining up back on fishynal my thighs were starting to ache (And I ride a bicycle regushylarly) Take a look at Seans thighs he could pass for an Olympic sprinter and I think its all from his Tri-Motor time Hmmm Use your feet
Which brings me to the point of this article Which is what we learn when flying aircraft with the little wheel in the back Conventional geared tailwheel tail dragger
call them what you will flying these aircraft will redefine what flying is all about for most pilots We are going to have to use our feet when flying these airplanes Not only in the air but more imshyportantly on the ground
Conventional geared
tailwheel taildragger call them what
you will flying these aircraft will
redefine what flying is all about for most pilots
It is said that when flying a tailwheel airplane youre not done flying until the engine is shut down and the tiedown ropes are attached The most important lessons to be learned when opershyating a taildragger are those lessons learned on the ground Esshypecially when the wind is blowing A tail wheel airplane has its center of gravity located beshyhind the main gear
When conducting ground opershyations-most notably when rolling out during landing but at all times even when taxiing slowlyshywhenever there is any sideload such as when there is a crosswind this rearward CG will aid and abet that side force in trying to make the tail swap ends with the nose
This is avoided by deft use of
our feet applying opposite rudder to direction of swing to keep the aircraft tracking straight Once that tail starts swinging it gets harder and harder to stop If the pilot does not react quickly enough the rudder will become ineffective and they will need to use some brake as well And if not quick enough with the brake the pilot will get to experience a ground loop If the groundspeed is on the fast side when this happens one can expect to damage the airshyframe and perhaps the landing gear as well
The other place we get to use our feet in most tail wheel aircraft is in coordinating our turns The ailerons of most taildraggers are rather large Whenever they are deflected the drag they create results in adverse yaw that is much greater than that experienced in most tri-gear airshycraft Therefore whenever you roll into or out of a turn in a convenshytional geared airplane you will experience one heck of a slip unless you coordinate the turn with suffishycient rudder
The reasons that people elect to fly taildraggers are numerous but all are valid For some it affords the ability to fly low and slow allowshying one to smell the roses so to speak (Although here in the dairy region of New England it isnt alshyways roses one smells) For others it is the only type of aircraft that can be used to access rough surshyfaced andor remote runways Still for others it brings their mentality back to an earlier age of aviation when flying was not about ATC and GPS autopilots and glass cockshypits TFRs and FARs but about stick and rudder skills and being totally connected in a visceral way to the aircraft being flown And for all it will mean using your feet
No matter what your reason learning to fly a tailwheel airplane will certainly improve your skills in any airplane that you fly taking you another step from being more than just a good pilot to being a GREAT pilot
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 2 3
PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
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PASS IT TO BUCK BY EE BUCK HILBERT EAA 21 VAA 5
PO Box 424 UN ION IL 60180
Stowaways Freeloaders and Other Culprits
One day more than a few years ago Dorothy and I were puttin along in our old 6SLA Chief when she
tapped my shoulder and pOinted to the wing root
There peering out at us was a cute little brown and white mouse
How long the rascal had been there I dont know but there it was seemingly enjoying the ride It would disappear for a while show up again and seemed quite active We delivered it to the AAA fly-in at Ottumwa That was a long time ago
The mystery was where did he come from and howd he get in Fully aware that mice can be a problem I tossed a supply of oldshyfashioned mothballs back into the rear of the fuselage and a few more under the seat sling
I dont believe that mouse had read the publication I had which said mothballs were a deterrent to mice
The odor and the residue linshygered for a long long time afterwards We never uncovered the wing before we sold the airshyplane so I didnt see any damage just half a bushel of nesting mateshyrial-highly odiferous at that
Another time and many years later I stopped off at a friends hangar to visit He was working on a Stearman project on one side of the hangar and had a Bonanza as his go places airplane on the other side
Something about the Bonanza caught my eye There were cloves of garlic lying atop the tires and get this fences of aluminum sheet 24 JUNE 2003
circling each of the tires He had actually built a circular barrier about six inches or more high around each wheel
When asked he dropped a few expletives about mice and how hed had a problem with them getshyting into the upholstery this was his method to prevent a reoccurshyrence Did it work I dont know but Ive never seen anyone do anyshything like it since
Weve also heard that dryer sheets the kind that are supposed to make your cloth es soft repel the four-legged critters Anyone have experience with that
Another airplane this time a Stinson L-SE we brought home to Illinois from Denver After we got it home we decided to do an anshynual Again the remnants of a hitchhiking mouse maybe a whole family of them We must have pulled two bushel baskets of nest and debris out of the left wing Now this is a wood wing and the stains and the odors were there to the day we sold the airplane
These invasio n s seem to be pretty prevalent I dont know what the antidote really is but it s a recurring problem here in the midwestern part of the country
Im working on a pair of Champ wings These guys had been hangshying on a dirt floor hangar wall for several years (Our Champ is getshyting pretty tired and is almost but not quite because we like to fly ready for another restoration) Anyshyway I saw these wings and thought that maybe I could get a little ahead of the restoration game by redoing
them and have them ready to bolt on when we did the restoration I talked to the owner and we struck a deal A week or so later we picked them up along with some rusty but restorable tail feathers and some other little items
We opened them up and there they were Mouse nests and remshynants mud-daubed wasp nests spiders and who knows how many other little buggers who had built themselves a real comfortable condo site We even found some nutshells that ground squirrels had put there
Now how did these guys get up a sheer wall maybe five or six feet above the floor I sure dont know but the evidence was sure there It was a below freezing day when we brought them into the heated hangar and it sure wasnt long beshyfore we knew we had to do something The odor was terrific
We lucked out though there must have been an adequate food supply cause they didn t gnaw on the spars The woodwork was inshytact and aside from being dirt encrusted it is in good shape Our editor HG can relate his tale of woe as to how his Chief spars were just ravaged by these little guys gnawing on them Ask him about it and then get the crying towel handy (Amen Boo Hoo - HGF)
It isnt just the wood and fabric machines these hitchhikers are apt to get into Just the other day doshying an annual on a Cessna 120 there was a huge collection of mouse nest and dirt under the floor in the gearbox area Ive seen
residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
most car cup holders
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
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residue in Mooneys Piper Cheroshykees Howard DGAs Stearmans You name it It is a problem How do we keep them out How do we get rid of them if theyre in You cant just poison them then they die in the nests or in the upholshystery and create a very unpleasant stink You can shake the wing blow compressed air at them maybe even chase them out but theyre back again because this is their home
My theory is prevention I took a tip from a farm neighbor When he plants his corn crop hell put out a sacrificial token Every thirty feet or so hell toss out an ear of corn This is easy pickings for mashyrauders like the crows and ground sqUirrels and they ll go for the easy ears and not bother the plantshy
ings I thought this was really clever and decided maybe it d work for hangar prevention too So I went to the local hardware store years ago and purchased one of those live traps Its a two-door job where they can get in but cant get out I bait it with cat food or birdseed sit back and wait About every four of five days I take the trap and if there are some I dump the mice into a bucket of water reshybait the trap and do it again I guess Im lucky as I havent had an intrusion of these critters in any of my airplanes for several years now
Sometimes I run out of mice too Just last week and I must admit I hadnt looked at the trap for several weeks maybe months and there were the remains of seven mice and
one very live one in the trap What prompted this check was the Cessna 120 I mentioned earlier
Another preventive measure Dont leave anything in the airshyplane that might be used for nesting material They love paper towels rags (They dont seem to bother sectionals maybe its the government red tape) and whatshyever you do dont leave anything edible in any compartment That is an open invitation to a critter smorgasbord
So far Ive been lucky I would like to hear from any of you victims or not as to how and what you have experienced and what action you are taking or contemplating And with that its over to you If
(( -BtJck
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SEE MORE Check out all the VAA available merchandise
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AT THE VAA RED BARN DURING Vintage section of AIRVENTURE 2003 EAA Aeronautica
ORDER ONLINE hHpshopeaaorg
3-D VAA Patch VOO548 $399 This 3-dimensional patch is well tailored and will look great on your clothing and accessories
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
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PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
NEW MEMBERS Wayne Ouellette Utopia ON Canada John Froelich Petersfield Hampshire UK Richard A Pulley Anchorage AK Scott Haggenmacher Jonesboro AR Jeffrey D Cannon Ventura CA Larry Feuerhelm Agua Dulce CA Dave Garland Davis CA J William Gotcher Hayward CA Elmer William Knobloch Lincoln CA Marty Noonan Long Beach CA Lance Schaus South Gate CA Gary Suozzi Oak Park CA James M Thomas Watsonville CA Tom Broadbent Pagosa Springs CO Robert D Tofsrud Clifton CO Ian A Wayman Peyton CO Stephen M Kelly Stoneington CT George Byrd Dunedin FL David McFarland Juno Beach FL Jorge Neumann Sarasota FL Mark Peck Altamount Spring FL Carmen D Pena Naples FL Eric Pinon Ft Pierce FL Thomas M Shelton Boynton Beach FL Fred Rascoe Lawrenceville GA Robert W Turner Brooks GA Michael Tindall Webster City IA James Auman Sycamore IL Douglas A Engel Naperville IL Mathew L Hunsaker Carbondale IL David J Mayer Ingleside IL Thomas M Peterson Rockton IL Don A pfeiffer Poplar Grove IL Terry L Burger Salina KS Bruce L Miles Smith Center KS William K Ortigo Pineville LA Margaret Ortigo Pineville LA John Ortigo Pineville LA George Frederick Waters Westboro MA
26 JUNE 2003
Fred L Day East Baldwin ME Ben Ennenga Grand Haven MI Richard Janke Commerce Township MI Philip Mintari Davisburg MI Jeremy Winsor Houghton MI Gary M Granfors Tower MN John L Wells Minneapolis MN Kenneth Doyle Springfield MO Stephen C Thayer High Point NC Dana Cornelius Madrid NE Tom Wieduwilt Omaha NE John R Stahl Weare NH David Blanche Neptune NJ William G Moore Lebanon NJ Bart Voyce Ledgewood NJ Alexander Cohen Long Beach NY George Donaldson Amsterdam NY Randy J Barney Tipp City OH David S Kroner Rock Creek OH Donald E Ross Oklahoma City OK John T Bagg Salem OR Kerry L Hofsess Ashland OR Raymond J Davidowski Sr Natrona Heights PA Raymond P Davidowski Jr Natrona Heights PA Berk B Walker Morrisville PA Carl Eversole Beaufort SC Mikell Van der Laan Goodlettsville TN Brian F Burney Houston TX Evans Gauthier McKinney TX Robert Hickerson junction TX George Moore Spring TX David Zimmerman Austin TX Richard Hutton Charlottesville VA James Bavendam Mercer Island WA Gary Eklund Sequim WA Jeff Stefanski Lacey WA Gerald E Gutzmann Menomenee Falls WI David A Williams Whitewater WI
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
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- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
FLY-IN CALENDAR
The following list ofcoming events is furnished to our readers as a matter of informashytion only and does not constitute approval sponsorship involvement control or direction ofany event (fly-in seminars fly market etc) listed To submit an event please log on to wwweaaorgeventseventsasp Only if Internet access is unavailable should you send the information via mail to Att Vintage Airplane PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Information should be received four months prior to the event date
JUNE I3-IS-Gainesville TX-41st Anshynual Fly-In Texas Ch of the Antique Airplane Assn Gainesville Municipal Airport (GLE) $5person $10family Camping or hotels Info 940-482shy6175 or aeroncagtenet
JUNE I4-IS-Rutland VT-13th Annual Taildraggers Rendezvous Fly-In Breakshyfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235-2808 vtlyervermontelnet
JUNE I4-IS-Toledo OH-EAA Ch 582 Fly-In Metcalf Field (TDZ) Pull-AshyPlane contest Young Eagles food aircraft and auto displays 9am-5pm Info John 419-666-0503 or wwweaa582org
JUNE I4-IS-Somerset PA-Somerset Aero Clubs 61st Annual Fly-In Breakshyfast on Fathers Day Weekend Somerset County Airport (2G9) PIC eat Free at Sunday Breakfast Vintage US Military planes on display and flyshying Antique classic and new autos Info 814-754-50250r georgegtjunocom
JUNE IS-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Summer Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21 B 830-noon (Gas available at Columbia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
JUNE I8-2I-Lock Haven PA-Sentishymental Journey 03 William T Piper Memorial -Airport Info 570-893-4200 or wwwsentimentaljoumeyfly-incom
JUNE I9-22-St Louis MO-American Waco Club Inc Fly-In Dauster Flying Field Creve Coeur Info Phil 269-624shy6490 Web wwwamericanwacocubcom
JUNE 2I-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8-11am Hog Roast for lunch 11am-2pm Info 740-454shy
JUNE 2I-22-Howell MI-4th Annual Great Lakes Fly-In Livingston County Airport (OXW) Hands-on workshops seminars and more Info 517-223shy3233 wwwgreatlakesflyinorg
JUNE 22-Niles MI-EAA Ch 865 Anshynual Fly-In Breakfast Tyler Memorial Airport (3TR) 7-noon at Ch Hangar Info 269-684-0972 or E-mail eaachapter865msncom
JUNE 28--Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 FlyshyIn Breakfast Info 509-735-1664
JUNE 28--Quincy CA- 6th Annual Anshytique Wings amp Wheels Pre 1950 aircraft amp automobiles 8am-3pm Gansner Field (201) Info 530-283shy4312 or alhansenjpsnet
JULY I2-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
JULY I2-Gainesville GA-EAA Ch 611 35 th Annual Cracker Fly-In (GVL) 730 Pancake Breakfast Judging in 9 cateshygories awards rides food amp drinks All day fun for the family Info 770-531shy0291 or wwweaa611com
JULY I 7-20-Dayton OH-Vectren Dayshyton Air Show Dayton Intl airport Info 937-898-5901 or wwwdaytol1airshowcom
JULY I9-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Parr Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also availshyable Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST I-Oshkosh WI-BellancashyChampion Club Banquet 6 pm at Hilton Gardens Tickets available in late April $27 including dinner Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-cl7ampioncubcom
AUGUST 8-I O-Alliance OH-5th Anshynual Ohio Aeronca Avia tors Fly-In Alliance Barber Airport (2D l ) Info Brian 216-932-3475 bwmatzllacyal7oocom or wwwoaafly-incom
AUGUST 9-Toughkenamon PA-EAA Ch 240 Fly-InDrive-In Pancake Breakshyfast amp Lunch New Garden Airport (N57) 8am-2pm Young Eagles Flights Info 215-761-3191 or EAA240org
AUGUST IO-Queen City MO-15th Annual Watermelon Fly-In amp BBQ Apshyplegate Airport 2pm-dark Info 660-766-2644
AUGUST I~adillac MI-EAA Ch 678 Fly-In Drive-In Breakfast Wexshyford Cty Airport 730-11 am Info 231-779-8113
AUGUST I 7-Brookfield WI-VAA Ch 11 19th Annual Vintage Aircraft Disshyplay and Ice Cream Social Capitol Airport Noon-5 Info George 414-962shy2428 or Capitol Airport 262-781-8132
EAA FLY-IN SCHEDULE 2003 bull Golden West EAA Regional Fly-In June 20-22 Marysville CA (MYV) wwwgodenwestlyinorg
bull EAA Rocky Mountain Regional Fly-In June 28-29 Longmont CO (2V2) wwwrmrfimiddotorg
bull Northwest EAA Fly-In July 9-13 Arlington WA (AWO) wwwnweaaorg
bull EAA AirVenture Oshkosh July 29-August 4 Oshkosh WI (OSH) wwwairventureorg
bull EAA Mid-Eastern Fly-In August 22-24 Marion OH (MNN) 440-352-1781
bull EAA East Coast Fly-In September 6-7 Toughkenamon PA (N57)
bull Virginia State EAA Fly-In September 20-21 Petersburg VA (PTB) wwwvaeaaorg
bull EAA Southeast Regional Fly-In October 3-5 Evergreen AL (GZH) wwwserfimiddotorg
bull Copperstate EAA Fly-In October 9-12 Phoenix AZ (A39) wwwcopperstateorg
EAAs Countdown to Kitty Hawk Touring Pavilion presented by Ford Motor Company
Key Venues in 2003 bullJune 13-16 - Ford Motor Companys lOOth
Anniversary Celebration Dearborn MI bullJuly 4-20 - Inventing Flight Celebration
DaytonOH bullJuly 29-Aug 4 - EM AirVenture Oshkosh
Oshkosh WI bull August 23-September 2 - Museum of
Flight Seattle WA December 13-17 - First Flight Centennial
Celebration Kitty Hawk NC
AUGUST 22-23-Coffeyville KS-Funk Aircraft Owners Association 26th Anshynual Fly-In and Reunion Info 302-674-5350
AUGUST 22-24--Sussex NJ-Sussex Airshow Experimentals ultralights classics warbirds top performers celebrate the history of flight Info 973-875-0783 or wwwsllssexairshowinccom
AUGUST 29-3I -Saranac Lake NY-Censhytennial of Flight Celebration Air Show wwwsaranaclakecomairportsl7tml
AUGUST 30-Zanesville OH-EAA Ch 425 Pancake Breakfast Fly-InDrive-In Riverside Airport 8am-2pm Lunch also available Info 740-454-0003
AUGUST 30-Prosser WA-EAA Ch 391 20th Annual Labor Day Weekend Prosser Fly-In Info 509-735-1664
AUGUST 30 --Marion IN--13th Annual FlylIn Cruise In Pancake Breakfast Marion Municipal Airport (MZZ) Features Antique ClaSSiC Homebuilt and Warbird aircraft as well as vinshytage vehicles Info Ray 765-664-2588 or wwwFlylnCruiselncom
AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER I -Cleveshyland OH-Cleveland Natl Air Show Info 216-781-0747 or wwwc1evelandairsl7owcom
continued on the next page
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 27
0003
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
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BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
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THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
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For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
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For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
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30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
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VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
-bull bullbull Aircraft CooUng
wwwpolyfibercom wwwaircraftsprucecom
1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746
sportaireaaorg
Visit wwwsportaircom for a complete listing of workshops
Workshop Schedule June 21-222003 Frederick MD
SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
amp AVIONICS GAS WELDING
June 27-29 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY TIG WELDING
Aug 23 2003 Arlington WA TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT
Aug 23-24 2003 Arlington WA SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS
Sept 5-7 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA TIG WELDING
Sept 12-14 2003 Corona CA RVASSEMBLY
Sept 20-21 2003 Denver CO SHEET METAL BASICS COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT FABRIC COVERING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
ampAVIONICS INTRO TO AIRCRAFT BUILDING
Sept 26-28 2003 Griffin (Atlanta) GA RVASSEMBLY
28 JUNE 2003
FLY-IN CALENDAR CONTINUED
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Rock Falls ILshyNorth Central EAA Old Fashioned Fly-In Whiteside County Airport (SQI) Forums workshops fly-marshyket camping air rally awards food amp exhibitors Sunday pancake breakshyfast Info 630-543-6743 or wwwnceaaorg
SEPTEMBER 13-14--Bayport NYshy40th Annual Fly-In of the Antique Airplane Club of Greater New York Brookhaven Calabro Airport Display of vintage and homebuilt aircraft awards flea market hangar party Info 631-589-0374
SEPTEMBER 19-20-Bartlesville OK-47th Annual Tulsa Regional FlyshyIn Info Charlie Harris 918-665-0755 Fax 918-665-0039 wwwtulsafyincom
SEPTEMBER 21-Simsbury CT-Anshynual Fly-In Simsbury Airport (4BO) 8 am-5 pm Info wdthomassnetnet
SEPTEMBER 26-28-Pottstown PAshyBellanca-Champion Club East Coast Fly-In at Pottstown Municipal Airshyport (N47) Info 518-731-6800 or wwwbellanca-championcJubcom
SEPTEMBER 27-28-Midland TXshyFina-CAF AIRSHO 2003 Midland Intl Airport Info 915-563-1000 wwwairshoorg
SEPTEMBER 27-Hanover IN-Anshynual Wood Fabric amp Tailwheels Fly-In Lee Bottom Flying Field Reshylaxed atmosphere legendary Cajun Avgas (15 Bean Chili) May arrive the night before to share fireside flyshying stories and enjoy Dawn Patrol Rain date 92803 Info 812-866shy3211 or IftsOldlllFlyItmsncom
SEPTEMBER 28-Ghent NY-EAA Ch 146 Fall Fly-In Pancake Breakfast Klinekill Airport (NY 1) Route 21B 830-noon (Gas available at Columshybia County Airport IB1) 518-758-6355 web wwweaa146org
OCTOBER 4-5-Rutland VT-13th Annual Leafpeepers Fly-In Breakfast Rutland State Airport Info 802-235shy2808 vt(lyerCiVvermontelnet
OCTOBER 15-19-Tullahoma TNshyBeech Party 2003 A Celebration Tullahoma Regional Airport Safety amp Formation Flying School 101703 Awards BBQ kids hayride ladies fashion show pilots maintenancesafety seminars and much more Info 931-455-1974 or wwwstaggerwingcom
OCTOBER 25-26-Royal Newcastle Aero Club Maitland New South Wa les-The Great Tiger Moth Air Race 2003 Info 02-9328-2480 eshymail ionacconsllitingbigpondcom
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
VINTAGE TRADER
Something to buy sell or trade
Classified Word Ads $550 per 10 words 180 words maximum with boldshyface lead-in on first line
Classified Display Ads One column wide (2167 inches) by I 2 or 3 inches high at $20 per inch Black and wh ite only and no frequency discounts
Advertising Closing Dates 10th of secshyond month prior to desired issue date (ie January 10 is the closing date for the March issue) VAA reserves the right to reshyject any advertising in conflict with its policies Rates cover one insertion per is shysue Classified ads are not accepted via phone Payment must accompany order Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426shy4828) or e-mail (classadseaaorg) using credit card payment (all cards accepted) Include name on card complete address type of card card number and expiration date Make checks payable to EAA Ad shydress advertising correspondence to EAA Publications Classified Ad Manager PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
WE PROBABLY HAVE YOUR AIRPLANE wwwairplanetshirtscom
1-800-645-7739
THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
(and those who love airplanes)
For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
FAA Certified Repair Station XHYR068L
Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
wwwradialexhaustsystemscom
Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
Paul Workman OHIO AIRCRAFT INTERIORS
Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
8007946560
The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
VIIiTAGE AERO fAPgtRICJ LTD PURVEYORS =
Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
Imported airualt Linen (beige and tan) German WW I Lozenge print fabril
Fabril tapes frayed straight pinked and early AmerilOll pinked Waxed nnen lacing lord
Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread
Vinloge Aero Fobrics lid 316 Creekwood Dr BOflklown KY 40004 lei 502-349-1429 fox 502-349-142B websile WWWOVclolhlom
Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
Greensboro NC 27425 Hartford WI 53027 336-668-3650 262-673-5885
windsockaolcom vaaflyboymsncom
Secretary Treasurer Steve Nesse Charles W Harris
2009 Highland Ave 7215 East 46th 51 Albert Lea MN 56007 Tulsa OK 74147
507-373-1674 918middot622-8400 stnesdeskmediacom cwhhv5ucom
DIRECTORS Steve Bender
85 Brush Hill Road Sherborn MA 01770
508-653-7557 sst lOOworldnetattnet
David Bennett PO Box 1188
Roseville CA 95678 916-645middot6926
antJquerinreachcom
John Berendt 7645 Echo Point Rd
Cannon Falls MN 55009 507-263-2414
fchldrconnectcom
Robert C Bob Brauer 9345 S Hoyne
Chlcago IL 60620 773middot779-2105
photopilotaolcom
Dave Clark 635 Vestal Lane
Plainfield IN 46168 317middot839middot4500
davecpctiquestnet
John S Copeland lA Deacon Street
Northborough MA 01532 5OB-393-4775
copeland1junocom
Pltil Coulson 28415 Springbrook Dr
Lawton MJ 49065 269-624-6490
rcouisonSl6cscom
Roger Gomoll 8891 Airport Rd Box C2
Blaine MN 55449 763-786-3342
pledgedrivemsncom
Dale A Gustafson 7724 Shady Hills Dr
Indianapolis IN 46278 317middot293-4430
dalefayemsncom
Jeannie Hill PO Box 328
Harvard IL 60033-0328 815middot943-7205
dinghaoowcnet
Steve Krog 1002 Heather Ln
Hartford WI 53027 262-966-7627
sskrogaolcom
Robert D Bob Lumley 1265 South 124th St Brookfield WI 53005
262-782-2633 lumperexecpccom
Gene Morris 5936 Steve Court
Roanoke TX 76262 817-491-9110
n03captf1ashnet
Dean Richardson 1429 Kings Lynn Rd
Stoughton WI 53589 608-877-8485
daraprilairecom
Geoff Robison 1521 E MacGregor Dr New Haven IN 46774
260-493-4724 chief702Saolcom
SH II Wes Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue
Wauwatosa WI 53213 414-771-1545
shschmldmilwpccom
DIRECTORS EMERITUS
Gene Chase EE Buck Hilbert 2159 Carlton Rd PO Box 424
Oshkosh WI 54904 Unlon IL 60180 920-231-5002 815-923middot459 1
buck7acmcnet
Membership Services Directo~y_ ENJOY THE MANY BENEFITS OF EAA AND
THE EAA VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION ~ EAA Aviation Center PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
Phone (920) 426-4800 Fax (920) 426-4873 Web Site httpwwweaaorg and httpwwwairventureorg E-Mail vintage eaaorg
EAA and Division Membership Services 800-843-3612 FAX 920-426-6761 (800 AM-7oo PM Monday-Friday CSn bull Newrenew memberships EAA Divisions
(Vintage Aircraft Association lAC Warbirds) National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI)
bull Address changes bull Merchandise sales bull Gift memberships
Programs and Activities EAA AirVenture Fax-On-Demand Directory 732-885-6711
Auto Fuel SICs 920-426-4843 Build restore information 920-426-4821 Chapters locating organizing _ 920-426-4876 Education _ _ 920-426-6815
bull EAA Air Academy bull EAA Scholarships
Flight Advisors information 920-426-6522 Flight Instructor information 920-426-6801 Flying Start Program 920-426-6847 Library Services Research 920-426-4848 Medical Quest ions _ 920-426-4821 Technical Counselors _ 920-426-4821 Young Eagles 920-426-4831 Benefits AUA 800-727-3823 EAA Aircraft Insurance Plan 866-647-4322 Term Life and Accidental 800-241-6103 Death Insurance (Harvey Watt amp Company) Editorial _ 920-426-4825 FAX 920-426-4828
bull Submitting article photo bull Advertising information
EAA Aviation Foundation Artifact Donations _ _ 920-426-4877 Financial Support bull 800-236-1025
MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION EAA
Membership in the Experimental Aircraft Associshyation Inc is $40 for one year including 12 issues of SPORT AVIATION Family membership is available for an additional $10 annually Junior Membership (under 19 years of age) is available at $23 annually All major credit cards accepted for membership (Add $16 forForeign Postage)
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION Current EAA members may join the Vintage
Ai rcraft AS5ociaton and receive VINTAGE AIRshyPLANE magazine for an additional $36 per year
EAA Membership VINTA GE A IRPLANE magazine and one year membership in the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association is available for $46 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not inshycluded) (Add $7 for Foreign Postage_)
lAC Current EAA members may join the Internashy
tional Aerobatic Club Inc Division and receive SPORT AEROBATICS magazine for an addi shytional $45 per year
EAA Membership SPORT AEROBATICS magazine and one year membership in the lAC DiviSion is available for $55 per year (SPORT
AVIATION magaZine not included) (Add $15 for Foreign Postage_)
WARBIRDS Current EAA members may join the EAA Warshy
birds of America Division and receive WARBlRDS magazine for an additional $40 per year
EAA Membership WARBIRDS magaZine and one year membership in the Warbirds Divi shysion is available for $50 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $7 for Foreign Postage_)
EAA EXPERIMENTER Current EAA members may receive EAA
EXPERIMENTER magazine for an additional $20 per year
EAA Membership and EAA EXPERIMENTER magazine i5 avaiJable for $30 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $8 for Foreign Postage_)
FOREIGN MEMBERSHIPS Please submit your remittance with a check or draft drawn on a United States bank payable in United States dollars Add required Foreign Postage amount for each membership
Membership dues to EAA and its divisions are not tax deductible as charitable contributions_
Copyright copy2003 by Ihe EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association All rights reserved
VINTAGE AIRPLANE (ISSN 0091-6943) IPM 40032445 is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association of the Experimental Aircra~ Association ane is published monthly at EAA Aviation Center 3000 Poberezny Rd bull RO Box 3086 Oshkosh Wisconsin 54903-3086 Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh Wisconsin 54901 ane at additional mailing offices POSTMASTER Send address changes to EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Return Canadian issues to Station A PO Box 54 Windsor ON N9A 6J5 FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow alleast two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APC addresses via surface mail ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken
EDITORIAL POLICY Readers are encouraged to submit stories and photographs Policy opinions expressed in articles are solely those of the authors Responsibility for accuracy in reporting rests entirely with the contributor No renumeration is made Matenal should be sent to Edor VINTAGE AIRPLANE RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Phone 920426-4800
EAA and SPORT AVIATION the EAA Logo and AeronauticaN are registered trademarks trademarks and service marks of Ihe Experimental Aircra~ Association Inc The use of these trademarks and service marks without the permission of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc is strictly prohibited
The EAA AVIAnON FOUNDATION Logo is a trademark of he EAA Aviation Founeation Inc The use of this trademark without the permission of the EAA Aviation Foundation Inc is strictly prohibited
30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
The Golden Age of Aviation Series
$2295 $2495 $2295 Bellanca s Golden Age ($2495) available Dec 2002
Add $4 shipping amp handling per order
Rave Reviews
Skyways A hit of the first order
Smithsonian s National Air amp Space Archival photos and technical drawings abound
Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
Over 225 3-view drawings
WiKtL Ctmycm B~ lite PO Box 511 Brawley CA 92227
Phone 800-952-7007 Fax 888-289-7086 E-mail bookswindcanyon com
website wwwwindcanyonbookscom Call or e-mail for free catalog
Great Holiday Gifts
bull Witll
~OVIbullbull These are the first tools you need
to buy when you re~cover your airplane Anyone who has used them will tell you theyre the next best thing to having one of our staff right beside you The VHS tape and the DVD will give you the Big Picture and the manual will walk you step by step through every part of the process Youre never on your own when youre using Poly~Fiber
wwwpolyfibercom e-mail infopolyfibercom
800-362-3490
Fly high with a quality Classic interior Complete interior assemblies ready for installation
Custom quality at economical prices
bull Cushion upholstery sets bull Wall panel sets bull Headliners bull Carpet sets bull Baggage compartment sets bull Firewall covers bull Seat slings
Free catalog of complete product line
Fabric Selection Guide showing actual sample colors and styles of materials $300
Qir~RODUCTS INC 259 Lower Morrisville Rd Dept VA Fallsington PA 19054 (215) 295-4115 website wwwairtexinteriorscom Fax 800394-1247
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
tration letters under the port wing and possibly a vestigial N number under the tailplane Could this be NC191M (ex GshyADWW) before the original open cockpit was enclosed and faired with a raised decking back to the fin Imshyported into the United States to Hyattsville Maryland in 1936 she came to grief at Palm Beach Florida in 1959
Mike Vaisey Little Gransden Airfield Nr Cambridge England
From one of our most experienced members we have this recollection
The March Mystery Plane is the Miles M-5 Sparrowhawk Built in Great Britain by Phillips and Powis Aircraft it particishypated in the Kings Cup race in the 30s It was a smaller version of the wellshyknown Miles Hawk and was powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major of 130 hp Registered as NC-191M it was the former G-ADWW under British registry
I first saw this aircraft at the old Queens Chapel Airport in Washington DC in the late 30s where it was unshydergoing restoration In the summer of 1946 it was sold by Perry Boswell to Carl Conrad of Romney West Virginia who hangared it at Bakers Air Park in Burlington West Virginia It was later stored at the nearby Keyser West Virshyginia airport In the early 50s it was resold to Boswell and wound up in southern Florida It was later reported to have crashed while being flown by anshyother pilot who suffered fatal injuries and the aircraft was destroyed
I first flew the Sparrowhawk in Sepshytember 1946 while employed at Bakers Air Park and during the next three years I made about 30 additional flights in it Most were of short duration with a few aerobatic demonstrations at local air shows and fly-ins
We had a Waco UEC at Burlington for passenger hops and an occasional charter trip In May 1947 we were in need of engine parts for the Waco which were located in Springfield Massshyachusetts I flew to Springfield in the Sparrowhawk picked up the parts and
continued on the page 31
VINTAGE TRADER
Something to buy sell or trade
Classified Word Ads $550 per 10 words 180 words maximum with boldshyface lead-in on first line
Classified Display Ads One column wide (2167 inches) by I 2 or 3 inches high at $20 per inch Black and wh ite only and no frequency discounts
Advertising Closing Dates 10th of secshyond month prior to desired issue date (ie January 10 is the closing date for the March issue) VAA reserves the right to reshyject any advertising in conflict with its policies Rates cover one insertion per is shysue Classified ads are not accepted via phone Payment must accompany order Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426shy4828) or e-mail (classadseaaorg) using credit card payment (all cards accepted) Include name on card complete address type of card card number and expiration date Make checks payable to EAA Ad shydress advertising correspondence to EAA Publications Classified Ad Manager PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings main bearings bushings master rods valves pisshyton rings Call us Toll Free 1-800-233-6934 e-mail ramremfgaolcom Web site wwwramenginecom VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS N 604 FREYA ST SPOKANE WA 99202
A irplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available
WE PROBABLY HAVE YOUR AIRPLANE wwwairplanetshirtscom
1-800-645-7739
THERES JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB
wwwaviation-giftshopcom A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind
(and those who love airplanes)
For sale reluctantly Warner 145 amp 165 engines 1 each new OH and low time No tire kickers please Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines 1966 Helton Lark 95 Serial 8 Very rare PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative Tri-gear Culver Cade See Juptners Vol 8-170 Total time AampE 845 hrs I just have too many toys and Im not getshyting any younger Find my name in the Officers amp Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings E E Buck Hilbert
Flying wires available 1994 pricing Visit wwwfyingwirescom
or call 800-517-9278
Aviation Art favorites WW-I Golden Age WW-II to present wwwMotorArtWorkscom
For Sale - 1939 Spartan Executive 35OOTT 10 SMOH 214-354-6418
For Sale-One pair of ORIGINAL Curtiss Jenny (IN-4) wheels Nice original condishytion These wheels were stored in wooden crate in a barn for over 80 years Pictures are available via e-mail Best Reasonable offer will be accepted Call 610-861-4406 ask for Chuck
Radial Exhaust Systems Inc Jumping Branch WV 25969
27 Years Experience 15 different engines for fitting
FAA Certified Repair Station XHYR068L
Antiques Warbirds Cropdusters 304-466-1752 Fax 304-466-0802
wwwradialexhaustsystemscom
Regardless of the size of tile project my goal
has always been to exceed my customers
expectations Award Winning Vi ntage Interiors by
Paul Workman OHIO AIRCRAFT INTERIORS
Parr Airport (421) Zanesville Ohio 43701
8007946560
The use of Dauon or similar modern materials os a substitute for conon is a dd giYeawoy 10 Ihe knowing eye They simply do nollook righl on ~nloge oircroft from Robert Mikh former curalor of Ihe Nationol Air ond poce
Mum in his book RestCling Museum AircraN
VIIiTAGE AERO fAPgtRICJ LTD PURVEYORS =
Dont compromise your restoration with modem coverings finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics
(ertHilated Grade A10110n Early airuoft 10110n
Imported airualt Linen (beige and tan) German WW I Lozenge print fabril
Fabril tapes frayed straight pinked and early AmerilOll pinked Waxed nnen lacing lord
Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread
Vinloge Aero Fobrics lid 316 Creekwood Dr BOflklown KY 40004 lei 502-349-1429 fox 502-349-142B websile WWWOVclolhlom
Originol Nieuporl 28 reslored by Vinloge Aviolion Services
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
Greensboro NC 27425 Hartford WI 53027 336-668-3650 262-673-5885
windsockaolcom vaaflyboymsncom
Secretary Treasurer Steve Nesse Charles W Harris
2009 Highland Ave 7215 East 46th 51 Albert Lea MN 56007 Tulsa OK 74147
507-373-1674 918middot622-8400 stnesdeskmediacom cwhhv5ucom
DIRECTORS Steve Bender
85 Brush Hill Road Sherborn MA 01770
508-653-7557 sst lOOworldnetattnet
David Bennett PO Box 1188
Roseville CA 95678 916-645middot6926
antJquerinreachcom
John Berendt 7645 Echo Point Rd
Cannon Falls MN 55009 507-263-2414
fchldrconnectcom
Robert C Bob Brauer 9345 S Hoyne
Chlcago IL 60620 773middot779-2105
photopilotaolcom
Dave Clark 635 Vestal Lane
Plainfield IN 46168 317middot839middot4500
davecpctiquestnet
John S Copeland lA Deacon Street
Northborough MA 01532 5OB-393-4775
copeland1junocom
Pltil Coulson 28415 Springbrook Dr
Lawton MJ 49065 269-624-6490
rcouisonSl6cscom
Roger Gomoll 8891 Airport Rd Box C2
Blaine MN 55449 763-786-3342
pledgedrivemsncom
Dale A Gustafson 7724 Shady Hills Dr
Indianapolis IN 46278 317middot293-4430
dalefayemsncom
Jeannie Hill PO Box 328
Harvard IL 60033-0328 815middot943-7205
dinghaoowcnet
Steve Krog 1002 Heather Ln
Hartford WI 53027 262-966-7627
sskrogaolcom
Robert D Bob Lumley 1265 South 124th St Brookfield WI 53005
262-782-2633 lumperexecpccom
Gene Morris 5936 Steve Court
Roanoke TX 76262 817-491-9110
n03captf1ashnet
Dean Richardson 1429 Kings Lynn Rd
Stoughton WI 53589 608-877-8485
daraprilairecom
Geoff Robison 1521 E MacGregor Dr New Haven IN 46774
260-493-4724 chief702Saolcom
SH II Wes Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue
Wauwatosa WI 53213 414-771-1545
shschmldmilwpccom
DIRECTORS EMERITUS
Gene Chase EE Buck Hilbert 2159 Carlton Rd PO Box 424
Oshkosh WI 54904 Unlon IL 60180 920-231-5002 815-923middot459 1
buck7acmcnet
Membership Services Directo~y_ ENJOY THE MANY BENEFITS OF EAA AND
THE EAA VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION ~ EAA Aviation Center PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
Phone (920) 426-4800 Fax (920) 426-4873 Web Site httpwwweaaorg and httpwwwairventureorg E-Mail vintage eaaorg
EAA and Division Membership Services 800-843-3612 FAX 920-426-6761 (800 AM-7oo PM Monday-Friday CSn bull Newrenew memberships EAA Divisions
(Vintage Aircraft Association lAC Warbirds) National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI)
bull Address changes bull Merchandise sales bull Gift memberships
Programs and Activities EAA AirVenture Fax-On-Demand Directory 732-885-6711
Auto Fuel SICs 920-426-4843 Build restore information 920-426-4821 Chapters locating organizing _ 920-426-4876 Education _ _ 920-426-6815
bull EAA Air Academy bull EAA Scholarships
Flight Advisors information 920-426-6522 Flight Instructor information 920-426-6801 Flying Start Program 920-426-6847 Library Services Research 920-426-4848 Medical Quest ions _ 920-426-4821 Technical Counselors _ 920-426-4821 Young Eagles 920-426-4831 Benefits AUA 800-727-3823 EAA Aircraft Insurance Plan 866-647-4322 Term Life and Accidental 800-241-6103 Death Insurance (Harvey Watt amp Company) Editorial _ 920-426-4825 FAX 920-426-4828
bull Submitting article photo bull Advertising information
EAA Aviation Foundation Artifact Donations _ _ 920-426-4877 Financial Support bull 800-236-1025
MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION EAA
Membership in the Experimental Aircraft Associshyation Inc is $40 for one year including 12 issues of SPORT AVIATION Family membership is available for an additional $10 annually Junior Membership (under 19 years of age) is available at $23 annually All major credit cards accepted for membership (Add $16 forForeign Postage)
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION Current EAA members may join the Vintage
Ai rcraft AS5ociaton and receive VINTAGE AIRshyPLANE magazine for an additional $36 per year
EAA Membership VINTA GE A IRPLANE magazine and one year membership in the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association is available for $46 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not inshycluded) (Add $7 for Foreign Postage_)
lAC Current EAA members may join the Internashy
tional Aerobatic Club Inc Division and receive SPORT AEROBATICS magazine for an addi shytional $45 per year
EAA Membership SPORT AEROBATICS magazine and one year membership in the lAC DiviSion is available for $55 per year (SPORT
AVIATION magaZine not included) (Add $15 for Foreign Postage_)
WARBIRDS Current EAA members may join the EAA Warshy
birds of America Division and receive WARBlRDS magazine for an additional $40 per year
EAA Membership WARBIRDS magaZine and one year membership in the Warbirds Divi shysion is available for $50 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $7 for Foreign Postage_)
EAA EXPERIMENTER Current EAA members may receive EAA
EXPERIMENTER magazine for an additional $20 per year
EAA Membership and EAA EXPERIMENTER magazine i5 avaiJable for $30 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $8 for Foreign Postage_)
FOREIGN MEMBERSHIPS Please submit your remittance with a check or draft drawn on a United States bank payable in United States dollars Add required Foreign Postage amount for each membership
Membership dues to EAA and its divisions are not tax deductible as charitable contributions_
Copyright copy2003 by Ihe EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association All rights reserved
VINTAGE AIRPLANE (ISSN 0091-6943) IPM 40032445 is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association of the Experimental Aircra~ Association ane is published monthly at EAA Aviation Center 3000 Poberezny Rd bull RO Box 3086 Oshkosh Wisconsin 54903-3086 Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh Wisconsin 54901 ane at additional mailing offices POSTMASTER Send address changes to EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Return Canadian issues to Station A PO Box 54 Windsor ON N9A 6J5 FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow alleast two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APC addresses via surface mail ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken
EDITORIAL POLICY Readers are encouraged to submit stories and photographs Policy opinions expressed in articles are solely those of the authors Responsibility for accuracy in reporting rests entirely with the contributor No renumeration is made Matenal should be sent to Edor VINTAGE AIRPLANE RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Phone 920426-4800
EAA and SPORT AVIATION the EAA Logo and AeronauticaN are registered trademarks trademarks and service marks of Ihe Experimental Aircra~ Association Inc The use of these trademarks and service marks without the permission of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc is strictly prohibited
The EAA AVIAnON FOUNDATION Logo is a trademark of he EAA Aviation Founeation Inc The use of this trademark without the permission of the EAA Aviation Foundation Inc is strictly prohibited
30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
The Golden Age of Aviation Series
$2295 $2495 $2295 Bellanca s Golden Age ($2495) available Dec 2002
Add $4 shipping amp handling per order
Rave Reviews
Skyways A hit of the first order
Smithsonian s National Air amp Space Archival photos and technical drawings abound
Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
Over 225 3-view drawings
WiKtL Ctmycm B~ lite PO Box 511 Brawley CA 92227
Phone 800-952-7007 Fax 888-289-7086 E-mail bookswindcanyon com
website wwwwindcanyonbookscom Call or e-mail for free catalog
Great Holiday Gifts
bull Witll
~OVIbullbull These are the first tools you need
to buy when you re~cover your airplane Anyone who has used them will tell you theyre the next best thing to having one of our staff right beside you The VHS tape and the DVD will give you the Big Picture and the manual will walk you step by step through every part of the process Youre never on your own when youre using Poly~Fiber
wwwpolyfibercom e-mail infopolyfibercom
800-362-3490
Fly high with a quality Classic interior Complete interior assemblies ready for installation
Custom quality at economical prices
bull Cushion upholstery sets bull Wall panel sets bull Headliners bull Carpet sets bull Baggage compartment sets bull Firewall covers bull Seat slings
Free catalog of complete product line
Fabric Selection Guide showing actual sample colors and styles of materials $300
Qir~RODUCTS INC 259 Lower Morrisville Rd Dept VA Fallsington PA 19054 (215) 295-4115 website wwwairtexinteriorscom Fax 800394-1247
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
President Vice-President Espie Butch Joyce George Daubner 704 N Regional Rd 2448 Lough Lane
Greensboro NC 27425 Hartford WI 53027 336-668-3650 262-673-5885
windsockaolcom vaaflyboymsncom
Secretary Treasurer Steve Nesse Charles W Harris
2009 Highland Ave 7215 East 46th 51 Albert Lea MN 56007 Tulsa OK 74147
507-373-1674 918middot622-8400 stnesdeskmediacom cwhhv5ucom
DIRECTORS Steve Bender
85 Brush Hill Road Sherborn MA 01770
508-653-7557 sst lOOworldnetattnet
David Bennett PO Box 1188
Roseville CA 95678 916-645middot6926
antJquerinreachcom
John Berendt 7645 Echo Point Rd
Cannon Falls MN 55009 507-263-2414
fchldrconnectcom
Robert C Bob Brauer 9345 S Hoyne
Chlcago IL 60620 773middot779-2105
photopilotaolcom
Dave Clark 635 Vestal Lane
Plainfield IN 46168 317middot839middot4500
davecpctiquestnet
John S Copeland lA Deacon Street
Northborough MA 01532 5OB-393-4775
copeland1junocom
Pltil Coulson 28415 Springbrook Dr
Lawton MJ 49065 269-624-6490
rcouisonSl6cscom
Roger Gomoll 8891 Airport Rd Box C2
Blaine MN 55449 763-786-3342
pledgedrivemsncom
Dale A Gustafson 7724 Shady Hills Dr
Indianapolis IN 46278 317middot293-4430
dalefayemsncom
Jeannie Hill PO Box 328
Harvard IL 60033-0328 815middot943-7205
dinghaoowcnet
Steve Krog 1002 Heather Ln
Hartford WI 53027 262-966-7627
sskrogaolcom
Robert D Bob Lumley 1265 South 124th St Brookfield WI 53005
262-782-2633 lumperexecpccom
Gene Morris 5936 Steve Court
Roanoke TX 76262 817-491-9110
n03captf1ashnet
Dean Richardson 1429 Kings Lynn Rd
Stoughton WI 53589 608-877-8485
daraprilairecom
Geoff Robison 1521 E MacGregor Dr New Haven IN 46774
260-493-4724 chief702Saolcom
SH II Wes Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue
Wauwatosa WI 53213 414-771-1545
shschmldmilwpccom
DIRECTORS EMERITUS
Gene Chase EE Buck Hilbert 2159 Carlton Rd PO Box 424
Oshkosh WI 54904 Unlon IL 60180 920-231-5002 815-923middot459 1
buck7acmcnet
Membership Services Directo~y_ ENJOY THE MANY BENEFITS OF EAA AND
THE EAA VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION ~ EAA Aviation Center PO Box 3086 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086
Phone (920) 426-4800 Fax (920) 426-4873 Web Site httpwwweaaorg and httpwwwairventureorg E-Mail vintage eaaorg
EAA and Division Membership Services 800-843-3612 FAX 920-426-6761 (800 AM-7oo PM Monday-Friday CSn bull Newrenew memberships EAA Divisions
(Vintage Aircraft Association lAC Warbirds) National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI)
bull Address changes bull Merchandise sales bull Gift memberships
Programs and Activities EAA AirVenture Fax-On-Demand Directory 732-885-6711
Auto Fuel SICs 920-426-4843 Build restore information 920-426-4821 Chapters locating organizing _ 920-426-4876 Education _ _ 920-426-6815
bull EAA Air Academy bull EAA Scholarships
Flight Advisors information 920-426-6522 Flight Instructor information 920-426-6801 Flying Start Program 920-426-6847 Library Services Research 920-426-4848 Medical Quest ions _ 920-426-4821 Technical Counselors _ 920-426-4821 Young Eagles 920-426-4831 Benefits AUA 800-727-3823 EAA Aircraft Insurance Plan 866-647-4322 Term Life and Accidental 800-241-6103 Death Insurance (Harvey Watt amp Company) Editorial _ 920-426-4825 FAX 920-426-4828
bull Submitting article photo bull Advertising information
EAA Aviation Foundation Artifact Donations _ _ 920-426-4877 Financial Support bull 800-236-1025
MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION EAA
Membership in the Experimental Aircraft Associshyation Inc is $40 for one year including 12 issues of SPORT AVIATION Family membership is available for an additional $10 annually Junior Membership (under 19 years of age) is available at $23 annually All major credit cards accepted for membership (Add $16 forForeign Postage)
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION Current EAA members may join the Vintage
Ai rcraft AS5ociaton and receive VINTAGE AIRshyPLANE magazine for an additional $36 per year
EAA Membership VINTA GE A IRPLANE magazine and one year membership in the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association is available for $46 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not inshycluded) (Add $7 for Foreign Postage_)
lAC Current EAA members may join the Internashy
tional Aerobatic Club Inc Division and receive SPORT AEROBATICS magazine for an addi shytional $45 per year
EAA Membership SPORT AEROBATICS magazine and one year membership in the lAC DiviSion is available for $55 per year (SPORT
AVIATION magaZine not included) (Add $15 for Foreign Postage_)
WARBIRDS Current EAA members may join the EAA Warshy
birds of America Division and receive WARBlRDS magazine for an additional $40 per year
EAA Membership WARBIRDS magaZine and one year membership in the Warbirds Divi shysion is available for $50 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $7 for Foreign Postage_)
EAA EXPERIMENTER Current EAA members may receive EAA
EXPERIMENTER magazine for an additional $20 per year
EAA Membership and EAA EXPERIMENTER magazine i5 avaiJable for $30 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included) (A dd $8 for Foreign Postage_)
FOREIGN MEMBERSHIPS Please submit your remittance with a check or draft drawn on a United States bank payable in United States dollars Add required Foreign Postage amount for each membership
Membership dues to EAA and its divisions are not tax deductible as charitable contributions_
Copyright copy2003 by Ihe EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association All rights reserved
VINTAGE AIRPLANE (ISSN 0091-6943) IPM 40032445 is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association of the Experimental Aircra~ Association ane is published monthly at EAA Aviation Center 3000 Poberezny Rd bull RO Box 3086 Oshkosh Wisconsin 54903-3086 Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh Wisconsin 54901 ane at additional mailing offices POSTMASTER Send address changes to EAA Vintage Aircra~ Association RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Return Canadian issues to Station A PO Box 54 Windsor ON N9A 6J5 FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow alleast two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APC addresses via surface mail ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken
EDITORIAL POLICY Readers are encouraged to submit stories and photographs Policy opinions expressed in articles are solely those of the authors Responsibility for accuracy in reporting rests entirely with the contributor No renumeration is made Matenal should be sent to Edor VINTAGE AIRPLANE RO Box 3OB6 Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 Phone 920426-4800
EAA and SPORT AVIATION the EAA Logo and AeronauticaN are registered trademarks trademarks and service marks of Ihe Experimental Aircra~ Association Inc The use of these trademarks and service marks without the permission of the Experimental Aircraft Association Inc is strictly prohibited
The EAA AVIAnON FOUNDATION Logo is a trademark of he EAA Aviation Founeation Inc The use of this trademark without the permission of the EAA Aviation Foundation Inc is strictly prohibited
30 JUNE 2003
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
The Golden Age of Aviation Series
$2295 $2495 $2295 Bellanca s Golden Age ($2495) available Dec 2002
Add $4 shipping amp handling per order
Rave Reviews
Skyways A hit of the first order
Smithsonian s National Air amp Space Archival photos and technical drawings abound
Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
Over 225 3-view drawings
WiKtL Ctmycm B~ lite PO Box 511 Brawley CA 92227
Phone 800-952-7007 Fax 888-289-7086 E-mail bookswindcanyon com
website wwwwindcanyonbookscom Call or e-mail for free catalog
Great Holiday Gifts
bull Witll
~OVIbullbull These are the first tools you need
to buy when you re~cover your airplane Anyone who has used them will tell you theyre the next best thing to having one of our staff right beside you The VHS tape and the DVD will give you the Big Picture and the manual will walk you step by step through every part of the process Youre never on your own when youre using Poly~Fiber
wwwpolyfibercom e-mail infopolyfibercom
800-362-3490
Fly high with a quality Classic interior Complete interior assemblies ready for installation
Custom quality at economical prices
bull Cushion upholstery sets bull Wall panel sets bull Headliners bull Carpet sets bull Baggage compartment sets bull Firewall covers bull Seat slings
Free catalog of complete product line
Fabric Selection Guide showing actual sample colors and styles of materials $300
Qir~RODUCTS INC 259 Lower Morrisville Rd Dept VA Fallsington PA 19054 (215) 295-4115 website wwwairtexinteriorscom Fax 800394-1247
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
MYSTERY PLANE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29
was back home by midday This was a good demonstration of its cross-country capability
The Sparrowhawk was a fine aircraft and its too bad that it no longer exists
Clement H Armstrong Rawlings Maryland
Alfred Fox Jr had found the photo in some of his fathers materials and Alfred Sr didnt recall what it was Alfred Sr has been actively flying since before the war and is a veteran World War II pilot who continues to fly a Kitfox
Other correct answers were received from the following members Jan Christie Holmen Wisconsin Russ Brown Lyndhurst Ohio Reshynald Fortier Ottawa Ontario Mike Searle Tucson Arizona Bill Pancake Keyser West Virginia (who used to taxi the airplane at the Keyser airport when he was a IS-year-old) Rick Wery Juneau Alaska Arnol Sellars Tulsa Oklahoma Steve McGuire Ponca City Oklashyhoma Jim Strothers Rancho Palos Verdes California Robert Byrd San FranCiSCO California Bill Mette Campell California Roy Cagle Prescott Arizona Wayne Muxlow Minneapolis Minnesota Vicki Buttles Placerville California Wayne Van Valkenburgh Jasper Georshygia Thomas Lymburn Princeton Minnesota John Erickson State College Pennsylvania Theodore Wales Westwood Massachusetts Frederick Blewitt Youngstown Ohio Ted Stanfill Alexandria Virshyginia Don DeGasperi Albuquerque New Mexico Frank Garove Baltimore Maryland David Money Wellington New Zealand
The Golden Age of Aviation Series
$2295 $2495 $2295 Bellanca s Golden Age ($2495) available Dec 2002
Add $4 shipping amp handling per order
Rave Reviews
Skyways A hit of the first order
Smithsonian s National Air amp Space Archival photos and technical drawings abound
Dozens of other highly-acclaimed titles (books amp CDs) including The Legacy of the DC-3
Over 225 3-view drawings
WiKtL Ctmycm B~ lite PO Box 511 Brawley CA 92227
Phone 800-952-7007 Fax 888-289-7086 E-mail bookswindcanyon com
website wwwwindcanyonbookscom Call or e-mail for free catalog
Great Holiday Gifts
bull Witll
~OVIbullbull These are the first tools you need
to buy when you re~cover your airplane Anyone who has used them will tell you theyre the next best thing to having one of our staff right beside you The VHS tape and the DVD will give you the Big Picture and the manual will walk you step by step through every part of the process Youre never on your own when youre using Poly~Fiber
wwwpolyfibercom e-mail infopolyfibercom
800-362-3490
Fly high with a quality Classic interior Complete interior assemblies ready for installation
Custom quality at economical prices
bull Cushion upholstery sets bull Wall panel sets bull Headliners bull Carpet sets bull Baggage compartment sets bull Firewall covers bull Seat slings
Free catalog of complete product line
Fabric Selection Guide showing actual sample colors and styles of materials $300
Qir~RODUCTS INC 259 Lower Morrisville Rd Dept VA Fallsington PA 19054 (215) 295-4115 website wwwairtexinteriorscom Fax 800394-1247
VINTAGE AIRPLANE 31
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
Don and Donna Warner Gilbert AZ
bull Don purchased (irst Luscombe an 8A in 1975
bull Don met Donna in 1981 and introduced her to flying they were married in 1982
bull In 1987 the Warners purchased Donnas Luscombe an 8EF the plane in which she learned to fly
bull 1994 Purchased current Luscombe an 8E150 hp and restored it
AUA has been our insurance company for many years Their
friendly agents have a thorough knowledge of classic aircraft
and AUA rates are the best Outstanding service and personal
attention makes AUA tops on our list
- Don and Donna Warner
800-727-3823 Fly with the pros fly with AUA In a
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount
THE VOLVO K[90l00) MOTOR TREND SPORTUTILITY OF THE YEAR VOLVOA ROLL STABILITY CONTROL SYSTEM THIRD-ROW INFLATABLE SIDE CURTAI NS SEAT BELT
PRETEN SIONERS IN ALL THREE ROWS THE VOLVO XC90 EQUIPPED UNLIKE ANY OTHER for lifeSUV AND GUIDED BY CONSCIENCE THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES AT VOLVOXC90COM copy 2003 Volvo Cars of North America LLC Volvo for life is a registered trademark of Volvo Always remember to wear your seat belt
~~~ Vehicle Discount