Upcoming attractions for your aviation diary

Avalon 2015As it’s 2015 already, here’s a brief list of some upcoming air events for your diary. If you know of any others in 2015 worth a mention – please let me know and I’ll publish an update.

January 11 – Amelia Earhart Family Fun Day,  Kyneton Airport, Victoria, Australia

January 14-17 – Sport Aviation Expo, Sebring Florida, USA

February 24-March 01 – Australian International Airshow, Avalon Airport, Melbourne, Australia
Look out for the Foxbat Australia static display area EX9 next to the ADF near the main entrance. Also, I’m hoping to have the Interstate Cadet on display at the AAAA display area.

March 15 – Clifton Airfield Fly-in, Clifton, Queensland, Australia

March 27-29 – Antique Aeroplane Association of Australia National Fly-in, Echuca, Victoria, Australia
I’m planning to take the Interstate Cadet to this fly-in, which has literally dozens of older aircraft attending. Come and have a family day out!

April 21-16 – Sun ‘n fun Expo, Lakeland, Florida, USA

July 20-26 – EAA Airventure, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, USA

September 2-7 – Antique Airfield Annual Fly-in, Blakesburg Airfield, near Chicago, Illinois, USA

And don’t forget – the Aviation Museum at Temora, New South Wales, Australia, has something going on most weekends during the year. In particular, look out for their ‘Warbirds Downunder’ show, currently scheduled for 21 November 2015. Come and have a look at their static and flying displays of old aircraft – many of which have been restored to better than new flying condition.

FoxbatPilot blog – 2014 in review

2014 blog reportI have just received an annual statistics report for 2014 for the FoxbatPilot blog from WordPress. The blog started at the very end of March, so these figures are for the first 9 months.

Here’s a summary:

– the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed over 28,000 times in 2014. If it were a concert at the Opera House, that would be more than 10 sold-out performances.

– the busiest day was 15 June, with over 850 hits on ‘World Cup Celebration – Brazilian Style‘.

– other high scoring posts were: ‘Spotlight on training – Soar Aviation‘, ‘Foxbat sunset & night landing‘ and ‘Foxbat bird-strike‘.

– overall, there were 98 posts and 184 pictures uploaded to the blog.

– the most popular posting day is Tuesday – I may need to change this as I’m told Saturday is the most popular day to upload a post.

– there were blog visitors/subscribers from 104 countries around the world; Australian visitors are the most common with USA, New Zealand and UK close behind.

– the top three referring websites sites are Foxbat Australia, Facebook and Netvibes.

Thank you to everyone for joining my blog since it was launched on 30 March 2014. Your contributions and pictures have been very welcome. I’m looking forward to further developing and growing FoxbatPilot during 2015 – any comments about content, design and style are welcome.

Best wishes for 2015, Peter

PS- if you like it, please send a link to people you know who might be interested.

Measuring the LSA market

Rotax 912 ULS engineI found an interesting article in General Aviation News about the growth of the Light Sport Aircraft (LSA) market, both in the USA and worldwide. Click HERE to read the article.

Written by Dan Johnson (see his aviation blog at ByDanJohnson.com) it concludes that Rotax is by far the world’s biggest aviation engine manufacturer, with well over 50,000 four-stroke and over 120,000 two-stroke aircraft engines delivered to date. As a result, their annual engine sales can be used as a barometer for the recreational/LSA market as a whole, as other manufacturers like Lycoming and Continental are not really players in this market.

Dan makes some interesting remarks around the different proportions of LSA versus GA registrations in the USA in comparison with the rest of the world. In the USA, the GA-LSA ratio is 80-20, while in the rest of the world the ratio is reversed: 20-80 in favour of LSAs. He comments that this is probably because GA is relatively cheap in the USA and perceived to be very expensive elsewhere. (Tell me about it!). Although USA is the biggest single LSA market, nearly twice as many LSAs are actually sold outside the USA.

Other influencing factors in the USA may be that many aircraft service centres are unfamiliar with Rotax engines and some don’t even have access to the metric tools needed on the engine. Contrast that with Europe – and even Australia – where the Rotax is now a familiar engine.

Flying the Interstate Cadet at Tyabb

Interstate CircuitsOn Sunday 28 December I enjoyed a few circuits at Tyabb Airport and a local flight around the Mornington Peninsula in the Interstate S-1A Cadet. The weather was very good early on with quite smooth conditions and a light south east wind. There’s always a cross-wind on the north-south strip at Tyabb.

I made a short YouTube video of the take-offs & landings in the Interstate which you can see by clicking here or on the photo above. I suppose I must have completed 50-75 landings in this aircraft now, so things are feeling easier, although with a tail dragger you always need to keep on your toes – literally and metaphorically!

While I was circuit-bashing, my friends Stephen and Mike flew in Stephen’s newly acquired Bush Hawk down and around Wilson’s Promontory, the most southerly tip of mainland Australia. It’s about an hour and a half round trip from Tyabb in that aircraft. They reported good conditions, although there was a little lee-turbulence at lower levels around the ‘Prom’. I think Stephen gets nosebleeds if he flies higher than 500 feet… Up higher, there was quite a stiff northerly, which slowed them a bit on the return journey.

But back to the Interstate. I have now completed just over 30 hours flying in the aircraft since the first flight early in August 2014. As a result, it’s starting to feel more relaxed to take-off and land. Admittedly I haven’t thrashed it, but fuel consumption is working out at a very economical 20 litres (just over 5 US gallons) an hour and it hasn’t used any oil so far; although there’s always a drip or two on the hangar floor after each flight.

The camera I used was the Garmin VIRB, a competitor to the now almost inevitable GoPro. The Garmin is a completely different shape and can be controlled via an App installed on an iPhone, iPad or other smart device. Unlike the GoPro, the Garmin view finder is built-into the camera and is on the top (or bottom, if the camera’s mounted upside down) not on the back. The Garmin also comes with a very easy to install neutral density filter to help get rid of those peculiar ‘feather’ effects you often see on videos taken through a rotating propeller. It’s the first time I have used it – in the past, I have relied on my trusty old GoPro – so it’s interesting to compare. Maybe, if I can find the time, I’ll do a bit more of a comparison in a different blog post.

Hopefully, there will be more Interstate videos coming soon.

Fly with Kent Pietsch in his Interstate Cadet

Kent Pietsch RenoThere are hundreds, if not thousands, of internet videos of Kent Pietsch performing his flying routines in the ‘Jelly Belly’ aeroplane. Kent is famous for his ‘dead stick’ and ‘landing on a recreational vehicle’ (RV) displays in his 70+ years old Interstate Cadet. However, this one is a favourite of mine – riding along in the back seat during his ‘comedy’ display. View it full screen and I guarantee you’ll be feeling a little queasy by the end!

There’s everything here, some of it in fast-motion: stall turns, spins, steep turns, low level. It includes Kent throwing things out of the window (which is open for much of the display) including an old tyre. What fascinates me is that the pilot door always looks like it’s going to come open but somehow doesn’t. It’s also worth keeping an eye on the throttle lever (bottom left of the screen) to see when he uses power.

It looks like he isn’t wearing a seat belt the whole time but sharp-eyed viewers will, near the beginning just before a cut, see him reaching down with his right hand  to pick up the lap belt-end; the original Interstate only had lap belts, although many have been later modified to add shoulder straps too.

The aircraft is an almost stock standard S-1A Cadet with a 90 hp engine and no electrics (you can see his hand-held radio attached to the left side windshield strut). I believe the only mod to the aircraft – apart from the jelly bean paint job – is to enable him to jettison an aileron early in the routine, which demonstrates how manoeuvrable the aircraft is, even with half its roll equipment missing!

You can see the routine from outside the aircraft by clicking here.

PS – I know the title of the video should say ‘aerobatic’ pilot, not ‘acrobatic’ pilot but I guess we have to make allowances for our non-aviation friends…

PPS – For more about the Interstate Cadet, you can click here.

Low and slow – 1

Lainey

Lainey’s first flight

I’m aiming for this to be the first in a series about simple aircraft. The series will be about easy flying in light aircraft, sometimes with nothing but an airspeed indicator, a slip ball, a tachometer, and an oil pressure gauge. These aircraft are all about a love of flying, pure and simple, without the need to get somewhere by a certain time and without the need for all the latest digital gadgets beloved by so many of us pilots.

I’m hoping it will re-kindle that wonder of getting off the ground, maybe just after dawn on a clear winter morning, or taking off into one of those warm, still summer evenings, when the long shadows give such an amazing sense of depth and contrast.

And where else to start but with the Piper J-3 Cub…

The J-3 Cub is thought by many to be the aircraft which personifies the essence of flying: near perfect control harmonisation, the third wheel at the back (where many old-timers say is the only place it should be) and complete simplicity of operation – no flaps and an ‘armstrong’ engine starter (there’s no electrical system). Although flown solo from the rear seat due to centre of gravity requirements, nevertheless, the J-3 Cub is an easy plane to fly…everything happens very slowly. If there is such a thing, the ‘typical’ J-3 is powered by an engine of only 65hp – but remember, this is a very light aircraft, even by today’s standards, and 65hp is plenty enough for all but the heaviest of crew on the hottest of days.

The very first Piper Cub, the J-2, had its origins in 1930 in the Taylor E-2 Cub, manufactured by Taylor Aircraft in Bradford, Pennsylvania. This aircraft, sponsored by William T. Piper, a local industrialist, was intended to be an inexpensive introduction to aviation but the Taylor company went bankrupt within a year and Piper bought the assets, although retaining C. Gilbert Taylor as president and also the company name. From a slow start, Taylor/Piper eventually built about 1,200 J-2 aircraft in the 1930s before a fire at the Bradford factory halted production.

J-3 panel

J-3 instrument panel simplicity

In 1938, the company was re-established as Piper Aircraft, the factory was relocated to Lock Haven, Pennsylvania and the J-3 was born. The J-3 featured, among other changes, a more integrated design of tail fin and a steerable tailwheel. It was originally powered by a 40hp engine and cost about $1,000 – for relevance, the average cost of a new car in USA was around $675 at that time. When the second world war broke out, the J-3 became the military trainer of choice and by the end of 1940, when the USA joined the war, over 3,000 J-3s had been built, powered by a number of different engines, designated by a suffix letter: J-3C (Continental), J-3L (Lycoming), J-3F (Franklin) and so on. At one point during the war, it is estimated that a J-3 was coming off the production line every 20 minutes!

During the late 1930s and 1940s around 20,000 J-3 Cubs were built, many designated as the military ‘L-4’ version. Since then, tens of thousands of Cub variants have been designed and built by Piper, most famously the Super Cub, with  powerful 150+hp engines, which give exhilarating performance, albeit at the expense of some of the endearing flight characteristics of the original J-3.

Sadly, in 1994, Piper went into liquidation and they stopped building the Cub. However, the aircraft lives on and various versions of it are now built in the USA both as certified GA aircraft and as Light Sport Aircraft (LSA) by Cubcrafters (in Yakima, Washington state), and American Legend Aircraft (in Sulphur Springs, Texas).

Here are some links to a few of my very favourite Cub videos (click on the names to connect):

The Classic Piper Cub – a short introduction to, and history of, the Piper Cub
Lainey’s first plane ride – a magical short video about a little girl’s first flight – in a J-3 Cub, of course. Reminds me of taking my own grandson, Ollie, for his first flight in my Foxbat about a year ago
The Yellow Piper – by Kristina Olsen, about learning to fly in a boyfriend’s Cub
Golden Wings – just the J-3 taking off, flying and landing
Dreams of Flying – an excerpt from the well-known video ‘One-Six Right’ featuring a J-3 Cub

And finally, if you are thinking of acquiring a J-3 Cub, there are hundreds in the USA. Have a look at Barnstormers.com aircraft for sale – hit the search button near the top of the home page, scroll down the menu on the left and click ‘Piper’ then scroll down and hit ‘J-3 Cub’. There’s usually a reasonable range, from basket cases to newly restored.

Pilot Flight Bags

AntoineMy very first flight bag – about 35 years ago – was a heavy, black rectangular box-like thing made of stiff board with (not very good) imitation leather covering, an opening top with flaps that folded over the single carrying handle, combination locks and a very basic single partition inside.

Occasionally I still see airline pilots with these types of bags but modern designs and materials technology have improved the quality and usability of flight bags out of all recognition compared with that old clunky box.

For the last few years I have been using a Brightline Bag, which is a modular system supposedly designed by pilots, for pilots. In many ways it’s great, in that it does contain most of my flying bits and pieces, except for a headset. However, in other respects, there are just too many zips and pockets. Every pocket has at least a couple – sometimes even three – different openings, each with its own pouch inside and although the zip tags are colour coded, it usually takes at least a couple of tries before I find what I’m looking for. You can only use one of the pocket-pouches at a time, so it would have been better to have just one opening per pocket and a lot less zips…

As the system is modular, you can add extra compartments by zipping them onto the ‘master’ bag – so, for example, you can add a 5″ deep compartment which could be used for an overnight change of shirt, undies and wash kit with toothbrush etc. In practice, this compartment is never quite big enough, you have to re-position the carry-handle to keep the whole bag in balance, and it is beginning to get a bit too bulky to fit comfortably in a small aeroplane. And having to carry a separate headset case can be irritating.

Now, just in time for for the holiday season – enter the Adventure Flight Bag Collection from Lightspeed – well-known manufacturers of pilot headsets. I have yet to see and handle one of these bags but from the reviews and comments I’ve seen, they look like a clear step forward, particularly for light sport and ultralight fliers. Each of the bags in the range is named after a famous aviation author. My personal favourite would be the Antoine, after Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, who wrote ‘Le Petit Prince’ (The Little Prince) which is the most widely read and translated book in the French language.

The bag is big enough to take a headset (Lightspeed of course!) and has a pocket at each end for a hand-held radio and a water bottle. There are pockets for a (now inevitable) iPad and much of the other paraphernalia we pilots love. My only complaint is that the very useful ‘organiser’ insert is an optional extra at $25; it should be included in the bag price of $179. Overall size of the bag is 30 cms wide by 25 cms tall by 14 cms deep, making it nice and compact for us light sport and recreational pilots.

Jumbo Jet Hostel Stockholm

Jumbo Stay HostelThinking of visiting Sweden any time soon? Well, for something a bit out of the ordinary, have a look at the Jumbo Stay Hostel at Stockholm’s Arlanda Airport.

The aircraft is a Boeing 747-212B which has all the seats (and quite a lot else) removed. Part of the conversion included completely cleaning and sanitising the entire inside of the aircraft. The engines have been removed, although the engine pods remain, and it is bolted firmly to the taxi-way, so there’s no danger whatsoever of waking up somewhere over the mid-Atlantic!

The Jumbo Stay 747 has nearly 30 rooms, some for singles but many with bunk beds to maximise space. If there are two of you and you want some privacy and a bit more space, try the luxury Cockpit Suite or Black Box Suite, both of which have double beds and ensuite shower rooms/toilets. All rooms have flat-screen TVs and the single and bunk rooms have access to toilet and shower facilities.

Jumbo barIn addition, there’s a Jumbo Lounge and a Jumbo Bar for relaxation. Or you can take the wing-walk if you want to stretch your legs and reflect on the fact that the first ever flight by the Wright Brothers in 1903 was actually shorter than the wingspan of the 747…

Trip Advisor has given the Hostel some good reviews and there’s a short YouTube Video about the Hostel.

Rates start at about $85 a night and rise to around $300 for the suites.