The warbird approach is so much easier/better if you've got the knots to qualify to use it. Fisk always feels like your just waiting for a midair to occur.Ha! Have you ever flown the Fisk arrival at Oshkosh? Talk about head-on-a-swivel!!!
The warbird approach is so much easier/better if you've got the knots to qualify to use it. Fisk always feels like your just waiting for a midair to occur.Ha! Have you ever flown the Fisk arrival at Oshkosh? Talk about head-on-a-swivel!!!
Even your carbon monoxide scratch-and-sniff is fresh! Nice aircraft.Just finished flying a factory new 182. The finest 135 KTAS money can buy for North if $700k.
New car smell and a nicely designed interior. The latest Garmin avionics and AP to keep doctors and lawyers from killing themselves.
No more vacuum or steam gauge standby instruments.
Still a 182 however.
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Oddly redundant since the G1000 suite contains a cabin CO detector and annunciator. But CAP insists on a old school one as well, replaced annually.Even your carbon monoxide scratch-and-sniff is fresh! Nice aircraft.
First time of several while a civilian to Osh Kosh was when my roommate & I took our boss's C-170 there during our college years in the early '70's. " I remember the non-stop radio transmissions going something like this, "Blue & white Cessna, follow the red & white Cherokee …….. Bonanza, keep your speed up & plan to touch down at midfield and roll to the end. Luscomb, touch down at the numbers & exit left into the grass as soon as you can." Later, took A-4's there a couple of times while in the Navy. Much easier.Ha! Have you ever flown the Fisk arrival at Oshkosh? Talk about head-on-a-swivel!!!
It is a thing of beauty. Just Git-er-dun. I felt challanged, never unsafe. Takeoffs are equally cool. Both sides of the runway simultaneously. Flagman waving you when to roll. He sets your interval by sound and time rarely turning around to see where the previous departure is on the runway.First time of several while a civilian to Osh Kosh was when my roommate & I took our boss's C-170 there during our college years in the early '70's. " I remember the non-stop radio transmissions going something like this, "Blue & white Cessna, follow the red & white Cherokee …….. Bonanza, keep your speed up & plan to touch down at midfield and roll to the end. Luscomb, touch down at the numbers & exit left into the grass as soon as you can." Later, took A-4's there a couple of times while in the Navy. Much easier.
Last year when I flew it, was the worst I’ve ever experiencedHa! Have you ever flown the Fisk arrival at Oshkosh? Talk about head-on-a-swivel!!!
Brings back so many good memories, CAP in NJ and FL.CAP Cadets
The warbird approach is so much easier/better if you've got the knots to qualify to use it.
SFWSL has a handful of them (as seen above).Looks like still a few T-34C are in active service - this example from a recent Navy PA photo showing orientation flight with USNA Mids during CORTRAMID at NAS Oceana... BUNO 164160 seems to be a rebuilt airframe regenerated from AMARC. Likely a "frankenship" from other T-34C major airframe components in storage at AMARC.
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I remember we were flying from Beeville to Key West for a CQ det, and were going to overnight at Pcola. Center was driving us past Pensacola at altitude and was going to let us down on the other side. I was leading a flight of four, and could look down and see the field from 40K feet. I suggested to Center that maybe we could just cancel and proceed VFR direct after a hasty descent. They basically cleared us from 40k’(quiet evening) and told us to switch tower passing 18K. I’d been slowing down while chattering, until we were hanging on the blades (T2s). When cleared, it was like a scene from one of those WWII movies where the divebombers roll in on the Jap carriers, boards out. Had to throw in an extra 360 to bleed off altitude, basically staying within the fence line of the airfield it felt like. Got an early initial, broke at the numbers, and rolled off the taxi way and into the parking spot at base ops, having not touched the throttles since 40K’. One for the log book!just auto straight down
BUNO 164160 seems to be a rebuilt airframe regenerated from AMARC. Likely a "frankenship" from other T-34C major airframe components in storage at AMARC.