View Full Version : Pinckneyville report
Rich Ahrens
May 21st 06, 03:06 PM
Real briefly...
The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
John Ammeter
May 21st 06, 03:45 PM
Please tell me Oyster didn't go out there with his pet goat.... I knew
there was a reason he always kept a pair of high rubber boots with the goat.
amprobe
Rich Ahrens wrote:
> Real briefly...
>
> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
> to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
> haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
> fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
Robert Bonomi
May 21st 06, 03:55 PM
In article >,
Rich Ahrens > wrote:
>Real briefly...
>
>The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
>temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
>to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
>haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
>fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
>involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
Dagnabit!!! so _many_ opportunities for a smart-ass follow-up:
1) ... ending a sentence with a proposition.
2) ... doing it on the numbers, if not by the numbers.
3) ... founding the 'zero AGL club', to complement 'mile high' membership.
4) ... rumor mill says there's a movie in the works -- 'runway bride'
5) ... in daylight it's "runway three-six", at night it's "oh, oh, ohhhhhh..."
Stella Starr
May 23rd 06, 04:49 AM
ROTFL!
It was LAST year that it was just a proposition.
What kind of flowers go with asphalt?
Robert Bonomi wrote:
> In article >,
> Rich Ahrens > wrote:
>> Real briefly...
>
>> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
>
> Dagnabit!!! so _many_ opportunities for a smart-ass follow-up:
>
> 1) ... ending a sentence with a proposition.
>
> 2) ... doing it on the numbers, if not by the numbers.
>
> 3) ... founding the 'zero AGL club', to complement 'mile high' membership.
>
> 4) ... rumor mill says there's a movie in the works -- 'runway bride'
>
> 5) ... in daylight it's "runway three-six", at night it's "oh, oh, ohhhhhh..."
>
>
>
Rich Ahrens
May 23rd 06, 01:38 PM
Stella Starr wrote:
> ROTFL!
> It was LAST year that it was just a proposition.
> What kind of flowers go with asphalt?
Dandelions.
Robert Bonomi
May 29th 06, 12:29 AM
In article <aDvcg.743098$084.44652@attbi_s22>,
Stella Starr > wrote:
>Robert Bonomi wrote:
>> In article >,
>> Rich Ahrens > wrote:
>>> Real briefly...
>>
>>> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
>>
>> Dagnabit!!! so _many_ opportunities for a smart-ass follow-up:
>>
>> 1) ... ending a sentence with a proposition.
>>
>> 2) ... doing it on the numbers, if not by the numbers.
>>
>> 3) ... founding the 'zero AGL club', to complement 'mile high' membership.
>>
>> 4) ... rumor mill says there's a movie in the works -- 'runway bride'
>>
>> 5) ... in daylight it's "runway three-six", at night it's "oh, oh, ohhhhhh..."
>>
>ROTFL!
>It was LAST year that it was just a proposition.
"living dangerously", too. Using the wrong end of the runway like that.
At the far end, at least there would have been assurance that all the
participants were "over 18".
>What kind of flowers go with asphalt?
<quote> They _do_ look like orchids. Lovely. <unquote>
Possibilities:
(see <http://www.earthlypursuits.com/FlwrsPer/FlwrName.htm> for context)
Wild Daisy
Double Daisy
Honeysuckle
Scarlet Ipomen
Zephyranth
Ed Sullivan
May 29th 06, 01:11 AM
>>What kind of flowers go with asphalt?
>
> <quote> They _do_ look like orchids. Lovely. <unquote>
>
>
>Possibilities:
> (see <http://www.earthlypursuits.com/FlwrsPer/FlwrName.htm> for context)
>
> Wild Daisy
> Double Daisy
> Honeysuckle
> Scarlet Ipomen
> Zephyranth
>
>
Isn't asphalt a rectal disorder?
Since Dylan Smith returned from across the pond, can we call it an
international fly-in?
Betsy
Rich Ahrens wrote:
> Real briefly...
>
> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
> to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
> haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
> fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
Stella Starr
May 31st 06, 04:57 AM
Yes!
And I move we return the favor, and all go visit him!
(hope he has a big hangar)
wrote:
> Since Dylan Smith returned from across the pond, can we call it an
> international fly-in?
>
> Betsy
>
>
> Rich Ahrens wrote:
>> Real briefly...
>>
>> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
>> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
>> to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
>> haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
>> fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
>> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
>
Paul Tomblin
May 31st 06, 03:47 PM
In a previous article, Stella Starr > said:
>Yes!
>And I move we return the favor, and all go visit him!
>(hope he has a big hangar)
We're gonna need some long range fuel tanks.
--
Paul Tomblin > http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/
"and by God I *KNOW* what this network is for, and you can't have it."
- Russ Allbery draws a line in the sand for Usenet.
(http://www.xnet.com/~raven/Sysadmin/Rant.html)
Rich Ahrens
May 31st 06, 04:17 PM
wrote:
> Since Dylan Smith returned from across the pond, can we call it an
> international fly-in?
Why not? We had a couple folks over from Ireland for it a few years ago
too. Now if only someone could talk Naugahyde into hauling his ass from
California...
Dylan Smith
May 31st 06, 10:23 PM
On 2006-05-31, Stella Starr > wrote:
> Yes!
> And I move we return the favor, and all go visit him!
> (hope he has a big hangar)
Sadly hangar space is something I'm short on!
If you've not seen the pics yet:
http://www.alioth.net/pics/Pinckneyville-2006/Pinckneyville-2006.html
--
Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid.
Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de
Stealth Pilot
June 2nd 06, 03:24 PM
On Sun, 21 May 2006 09:06:41 -0500, Rich Ahrens > wrote:
>Real briefly...
>
>The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
>temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
>to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
>haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
>fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
>involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
what is the wildfire motorcycle? is it a new bike or a restoration?
reason I ask is that I rode one commuting to work for years. did
17,000 miles on it before I retired it and bought another bike.
if it is a new manufacture then it is an exact clone of a Honda CT70.
my honda was absolutely mint little bike.
It sits out in the workshop beside the Auster waiting for a
restoration job on it.
Stealth Pilot
Montblack
June 2nd 06, 07:02 PM
("Stealth Pilot" wrote)
> if it is a new manufacture then it is an exact clone of a Honda CT70.
>
> my honda was absolutely mint little bike.
> It sits out in the workshop beside the Auster waiting for a restoration
> job on it.
We are selling an... "absolutely mint little [bit bigger] bike"
A VERY, VERY, VERY NICE 1978 Hondamatic CB750(A).
They made the 750(A) Hondamatic for 3 years, '76, '77, and '78.
It shares many parts with the 1978 Honda Gold Wings:
Fenders
Wheels - nice!
Instrument cluster
Brakes?
Front shocks?
Some more, IIRC.
This bike has a nice (original) white Vetter Windjammer.
Backrest
Roll bar w/ rubber foot pads
Luggage rack
4 cylinder + 4 carbs (Fresh carb rebuilds, Fall of 2005)
Compression good.
Chain (new)
Frame "tune up" - done
Electrical gone over last spring - $$$.
Good pipes.
Good rubber.
Good brakes.
23,000 miles
Teal(?) green - nice nice shape
Many compliments at stop signs, biker bars, parking lots, etc.
First $2,800 takes it. Rare!! :-)))
(They didn't make many CB750A's, unfortunately I can't lay my hands on those
figures)
Montblack
I've been tool'n around on the bike this spring. Fun. Fun. Fun.
Minnesota, USA
Morgans
June 2nd 06, 10:21 PM
"Montblack" > wrote
> They made the 750(A) Hondamatic for 3 years, '76, '77, and '78.
> First $2,800 takes it. Rare!! :-)))
> (They didn't make many CB750A's, unfortunately I can't lay my hands on
> those figures)
Sounds like a real buy. That brings back memories of my youth. The Honda
750 was king, for quite a long time, as I recall.
The first "superbike" I rode (around '78 ?) was a Kawasaki 900. It belonged
to a buddy of mine, that was home on leave from the Airforce. All I can
remember is taking it around the block to get used to it's larger weight,
size and power, then stopping to do a "simulated" quarter mile.
I wound it up in first gear, close to redline, pulled the clutch in, shifted
to second, and popped the clutch out, while pulling the throttle back out to
full throttle.
That (at least at that point in my life) was one of the most stupid, and
scariest things I had ever done. The damn thing almost left me, back there,
sitting on the pavement. Somehow, I managed to get the throttle closed
(which was hard, since I was sliding off the back, pulling on the
handlebars, which only wanted to cause pulling the throttle further open)
and got slowed down, and repositioned by ass on the seat in a more
appropriate, and dignified position. ;-)
I found it hard to believe that ANYTHING had that much power. Of course, at
the time, my car was a '68 Corvair. <g>
Back to the Hondamatic. Did it have an automatic clutch, or something?
What is the meaning of the "matic" in Hondamatic?
--
Jim in NC
> I wound it up in first gear, close to redline, pulled the clutch in, shifted
> to second, and popped the clutch out, while pulling the throttle back out to
> full throttle.
>
> That (at least at that point in my life) was one of the most stupid, and
> scariest things I had ever done. The damn thing almost left me, back there,
> sitting on the pavement.
Ha! I had the same experience on a Kawasaki 750.
The only thing that saved me was the stepped seat. (I was upgrading
from a Honda 160 -- remember those? -- and the increase in horsepower
'bout kilt me....)
God, I wish I had that bike back!
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Andy Asberry
June 3rd 06, 11:05 PM
On Fri, 2 Jun 2006 17:21:49 -0400, "Morgans"
> wrote:
>
>Sounds like a real buy. That brings back memories of my youth. The Honda
>750 was king, for quite a long time, as I recall.
>
>The first "superbike" I rode (around '78 ?) was a Kawasaki 900. It belonged
>to a buddy of mine, that was home on leave from the Airforce. All I can
>remember is taking it around the block to get used to it's larger weight,
>size and power, then stopping to do a "simulated" quarter mile.
>
>I wound it up in first gear, close to redline, pulled the clutch in, shifted
>to second, and popped the clutch out, while pulling the throttle back out to
>full throttle.
>
>That (at least at that point in my life) was one of the most stupid, and
>scariest things I had ever done. The damn thing almost left me, back there,
>sitting on the pavement. Somehow, I managed to get the throttle closed
>(which was hard, since I was sliding off the back, pulling on the
>handlebars, which only wanted to cause pulling the throttle further open)
>and got slowed down, and repositioned by ass on the seat in a more
>appropriate, and dignified position. ;-)
>
>I found it hard to believe that ANYTHING had that much power. Of course, at
>the time, my car was a '68 Corvair. <g>
>
>Back to the Hondamatic. Did it have an automatic clutch, or something?
>What is the meaning of the "matic" in Hondamatic?
I had a '70 Honda 750. That was before they were detuned. Stage:
Sunday at the car wash. I've washed and dried the bike. With the wet
street and the residual water on the tire, it was easy to do a reeeal
good burnout.
It seems I got some water under the grips because when I hit dry
pavement and the tire hooked up, the left grip came off in my hand
just as the front tire lifted. All I could do was let go and bear
down on the tank with my knees.
--Andy Asberry recommends NewsGuy--
Rich Ahrens
June 4th 06, 10:18 PM
Rich Ahrens wrote:
> Real briefly...
>
> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
> to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
> haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
> fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
Followup: Sources known to be occasionally reliable report that the
aforementioned proposition led to an appearance before a judge a few
days ago. This is believed to be another first in the history of this
fly-in.
Montblack
June 5th 06, 05:14 AM
("Rich Ahrens" wrote)
> Followup: Sources known to be occasionally reliable report that the
> aforementioned proposition led to an appearance before a judge a few days
> ago. This is believed to be another first in the history of this fly-in.
"This is believed to be another first in the history of this fly-in."
Well, I've yet to attend my first Pinckneyville Fly-In.
That fact combined with a sketchy report, from an occasionally reliable
source, has me asking myself: "Do you "believe" in something - That you've
never seen before?" <G>
Montblack
It's my understanding - if a man appears before a Judge, it's best to tell
the truth. Being an honest woman in court is the best policy for the ladies,
too.
John Ousterhout
June 5th 06, 03:24 PM
Rich Ahrens wrote:
> Rich Ahrens wrote:
>> Real briefly...
>>
>> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
>> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high scattered
>> to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and Waco brigades
>> haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new experience for the
>> fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36 last night. Something
>> involving an indecent, or at least inexplicable, proposition...
>
> Followup: Sources known to be occasionally reliable report that the
> aforementioned proposition led to an appearance before a judge a few
> days ago. This is believed to be another first in the history of this
> fly-in.
An eyewitness reports that the two pilots, both wearing Hawaiian-shirts,
received a life sentence from Polk County Circuit Court Judge Robert
Hanson.
- J.O.-
Rich Ahrens
June 5th 06, 04:23 PM
John Ousterhout wrote:
> Rich Ahrens wrote:
>> Rich Ahrens wrote:
>>> Real briefly...
>>>
>>> The weather curse of recent years lifted finally. Gorgeous weather,
>>> temps in the 70s, cloud cover varying between clear and high
>>> scattered to broken. No groundloops yet, but then the Stearman and
>>> Waco brigades haven't shown up. Rumor has it that a truly new
>>> experience for the fly-in occurred right over the numbers on RWY 36
>>> last night. Something involving an indecent, or at least
>>> inexplicable, proposition...
>>
>> Followup: Sources known to be occasionally reliable report that the
>> aforementioned proposition led to an appearance before a judge a few
>> days ago. This is believed to be another first in the history of this
>> fly-in.
>
> An eyewitness reports that the two pilots, both wearing Hawaiian-shirts,
> received a life sentence from Polk County Circuit Court Judge Robert
> Hanson.
With no hope of parole?
Montblack
June 5th 06, 06:55 PM
("John Ousterhout" wrote)
> An eyewitness reports that the two pilots, both wearing Hawaiian-shirts,
> received a life sentence from Polk County Circuit Court Judge Robert
> Hanson.
"Sentences to be served concurrently!" - Judge Robert Hanson
Montblack
'Escaped convict and the Warden's wife' tonight, or is it 'Bubba and his
cellmate' all this week?
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