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Okay, you guys, I've been away for awhile. I had to rejuvenate my
group list. When I last looked there was no alt.binaries.pictures.aviation. So, I went over there and stuffed in some jpg's for you guys to look at. I don't think I sent any of these to Jay, but I should have. (Maybe I did...hell, a mind is a terrible thing to waste). It's called Lark Glider. I didn't realize he might want everything I've owned and/or flown. I just figured I send him the stuff I liked the best and besides, I just don't have pictures of all of the stuff over 45 years. In fact I was thinking today about some guy's question here about teaching people to fly and just how long guys like Jerry Springer and I and a few others like Bob Urban have been doing it. My first airplane ride was in 1956 and I went nuts about flying. I lost control at that point and I've been bit by the bug ever since. Being a pilot isn't the best of all possible lives to live. But it's better than setting at a desk in a building somewhere. Early in my life I almost went to law school but the thought of setting in an office in a large building in a major city was so applauding to me I didn't go (I'm actually doing it now for personal reasons). I ended up studying physics instead but a funny thing happened to me when I got my first master's degree in 1972. I was offered a job by Boroughs in San Diego, to make integrated circuits. It paid $14,000 a year which was great money at that time. I took a job with the government for $9000 a year as a GS-9 instead, because Nixon had just created EPA and they had Huey Helicopters, and they had a three year mission doing lake sampling all over the US. If you look at Jay's website and he has the pictures up, you'll see the old white Army UH-1H Huey's we had (3 of em) on floats. We flew them around the United States for three years landing in lakes in every single state of the union. Now, for a 23 year old kid just out of grad-school who already had a commercial airplane license, that was heaven. Jay may also put up a photo of a big yellow Petroleum Helicopters helicopter I was flying in 1973 in Los Angeles. I got reassigned for 6 months on that project because I was a pilot and a physicist and could do the data reduction each night. I remember the young warrant officers who had just returned from the Viet Nam war were our pilots. They were tired as young men from that war. All they wanted to do was screw the chicks and sleep. In the helicopters, they'd take off, get us up and on course then say, "Hey, kid, you fly. I'm going to sleep. Just don't pull more torque than 80% unless you need to and keep it at 100 knots with these God Damn floats or you'll flip us over." Then ZONK...they were out and I flew the legs to the lakes we had to sample. We launched in the summer months at 5 a.m. when the sky was just getting light. We'd fly until noon and another team would fly out and meet us in an Otter on Amphib floats. I'd usually fly that Otter back to the air base we were stationed at while the helicopter crew slept in the back. All I really remember much about it now 30 years later is that most of them were asleep most of the time because they chased women all night long. The crew was a team of 23 people and there were only two of us who were not married. Two years later they were all divorced. I'm not kidding. All of them. Needless to say, by the time I was 25 years old I had about 4000 hours of Huey time. Then I came back to Vegas and was assigned to the radiation cloud tracking team with EPA. We flew B-26's, Mohawks, OV-10's, we had a T-34, a Hughes 269 helicopter, a Beech-D18, and two Beech Vopar modified D-18's with the Garrett-331 turbine engines. For about 10 years I flew a lot of that stuff and piled up another 3000 hours of airplane time, got my ATP and a lot of other ratings just because I could. There's a lot of stuff I didn't send Jay for his site. It's just a pile of photos now that I'm getting to be an old man. But I can remember certain things about every airplane or helicopter or balloon or glider I ever flew. It's all in there and someday I might write it all down, just for my own edification. Anyway, I'm rambling. Bye BWB |
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If you look at Jay's website and he has the pictures up, you'll see
the old white Army UH-1H Huey's we had (3 of em) on floats. We flew them around the United States for three years landing in lakes in every single state of the union. Now, for a 23 year old kid just out of grad-school who already had a commercial airplane license, that was heaven. Jay may also put up a photo of a big yellow Petroleum Helicopters helicopter I was flying in 1973 in Los Angeles. I got reassigned for 6 months on that project because I was a pilot and a physicist and could do the data reduction each night. Yep, they're all there. See 'em at http://alexisparkinn.com/rec_aviation.htm . (You've got to navigate to Bill's name to find 'em...) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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