![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I guess I've been reading this group for too
long. I actually understood that. -R |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
3 D-cell metal case flashlight. Suitable for night flight pre-flights,
emergencies, and creating a pilot-side door on a cherokee. (*sniggles*) |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "John Harper" Lighter than a hammer and a lot more effective, for glass anyway (never tried it with Plexiglas)... an automatic centre punch (one of those things that you push until it goes "thunk" and makes a dimple in the metal). Press it up against the corner of a window and bingo. (I have a good reason for knowing, honest, I locked myself out of a rental car once and this was how they got back in). Somebody joked about putting a Ka-Bar combat knife behind seats in airplanes here this week, but it's a good point. I always carry mine, even in my jeep or van. The blade of a Ka-Bar is sharp enough to cut fabric and the back of it is a metal pommel that is flat for pounding tent stakes, and it could easily be used to break a window. And unlike a hammer or a centerpunch, it's great for slicing summer sausage and cheese. : A Leatherman would probably do too. I carry a small flashlight, some aspirin, a yak-sack that I liberated from a United Airlines seatback, a knife and glasses. Personally I'm pretyt impaired without glasses - I can fly just fine but I can't read anything. I keep a spare pair of (cheap) glasses in the plane and another in my flight bag. I usually wear contacts. At my first BFR, the CFI told me he'd sign me off if I promised to carry glasses with me "in case." (pun) Made sense, so now I almost always do. -c |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
blanche cohen wrote:
3 D-cell metal case flashlight. Suitable for night flight pre-flights, emergencies, and creating a pilot-side door on a cherokee. No reason to not add a LED headlamp. Low cost, non glare lighting, long battery life, small size, light weight. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"John Harper" wrote in message
news:1060893504.948012@sj-nntpcache-3... Personally I'm pretyt impaired without glasses - I can fly just fine but I can't read anything. I keep a spare pair of (cheap) glasses in the plane and another in my flight bag. John British pilots are required to have a second pair of glasses, IIRC. I can't get a second pair (long explanation deleted) so tightening the frame screws and putting on a sports strap are now on my preflight. Kathy |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Dr. Anthony J. Lomenzo"
wrote: Perhaps some recall moons ago when the RAP newsgroup discussion was the old flight bag and what 'extras' one would carry 'other' then the usual and in fact almost expected items. Well, this came up again some weeks ago among the brethren and again I mentioned what some considered an odd item to have along but after some discussion it wasn't as odd as it first seemed! A HAMMER! Wait now! Don't be so quick to scoff! Two potentially deadly scenarios just for starters: smoke in the cabin [still grinning?] and a forced landing where mercifully you made it but even in cases of minor crumpling of the aluminum, door jamming is 'not' uncommon when your FIRST goal [and any folks with you] in such an event is to get out of there....FAST! Unfortunately, the human hand or fist or ad hoc shoe for that matter is not particularly effective against Plexiglas but a hammer can at least help matters. Plexiglas can be replaced, you and yours can not. Better you beat the thing with steel ... versus slippery flesh. But then, I know long term GA folks who 'sans' their corrective lens polarized specs would 'admittedly' be reduced to the German Shepherd and the red/white cane thing yet they do not carry a second back-up pair of eyeglasses. Recall that even if the corrective lens specs resemble the ends of coke bottles or could fry those proverbial ants in literal droves when tilted to the sun, the FAA concern is only that 'with' the specs you can pass the old Snellen requirements and so the dioptic(s) of the lens is not an issue...until you're suddenly found without them for some unforeseen reason. Or, more on the probability side of things, they simply break and you need a backup. Hey, get your friendly optician to 'also' give you a copy of the lens prescription and stick it in the bag....along with a back-up pair of corrective lens specs. As to others things in the flight bag, hey, as I recall there was quite a lively discussion about it and those odd items that folks tend to forget! Or reflect upon. A small pair of vice-grips. I was flying once when the knob on the throttle disintegrated. Quite by coincidence (from tightening a lock) I had some vice-grips in my flight bag and I gripped the throttle and they worked just fine. There are lots of items in an aircraft that can break or come loose and just need holding, and several controls that could break and then you need an instant handle. Also a flashlight or l.e.d. headlamp, and - a luxury but one that I am about to purchase - a handheld radio. If I ever did go down, I would really like to have a radio with me for if/when search & rescue flew overhead! -- Tony Roberts ) PP-ASEL VFR-OTT - Night Cessna 172H |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
An ex-food 500ml glass jar with a sealable lid for
those longish cross-country trips. (in non-coastal areas of Australia runways can be few and far between, for that *urgent* pit-stop) |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 14 Aug 2003 16:02:36 -0600, blanche cohen wrote:
3 D-cell metal case flashlight. Suitable for night flight pre-flights, emergencies, and creating a pilot-side door on a cherokee. I call it a PART: Passenger Attitude Readjustment Tool. Morris |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I also carry folding plier, allways useful to unscrew the oil cap of thoses ranted planes flew by students who screw that cap thight like hell ... :-) Tony Roberts wrote: A small pair of vice-grips. I was flying once when the knob on the throttle disintegrated. Quite by coincidence (from tightening a lock) I had some vice-grips in my flight bag and I gripped the throttle and they worked just fine. There are lots of items in an aircraft that can break or come loose and just need holding, and several controls that could break and then you need an instant handle. Also a flashlight or l.e.d. headlamp, and - a luxury but one that I am about to purchase - a handheld radio. If I ever did go down, I would really like to have a radio with me for if/when search & rescue flew overhead! |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|