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#1
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Hi guys, I'm seeking a little advice from you Las Vegas locals.
I'm going to be traveling to Las Vegas, from Illinois, this August and want to fly my Quickie Q-200. I have been there before, but not in the dead of summer. What can I expect? We're going to be there about four days. Is it possible to find shade to park? Any personal density altitude experience? Would we be better off flying commercial? Any input would be very helpful, Thanks very much Sam Hoskins http://home.mchsi.com/~shoskins/index.htm |
#2
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On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 14:51:47 GMT, "Sammy" wrote:
Hi guys, I'm seeking a little advice from you Las Vegas locals. I'm going to be traveling to Las Vegas, from Illinois, this August and want to fly my Quickie Q-200. I have been there before, but not in the dead of summer. What can I expect? Sammy, I'll step up for this one, since nobody else did. I've not flown in there private but have flown in commercial in July (end of the month) and man-o-man, it IS HOTHOTHOT! Way over 100 during the day and never below till way late in the early AM (like maybe, if you're lucky, by morning). I don't know what the DA would be but, comfort level, unless your Quickie has AC, would be REALLY bad, if not in the melted airplane realm. Shade might be very hard to find also, unless you can get hangar space (unlikely, from what I gather, unless for a stiff fee) Which airport would you plan on using? Might be a good idea to check with North Vegas and Henderson, maybe out at Boulder also.. Just a few thoughts from a non-pilot who will try to stay away from there from July through October.. Wayne Sagar All Aviation FlightLine OnLine http://aafo.com/ |
#3
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Thanks. Anyone elese out there? Can I get any shade at North LV?
wrote in message ... On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 14:51:47 GMT, "Sammy" wrote: Hi guys, I'm seeking a little advice from you Las Vegas locals. I'm going to be traveling to Las Vegas, from Illinois, this August and want to fly my Quickie Q-200. I have been there before, but not in the dead of summer. What can I expect? Sammy, I'll step up for this one, since nobody else did. I've not flown in there private but have flown in commercial in July (end of the month) and man-o-man, it IS HOTHOTHOT! Way over 100 during the day and never below till way late in the early AM (like maybe, if you're lucky, by morning). I don't know what the DA would be but, comfort level, unless your Quickie has AC, would be REALLY bad, if not in the melted airplane realm. Shade might be very hard to find also, unless you can get hangar space (unlikely, from what I gather, unless for a stiff fee) Which airport would you plan on using? Might be a good idea to check with North Vegas and Henderson, maybe out at Boulder also.. Just a few thoughts from a non-pilot who will try to stay away from there from July through October.. Wayne Sagar All Aviation FlightLine OnLine http://aafo.com/ |
#4
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On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 21:55:13 GMT, "Sammy" wrote:
Thanks. Anyone elese out there? Can I get any shade at North LV? You might be able to park it in Jerry Airola's hangar during the day, but move it out at night. That's really all you need. He's got all his helicopters in there at night and needs the whole thing. He's at North Las Vegas at 702-616-1967. Silver State Helicopters. Other than that, it got so hot here one time when I left my RV-6 on the ramp it melted the sagged the canopy. The inside cockpit temps might get as high as a couple hundred degrees. That's not bull **** either. If I were you, I'd fly to Boulder City and call them first to make hangar arrangements. There's a lot of hangar space there and they are only 20 miles away from Vegas. Call the FBO there and make prior arrangements. Rent a car from there and have fun. Only fly in the mornings. Get your butt out of bed early and take off at first light. Fly 4 to 6 hours until it gets about 10 o'clock then quit for the day. Also, depending upon when you come, if there is humidity the afternoon Thunderstorms form and will kill you. So, go to bed at 8p.m. and get up at 4 a.m. Fly from about 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. then quit for the day. If that sounds to strenuous to you then fly commercial. I live here and flew today. I took off at 8 a.m. and landed at 9 a.m. The bumps were busting ass by then, the cockpit was hot and I had "Had it." Good luck. BWB |
#5
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#6
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![]() Most heat rays will simply pass through the plexiglass but, if you've got dark colored stickons on the top of the canopy you WILL have a problem... it concentrates the heat right on the plastic and you end up with an "inny" rather than an "outy". John Yep. I forgot. That's exactly what happened. I bought that thing and the builder had those on the top of the canopy. They concentrated the heat on the plexiglass and melted my canopy. It sagged a bit. But, I've been flying it for years that way and it's still just fine as far as performance and no crazing. Interesting thing actually. Bill |
#8
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![]() Bill, I flew in commercial on the evening of 11 may this year.. don't know if you remember that evening but apparantly, a pretty nasty wind had kicked up. We were a United 737 following an RJ that center kept telling us we were overtaking and to slow down... (listening on United's neat earphone thing) long story short, there were some dry mouths on the freq that evening. I can't remember exactly what the wind was but in excess of 45 kts directly across the runway coming from around the hotels on the strip.. we were plenty fast and used a lot of runway stopping.. One of those times that I was glad for the double Tequla that I'd had while on layover in LA just prior.. neat flight and I loved the landing... not so the RJ pilots I was listening to tho... Wayne Sagar All Aviation FlightLine OnLine http://aafo.com/ Yes, that night I recorded gusts up to 65 mph at my house. I'm behind a little mountain and a vortex forms here that is nowhere else but behind BIG HOTELS near McCarran. I know the drill. It gets goofy out there. I flew an RV-6 today. When I took off the winds were calm. When I cam back I had to land on runway 12R at North Town with a damn wind out of 180 at 25, gusting to 40. It's a typical thing here. I got up at 06-hundred and launched at 07-hundred. I was back at 08:30 and had that problem. Now that's sort of unusual unless there is some disturbance rolling through. Today there was. Most of the time you can get away with flying until about noon. I mean the bumps start and go all the way up to 10,000 msl by about 10 a.m., but you can stand it if you have to... until about noon. I was going to fly down and see Pac today (one hour). But I wouldn't have tried to get back home until about sundown. My friend who was going with me had other things to do this afternoon, so I aborted rather than fly past noon. I'd have been hot, ****ed, dehydrated, beat to **** and ready to scream when I got back here at 14 hundred. So, I aborted. I wrote this to just give you a taste of how you have to evaluate it. If I fly the P-210 in the summer, I file IFR and go to 20,000 (Flight Level 200). In that thing it doesn't matter because you are above the thermals all the way and you are cool. In the little stuff I fly, it's just not worth going at all. But, then that's the way I look at it. Everybody is different. Some people don't fly as much as I do and the aren't worn out by turbulence. I'm just up for a smooth ride anymore. Summer flying is ****ty unless you go early. You fight thunderstorms or severe bumps if you go late. In the winter, you fight the storms and the ice. There ain't no free lunch. BWB |
#9
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Thanks, BWB, that's the kind of advice I'm looking for. Why my daughter
decided to get married in August in LV, I dunno. Why the preference for Boulder City? I know lots about T-stms, I live in southern Illinois. Good tip aboput the saggy canopy. That must have raised your blood pressure. I often use one of those space blankets and lay it out in the cockpit. Really reflects the sun out nicely and keeps the cockpit amazingly cool. Any other tips? Sammy http://home.mchsi.com/~shoskins/index.htm "Badwater Bill" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 21:55:13 GMT, "Sammy" wrote: Thanks. Anyone elese out there? Can I get any shade at North LV? You might be able to park it in Jerry Airola's hangar during the day, but move it out at night. That's really all you need. He's got all his helicopters in there at night and needs the whole thing. He's at North Las Vegas at 702-616-1967. Silver State Helicopters. Other than that, it got so hot here one time when I left my RV-6 on the ramp it melted the sagged the canopy. The inside cockpit temps might get as high as a couple hundred degrees. That's not bull **** either. If I were you, I'd fly to Boulder City and call them first to make hangar arrangements. There's a lot of hangar space there and they are only 20 miles away from Vegas. Call the FBO there and make prior arrangements. Rent a car from there and have fun. Only fly in the mornings. Get your butt out of bed early and take off at first light. Fly 4 to 6 hours until it gets about 10 o'clock then quit for the day. Also, depending upon when you come, if there is humidity the afternoon Thunderstorms form and will kill you. So, go to bed at 8p.m. and get up at 4 a.m. Fly from about 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. then quit for the day. If that sounds to strenuous to you then fly commercial. I live here and flew today. I took off at 8 a.m. and landed at 9 a.m. The bumps were busting ass by then, the cockpit was hot and I had "Had it." Good luck. BWB |
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