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#1
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I'm sure everyone who has air-camped has a few ideas that might make air
camping a little more enjoyable for others. Here are a few of mine: Ditch your sleeping bag. Instead, use a combination of sheets and fleece blankets. Much more comfortable at little or no weight penalty. Sew an old sheet into a sleeve to cover your camping pad. If you just throw a sheet over a camping pad, it'll creep overnight and you'll end up sleeping on the pad itself. Bring your towels that are almost ready to be downcycled into use for your dogs or for shop rags. After you've done all of your showering for the week, use the towels to wipe down the aircraft, then put the towels in the nearest dumpster. Underwear. Same as towels. Take the stuff that is almost ready for the trash heap. Wear it, then trash it. Alternately, leave it at the ANN booth. Use a soft-side cooler as one of your travel bags. Fill it with clothes on the way to the show, then unload it and use it as a cooler until you leave. Take earplugs. Not everyone is on your sleep schedule, and there is always someone loud within earshot. In particular, there is no way you're going to get the slightly drunk group at the *next* tent to keep it quiet for more than 5 minutes, so you might as well try the earplugs. If you're a nighttime reader, flashlights using LED bulbs are your friend. 100+ hours of battery life, so you don't need to bring a sleeve of AA batteries in order to pour through all the literature you picked up during the day. Not a camping note, but applies to all fly-ins: Don't power your airplane out of its parking space in back to back rows. Pull it out, turn it perpindicular, then fire it up... There are few things more aggravating than having the control surfaces on your airplane bashed around by some thoughtless clown. |
#2
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Don't bother with a regular single-section air mattress. All the air
will go out from under you and end up in the corners. Find an air mattress that has independent sealed air bladders. Jose -- Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#3
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Possibly the best Oshkosh camping trick of all ...
UW-O dorms. Jim |
#4
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Let me add a few more...
ditch the air mattress or foam pad and get one of those twin/queen/king (depending on the size of your tent) air mattresses that inflate to 5-9 inch high. They take regular-sized sheets and blankets. Quite comfy, and are higher off the ground. Ear plugs are great, but so is a CD or MP3 player with earplugs or lightweight headset. In the back of the putt-putt I have a couple of those plastic crates sold in hardware stores and office supply stores.Really sturdy. When I'm flying with weight in the front 2 seats, I put the 8 gal. water tank in one of them. The other one has the tie-down kit, tools, etc. Turned over, they make great "night stand" or small tables to keep things off the ground. And I think I'm going to bring the 3 gal. water tank along. Much easier to refill the bottles for the day as well as having "clean up" water handy. |
#5
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("Kyle Boatright" wrote)
Ditch your sleeping bag. Instead, use a combination of sheets and fleece blankets. Much more comfortable at little or no weight penalty. Sew an old sheet into a sleeve to cover your camping pad. If you just throw a sheet over a camping pad, it'll creep overnight and you'll end up sleeping on the pad itself. Is the weight penalty worth the comfort of an air mattress for a week? I bought an Eddie Bauer (self-inflating) queen size air mattress on the way to OSH last year ....in the minivan. Pump uses 4 D-cell batteries. Smaller Single/Twin size mattress was also available. I'm not the smallest guy around, yet the thing kept me up off the ground all night - unless I rolled to the side too quickly, then I would sometimes bottom out. On our last night, I wasn't even aware we had a flooded tent until I rolled off the air mattress the next morning - only to discover an inch of water in the bottom of said tent. I have not ruled out foul play!! :-) I packed 1 old crummy comforter and 1 normal "top" sheet. If it's hot - sheet on top, cold - comforter on top. Air mattress ($45) has been used many, many times by us since last year. No leaks, same batteries. Montblack |
#6
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For your airplane:
three pieces of 1" thick plywood (one for each wheel) 12" or 18" square Shut down your engine a foot or two short of the line, place the squares ahead of the wheels and pull the airplane up onto the squares. These will keep your wheels from sinking into the soil while you are there, making your departure much easier, rolling off the plywood instead of pulling your airplane out of the holes. |
#7
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1" ply? Jeez, are you flying a DC-3 in?
Jim "john smith" wrote in message .. . For your airplane: three pieces of 1" thick plywood (one for each wheel) |
#8
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Okay, I admit I don't know how much weight a one-square-foot piece of
3/8, 1/2, or 3/4 inch plywood will bear before breaking. I err on the conservative side. :-)) What would be the appropriate size for 210 or Cherokee Six six aircraft? RST Engineering wrote: 1" ply? Jeez, are you flying a DC-3 in? Jim "john smith" wrote in message For your airplane: three pieces of 1" thick plywood (one for each wheel) |
#9
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I'm going to make some offhand assumptions:
1. This is Wisconsin dirt covered with either green or brown grass quite evenly. 2. The plywood will be 90% in contact with a supporting surface of grass/ground 3. The airplane will weigh something on the order of 3000 pounds spread evenly over all three wheels. If this is true, then the plywood will have a supporting role 10% of 1000 pounds, or 100 pounds over a square foot, or a little less than 1 psi. My best guess is that 3/8 would do, but beltandsuspenders would be half-inch. That's what I'm bringing along. Jim "john smith" wrote in message ... Okay, I admit I don't know how much weight a one-square-foot piece of 3/8, 1/2, or 3/4 inch plywood will bear before breaking. I err on the conservative side. :-)) What would be the appropriate size for 210 or Cherokee Six six aircraft? RST Engineering wrote: 1" ply? Jeez, are you flying a DC-3 in? Jim "john smith" wrote in message For your airplane: three pieces of 1" thick plywood (one for each wheel) |
#10
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![]() Is the weight penalty worth the comfort of an air mattress for a week? Montblack Do the words HELL YES mean anything to you? Dave |
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