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#31
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![]() In article , jon wrote: I returned a few hours ago from my flight to celebrate the 100th anniversary. For my part, I decided that attempting to leave the ground with a degree of fever and coughing my lungs out was not a real good idea. Even if the weather would've let me off the ground. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." |
#32
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David
Very nice pictures.. Your event was great. What a turn out and all of those different types of planes. Congratulations.. Jon "David Brooks" wrote in message ... http://groups.msn.com/davidbrooks/paradeofplanes.msnw. Enjoy. My aging camera has a distinctly blue cast - haven't had time to retint the pictures yet. -- David Brooks "jon" wrote in message ... Wow this sounds great .. Any pictures ? "David Brooks" wrote in message ... We have been *so* fortunate here, in Seattle of all places: 30005KT 10SM FEW160 SCT250 BKN330 11/05 The Parade of Planes went ahead with very few problems. 120 local pilots signed up (there were a few no-shows). There were 6 speed groups plus a formation team flying a circle up to Everett and down to McChord south of Tacoma. Flight A lead reached the dispersal point, abeam BFI, just as the sweep for flight F reported off the ground. We started at the Museum of Flight at 9 for briefings, and left for the airplane around 11:10 (we had to miss the Flyer's attempt on the big screen). We got out of the plane about 1:30. In between was lots of meeting other pilots and their craft, from big warbirds to a pair of Long-Ezes. I was a passenger in the back of a friend's 206 - we have the same instructor, who was in the left seat. We were following a Texan and an Archer, with another 8 behind us in the group. As far as I could hear, only one craft had to leave the parade, a biplane suffering some roughness. Enormous kudos to the team from MOF for pulling it together at fairly short notice, and to the guys at Boeing Tower. We even got a stirring send-off from the FSDO guy (who introduced himself as representing the Federal Anti-Aviation Administration). I think I'll make sure I'm in the front seat in December 2103. -- David Brooks |
#33
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Pete
You know, it is very important to set your priorities... I lucked out and was able to rearrange my schedule to let me fly that day. Take care. Jon "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "jon" wrote in message ... I returned a few hours ago from my flight to celebrate the 100th anniversary. [...] Nice. I missed flying today, but I got a one-day reprieve on some pressing matters, and I'm hoping to sneak out tomorrow. It will no longer be the 17th anywhere in the world, but better late than never, right? ![]() We did luck out today and have some great flying weather (which made it all the harder to keep working rather than heading to the airport). I did happen to catch several large flights of airplanes doing a parade. I don't know where they started (though I suspect the well-formed flights of RVs probably came from Arlington, north of here, where all the homebuilts hang out) but it was a lot of fun, and I saw probably 50 airplanes go by in the span of about 30 minutes, in a half-dozen different groups. I'm a little ticked that no one invited me to participate in the parade, but that's probably because I don't spend enough time hanging out with other pilots in real life. Gotta do something about that... Pete |
#34
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John,
I hardly fly at night and when I did I didn't look at the lights. My wife is not much of a flyer could I use this to convince her to go up ? Are the lights visible from the air, is it as good as ground viewing ? Thanks. Jon "jcc" wrote in message .. . "jon" wrote in message ... I returned a few hours ago from my flight to celebrate the 100th anniversary. [snip] Great flight Jon! This evening my daughter and I took a short "Centennial Anniversary and Christmas Light Viewing Flight" around the Temple area. I've recently gotten OziExplorer to work with my Airmap 100, so I have posted an image of the flight track on alt.binaries.pictures.aviation titled "Centennial Anniversary, Christmas Light Viewing Flight". Cheers! John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
#35
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JP,
Sounds like you had a great day. What you and your wife did for the kids is fantastic and hopefully will stick with a few of them. Jon "JP Krievins" wrote in message m... in recognition of the centennial of flight, my wife has been teaching her middle school level science classes this fall about the Wright Brothers and aviation. She teaches at a special purpose school, a residential facility for youth with various problems that keep them out of the normal public schools. For yesterday, she organized a field trip for her kids to our local airport, which has a flight training program run by a local college. I spent the morning helping out with running the kids through the activities there. The kids were divided in groups of about five or six, taking turns touring the facility, sitting in airplanes, flying the simulator, answering Wright Bros trivia questions to "win" T-shirts, and flying the paper airplanes they had built inside the hangar. Lot's of smiles and "big" eyes from kids that don't have a lot to look forward to, particularly in the holiday season. We ended the morning's activities by launching a rubber band powered Wright Flyer model in the hangar. It flew for about 3-4 seconds and 60 feet, which wasn't too bad (and was better than the full size replica did). I had brought our Cherokee over to the college hangar, and the kids were surprised to learn that their teacher had a "real" airplane. I think she was a little embarassed to have admit that she didn't fly it. Maybe all this aviation stuff she's been teaching will get her thinking about moving over to the left seat? A little prequel to this story. I drove over to the college hangar earlier that morning to unload and set up some of the equipment for the field trip. The only person there was a young student pilot pulling planes out of the hangar, as the sun was coming up in the east. I offered her a hand and soon we had the Cessna 150 freed up and parked at the gas pump. As she was fueling, I asked her where she was going. She replied that she was flying her first solo cross-country that morning. She had that expression of excitement, joy and fear in her eyes that took me back to that first time of "leaving the nest" as a pilot. I wished her well, and went on with my unloading. When I heard her engine fire up, I stepped out and gave her a thumbs up. She returned the gesture with a big smile. Later that morning, I flew the Cherokee, on it's way back to the T-hangars. I did a few steep turns, enjoying the cold smooth air and clear blue skies. I'd flown a cross-country the day before for a business trip, so the winter flying itch wasn't biting too bad. But, reflecting on the day, I am thinking more about the new beginnings I had witnessed than on my own flight. The middle schoolers with those freshly planted seeds. Seeds that could grow into a motivation strong enough to pull a young life towards a brighter future. A young lady, already with this vision, taking on one of the first big challenges along that road. Yesterday I was a witness to the dawn of the next hundred years of flight. Not a bad way to spend the day. JP Krievins |
#36
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![]() "jon" wrote in message ... John, I hardly fly at night and when I did I didn't look at the lights. My wife is not much of a flyer could I use this to convince her to go up ? Are the lights visible from the air, is it as good as ground viewing ? Thanks. Jon Frankly I think most would find the Christmas lights better from the "automobile view". It's certainly a interesting and novel perspective from the air. You could use the aerial view to quickly locate what neighborhoods had the best concentration of lights. But I think there are a lot of the lights that are visible at street level which are not from above (e.g. on the fronts of houses), and there is a much more 3d, "immersive" effect from the street. From the air its a lot more 2d. Also, this was from 1000 ft AGL and 100 knots. This kind of sightseeing is the one thing that makes me kinda miss our old 172. (Flying a C210 now). Cheers, John |
#37
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:hbjEb.391036$Dw6.1242578@attbi_s02... I've recently gotten OziExplorer to work with my Airmap 100, so I have posted an image of the flight track on alt.binaries.pictures.aviation titled "Centennial Anniversary, Christmas Light Viewing Flight". Sadly, it's not appearing on my server's version of "The Binary Channel". Can you tell us a bit more about this software? I'd like to be able to download (and save) my flight track from yesterday, since I doubt I'll ever do 12 airports in 2.5 hours again! Hello Jay, www.oziexplorer.com. I'm using the trial or demo version-- its limitations have not been a factor yet. I don't know if or how well it would get along with your Avmap. It doesn't specifically list that brand, but it does claim to work with "others" to a certain degree via the standard NMEA protocol (which Avmap claims to support as well). If you find that it does seem to work let me know, I have some tips for acquiring and calibrating maps I can give you. I've had pretty good success overlaying tracks onto NOCA approach plates, Kyler's and aeroplanner's sectionals, yahoo and mapquest street maps, and tiger.census.gov (which I used here). Cheers, John |
#38
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Thanks for the info. Although it looks cool, I don't have time to deal with
new software right now. Thus, it's being filed into the "after the holidays" folder... :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" If you find that it does seem to work let me know, I have some tips for acquiring and calibrating maps I can give you. I've had pretty good success overlaying tracks onto NOCA approach plates, Kyler's and aeroplanner's sectionals, yahoo and mapquest street maps, and tiger.census.gov (which I used here). |
#39
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"jon" wrote in message
... You know, it is very important to set your priorities... Yes, it is. Unfortunately, especially when there are many other people relying on carrying out preexisting commitments, somehow as significant yesterday's anniversary was to us pilots, it still winds up a lower priority than those other preexisting commitments. I don't know what your intent was behind the "set your priorities" comment, but I'm having a hard time understanding what your point might have been, if not to be unreasonably critical. Others might have expressed some empathy instead. Pete |
#40
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Peter,
Have you ever joked with your pilot friends about flying being the most important priority ? If not I apologize for the misunderstanding. This was a friendly comment. I had no intent. "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "jon" wrote in message ... You know, it is very important to set your priorities... Yes, it is. Unfortunately, especially when there are many other people relying on carrying out preexisting commitments, somehow as significant yesterday's anniversary was to us pilots, it still winds up a lower priority than those other preexisting commitments. I don't know what your intent was behind the "set your priorities" comment, but I'm having a hard time understanding what your point might have been, if not to be unreasonably critical. Others might have expressed some empathy instead. Pete |
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