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#11
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In article ,
John Ammeter wrote: Speaking of high energy crashes... A few years ago a friend of mine, with his wife, was attempting a landing that went wrong. He was flying an RV-6 and, somehow, lost control of the plane on landing. At least he was flying one of those manly old-fashioned planes, rather than one of those new-fangled sissy planes designed to prevent ground loops and other misfortunes. That certainly must have saved him some embarrassment. Smitty (-7A) Two |
#12
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On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 18:02:37 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote: "Stealth Pilot" wrote the sawdust pongs a Could you give a yank wood butcher an idea of what pong is in relation to sawdust? Thanks. I can honestly say that you probably wouldnt know ...since spruce grows in your locale and neither it nor QHP have any aroma. pong - an obnoxious smell, in this case the malodourous scents emanating from the sawn alaskan yellow cedar. It seems there would be a market for an australian-american dictionary. ...we'd publish one if only you'd go metric :-) Stealth Pilot |
#13
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On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 19:03:12 -0800, John Ammeter
wrote: Speaking of high energy crashes... A few years ago a friend of mine, with his wife, was attempting a landing that went wrong. He was flying an RV-6 and, somehow, lost control of the plane on landing. He careened off the runway to the left, dragging the left wing tip in the grass, went through a barbed wire fence complete with metal posts, through a blackberry thicket and then it got interesting.... The thicket was at the top of a cliff next to a gravel pit and the plane ended up at the base of the 60 foot cliff nose down in between two piles of gravel. The nose of the RV was buried in the gravel and the wings were buried in the two piles of gravel. The contents of the fuel tanks drained out instantly (cut open by the metal posts) into the gravel. He suffered a small cut on his left arm from the broken canopy and his wife, in the right seat, suffered a crushed ankle from the collapsing fuselage around her right foot. The RV may not use wood construction but it certainly is well designed for pilot/passenger protection. John one of our 80 year old pilots took an international visiting friend for a fly in his Druine D5 turbi. gave the guy his normal rear seat so that he could fly and flew from the front seat. on approach to landing he found that the lower seat position in the front seat prevented him from seeing much. the aircraft intercom being a homemade unit that ceased working reliably probably back in the 50's was no help in getting the visitor to take over so the landing proceeded. 150 ft short of the runway, on the other side of a country road, in the opposite paddock stood an old cattle loading ramp built from 6"x4" timber posts probably about the time the radio intercom started to quit. the D5 turbi took the nearmost corner post of the cattle ramp fair on the nosebowl. the impact demolished to a wood stack the entire cattle ramp. the D5 then slid through a 5 wire farm fence taking out one post. the aircraft came to rest on a demolished undercarriage in the centre of the road pointing to the front gate of the airfield. I arrived on the scene just as the dust settled intending to take my aircraft out flying. The D5 turbi is a tandem seat low wing wooden aircraft which is the bigger brother to the single seat Druine D3 Turbulent. The most damage was caused by the sawing action of the fence wires as the aircraft slid through them. The engine mount was bent but not broken. The guys suffered a cut lip for the pilot and a gash across the eyebrow for the passenger. The aircraft has long since completed it's third rebuild and is still being flown by the now late 80's pilot. timber is just as much an engineering material as aloooominum. the glues are a hell of a lot more reliable nowadays. whittling and aeroplane is good fun. Stealth Pilot |
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![]() "Stealth Pilot" wrote It seems there would be a market for an australian-american dictionary. ...we'd publish one if only you'd go metric :-) The *real* problem would be in making the first "smellobetic" dictionary, me thinks. g So it is kinda like how some of our red oak smells like "dog ****." -- Jim in NC |
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Well, I wuss'd out and went with Sitka on my Wright machine, but only
b/c I didn't know anyone who would murder a West Virginia silver spruce tree for me. ...that stuff's kinda hard to find, for obvious reasons. One of the Wright recreators did use it, but then they also had a $7 million budget. I've been entertaining the idea of building a Chanute-Herring glider from alternate wood like doug fir or possibly yellow poplar. Anyone got specs on yellow poplar? Didn't see it listed in AC43-13. |
#17
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"wright1902glider" wrote in message
oups.com... I've been entertaining the idea of building a Chanute-Herring glider from alternate wood like doug fir or possibly yellow poplar. Anyone got specs on yellow poplar? Didn't see it listed in AC43-13. Harry............... All I have is this table, copied from one of the old Emeraude newsletters: Essence Spec. Grav. Tension (psi) Yellow Poplar .44 8600 Alaska Cedar .46 9900 Douglas Fir .43 to .50 9000 to 10900 Fir .40 to .42 8400 to 9400 West. Hemlock .45 11000 East. White Pine .37 7600 West. Red Cedar .34 7100 Sitka Spruce .41 9400 Port Orford Cedar .43 10200 East. Cottonwood .43 7700 Rich S. |
#18
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Rich S. wrote:
"wright1902glider" wrote in message oups.com... I've been entertaining the idea of building a Chanute-Herring glider from alternate wood like doug fir or possibly yellow poplar. Anyone got specs on yellow poplar? Didn't see it listed in AC43-13. Harry............... All I have is this table, copied from one of the old Emeraude newsletters: Essence Spec. Grav. Tension (psi) Yellow Poplar .44 8600 Alaska Cedar .46 9900 Douglas Fir .43 to .50 9000 to 10900 Fir .40 to .42 8400 to 9400 West. Hemlock .45 11000 East. White Pine .37 7600 West. Red Cedar .34 7100 Sitka Spruce .41 9400 Port Orford Cedar .43 10200 East. Cottonwood .43 7700 Rich S. Try this--it's the whole ball o' wax---(Forest products Laboratory wood handbook, http://search.netscape.com/ns/boomfr...e.com%2Fsearch Sorry 'bout the long url----just google the title..Jerry |
#19
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jerry wass wrote:
Rich S. wrote: "wright1902glider" wrote in message oups.com... I've been entertaining the idea of building a Chanute-Herring glider from alternate wood like doug fir or possibly yellow poplar. Anyone got specs on yellow poplar? Didn't see it listed in AC43-13. Harry............... All I have is this table, copied from one of the old Emeraude newsletters: Essence Spec. Grav. Tension (psi) Yellow Poplar .44 8600 Alaska Cedar .46 9900 Douglas Fir .43 to .50 9000 to 10900 Fir .40 to .42 8400 to 9400 West. Hemlock .45 11000 East. White Pine .37 7600 West. Red Cedar .34 7100 Sitka Spruce .41 9400 Port Orford Cedar .43 10200 East. Cottonwood .43 7700 Rich S. Try this--it's the whole ball o' wax---(Forest products Laboratory wood handbook, http://search.netscape.com/ns/boomfr...e.com%2Fsearch Sorry 'bout the long url----just google the title..Jerry Here it is ---shorter-----www.fpl.fs.fed.us/ - 29k - Jan 25, 2006 you want Ch. 4---mech. properties of wood |
#20
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Thanks again Bugger! er...VW'er! er...Veeduber!
I haven't built anything yet, but love to read your articles. One of these days... Started on a trike, no wood needed there. Maybe this spring I'll get it done. Got the hang glider, the motor, prop, whels, just gotta design(AutoCad) and build the frame. Still playing with the layout. So you still surfing or what? I'm guessing you used to surf. Just a wild guess. The Monk |
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