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#11
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: Lots of red on that 496 wasn't there? :-))
Does that mean that Jay bought a 496? ;-) Yep -- impressions to follow. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#12
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... We had another big downpour on sunday the 30th. Yep, it really, REALLY came down this morning, ruining our plans for an early departure. I'll post some awesome pictures of the gust front approaching. (It reportededly flipped one plane onto two other planes, in nearby Appleton.) We were inside the tent when it hit, holding the windward side up with our feet. Despite this, the 6-foot tall tent collapsed far enough to hit me in the head with the lantern hanging from the center hook -- and I was laying down! No further damage, but our neighbors had poles sticking right through the top of their tent! A wild end to a great week... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" We were there Thursday-Sunday. The storms that came in on both Saturday and Sunday morning were the fastest moving weather I've ever seen. On Saturday, we got up, showered, and saw the front heading our way. I thought we had a good 30 minutes to grab breakfast and get to cover, but the clouds and wind were on us in 10 minutes or less. Thankfully, there was no rain on Saturday. Today, the experience was similar - fast moving storms, high winds, but we got a lot of rain too. My understanding is that the Homebuilt Cafe tent came down during the storm. We were in the Ace's Cafe, getting very wet, despite being in the direct center of a 4,000 sf tent. When we got back to Homebuilt camping, the row of porta potties had blown over. I'd hate to clean up that mess, but I'd hate it even worse if I'd been inside one of 'em when it went over. Once things dried out, we broke camp, loaded the airplane, and headed south where we saw some REALLY interesting weather. Just north of Aurora, I deviated west to avoid some building convective activity. We went around a rain shaft or two, and then I spotted a funnel cloud dropping from the base of the convective stuff. It dropped 300-500' from the cloud base and couldn't have been more than 3 miles away. I notified the tower at Aurora that there was a funnel cloud 5 miles west of the field. This got their attention, as well as the attention of several aircraft in the area. In a couple of minutes, the funnel retreated back into the clouds, so I let Aurora towere know that too. My most miserable experience from Osh this week was the departure. First, there was a loooooong line of aircraft taxiing for departure. Second, I got stuck behind a jet. Breathing kerosene stench for a 20 minute taxi was an eye-watering experience. Then came my departure. I thought the wind was straight down 18, but the aircraft which departed in front of me got pushed way left by a crosswind. Determined not to let that happen, I let the RV weathervane, then made a horrible bounced (!) takeoff. Uggh. KB |
#13
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We were there Thursday-Sunday.
Dang! You shoulda stopped by, Kyle! We were doing the "Departure Party" every night, with several different (always donated) kinds of beer. We usually had anywhere from 5 to 15 people, "grading" landings and departures. It was great fun! When we got back to Homebuilt camping, the row of porta potties had blown over. I'd hate to clean up that mess, but I'd hate it even worse if I'd been inside one of 'em when it went over. Three of the four porta-potties nearest our campsite in the North 40 were blown over by that storm today, too. My son was very nearly inside one of them when the storm hit -- he just missed it by a minute or two -- and they blew over ONTO THEIR DOORS. Can you imagine what being trapped inside must be like, with all the blue water and, um, stuff, flowing everywhere? God almighty. They were smashed up pretty badly, too. (Do they *insure* porta-potties?) Once things dried out, we broke camp, loaded the airplane, and headed south where we saw some REALLY interesting weather. Just north of Aurora, I deviated west to avoid some building convective activity. We went around a rain shaft or two, and then I spotted a funnel cloud dropping from the base of the convective stuff. It dropped 300-500' from the cloud base and couldn't have been more than 3 miles away. Wow! Not many people can say they've seen a tornado THAT close. Pretty scary stuff. I wonder what that would look like on a 496? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#14
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... We were there Thursday-Sunday. snip Once things dried out, we broke camp, loaded the airplane, and headed south where we saw some REALLY interesting weather. Just north of Aurora, I deviated west to avoid some building convective activity. We went around a rain shaft or two, and then I spotted a funnel cloud dropping from the base of the convective stuff. It dropped 300-500' from the cloud base and couldn't have been more than 3 miles away. Wow! Not many people can say they've seen a tornado THAT close. Pretty scary stuff. Not scary at all. Other than one dark cloud (with a funnel sticking out the bottom), there was no turbulence in the area and only a couple of small rain shafts. It looked like lots of other building weather I've flown under or preferably around. The real surprise was that a relatively small cloud could spawn a twister. If the RV didn't have a wood prop, I probably wouldn't have deviated and would have flown right under the cloud where the funnel appeared. I wonder what that would look like on a 496? It appeared and disappeared quickly enough that I think you'd have been lucky to have gotten a radar snapshot which showed it. I think this took place at 1:20 PM Central time (plus or minus 15 minutes). I wonder if anyone knows where to find yesterday's radar loop from Aurora, Il? It would be interesting to look at those pictures. KB -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#15
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In article .com,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: Wow! Not many people can say they've seen a tornado THAT close. Pretty scary stuff. I wonder what that would look like on a 496? Look up "hook echo". There should be some good radar images for you to study. |
#16
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On Sat, 29 Jul 2006 18:56:52 -0400, "Morgans"
wrote: Use an inflated air mattress. That keeps you and your bag out of the water, sloshing in the low corner of the floor. The inflatable air mattresses are great... If the water gets too high, you just float... I found that the queen size mattress fit my tent just about perfect... Just enough space left for an ice cooler of beer... |
#17
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The inflatable air mattresses are great... If the water gets too high,
you just float... I've never liked them - but maybe I just have the wrong kind. I find that I sink down in the middle and all the air goes to the outside, which makes for uncomfortable sleeping. Maybe they make air mattresses with separate bladders. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#18
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![]() "Jose" wrote in message ... The inflatable air mattresses are great... If the water gets too high, you just float... I've never liked them - but maybe I just have the wrong kind. I find that I sink down in the middle and all the air goes to the outside, which makes for uncomfortable sleeping. Maybe they make air mattresses with separate bladders. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. I have a pair of Therm-a-rest self inflating mattresses. Good for backpacking and for air-camping. I sleep better on a Therm-a-rest than on our bed at home. Kelly, my wife, doesn't like the therm-a-rests at all. Different strokes for different folks. Inflated, the Therm-a-rest gives you about an inch or two of elevation above the tent floor. Plenty to keep you out of a little moisture, but nowhere near enough if you have a leaky tent and a low spot that encourages water pooling in one place... KB |
#19
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On 30 Jul 2006 21:04:25 -0700, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Can you imagine what being trapped inside must be like, with all the blue water and, um, stuff, flowing everywhere? God almighty. They were smashed up pretty badly, too. So will they start requiring the porta-potties to be tied down like the aircraft from now on? Sounds reasonable... |
#20
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On Tue, 01 Aug 2006 02:33:34 GMT, Jose
wrote: I've never liked them - but maybe I just have the wrong kind. I find that I sink down in the middle and all the air goes to the outside, which makes for uncomfortable sleeping. I don't like the small ones that are marketed towards backpackers... I like the large and thick mattresses that are marketed more towards vehicle based camping or as spare guest beds... Yeah, you sink a bit in the middle, but if you sink all the way through, you didn't have it aired up enough... You definitely don't want to have to blow one of these up via just lung power... The AC outlet type blowers will inflate or deflate one in less than 90 seconds... |
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