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#11
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Airport manager Timothy Fousee said a lever that locks the landing gear in place malfunctioned. Or it was improperly maintained. No, the airport manager didn't say that. However, many things that are not properly maintained do malfunction, so it might be "And it was not maintained", but the airport manager didn't say that either. In any case it really doesn't matter to the people reading this does it. |
#12
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![]() "Fred Goodwin, CMA" wrote Thanx for that reminder. Actually, to be a merit badge counselor, there is no fee required. If you register for any other volunteer position (e.g., Scoutmaster or unit commissioner), it does indeed cost $10, then you can add MBC or additional volunteer positions for free. But if you register *only* as a MBC, there is no charge. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ As long as we are on the subject of becoming active in Boy Scouts, I should mention the Explorer program, specifically, the Aviation Explorer program. The Explorers are groups involved in about every career path that could be taken in life. Examples are paramedic, police, nursing, engineering, and the list goes on. Explorers are a "division" of Boy Scouts, and more specifically, "Learning for Life." Not to lose sight of the ball though, as the organizational specifics are not important. Aviation Explorers can be a pivotal way to increase our youth's interest in aviation. In our post, we have had several youth take aviation as a career path, when that was not the likely way they were headed. It is not all that hard to get a new post started. The activities can be broad, and varied, and not necessarily all aviation. We have gone to at least two air shows per year (not counting the big one (OSH)) gone skiing, rafting, to scuba certifying classes, directed parking and aircraft at our area air show, helped with our local EAA fly-ins, and the list goes on. I'll bet a good many people do not realize where all of the man (and boy g) power comes from, to push and park all of the airplanes in the homebuilt showplane area at OSH every year. It is all Explorers, and other adult EAA advisors. They also man the ropes at the taxiways in area 51, do crowd control and plane protection (from the few ignorant people watching the daily airshow) People over 18 that have been to OSH two times as an Explorer are eligible to be trained to flag aircraft on some of the active taxiway intersections off of 18/36, serving one year as apprentice, then on their own the next year. Shifts are 2 or three hours per day, with opportunities to work double shifts, if desired. The Aviation Explorers have a base on the airport grounds, down next to the North airplane camping area, next to the Civil Air Patrol base camp. There are usually a few more than 100 boys and girls, and 20 or 30 adult advisors. Units come from Cleveland, Kansas, Missouri, Texas, North Carolina, and some other far away places that I can't remember right now. I can't emphasize how good of an experience Aviation Explorers can be for you, and for our youth. For those people who really want to make a difference in keeping G.A. alive, and even growing, IMHO, there is NO better way to make it happen. Seriously, think of getting some buddies together and start a post. It is not hard, and very rewarding. I can point you to a person who is far more qualified than me, to give you the specifics of how to make this all happen. Contact me via back channels to get the contact person's name, at: Make the two obvious BIG changes in my addy. For other general questions, feel free to contact me, or better yet, post them here, in newsgroup land. -- Jim in NC |
#13
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On Mar 19, 2:40 pm, "Morgans" wrote:
"Fred Goodwin, CMA" wrote Thanx for that reminder. Actually, to be a merit badge counselor, there is no fee required. If you register for any other volunteer position (e.g., Scoutmaster or unit commissioner), it does indeed cost $10, then you can add MBC or additional volunteer positions for free. But if you register *only* as a MBC, there is no charge. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ As long as we are on the subject of becoming active in Boy Scouts, I should mention the Explorer program, specifically, the Aviation Explorer program. The Explorers are groups involved in about every career path that could be taken in life. Examples are paramedic, police, nursing, engineering, and the list goes on. Explorers are a "division" of Boy Scouts, and more specifically, "Learning for Life." Not to lose sight of the ball though, as the organizational specifics are not important. Aviation Explorers can be a pivotal way to increase our youth's interest in aviation. In our post, we have had several youth take aviation as a career path, when that was not the likely way they were headed. It is not all that hard to get a new post started. The activities can be broad, and varied, and not necessarily all aviation. We have gone to at least two air shows per year (not counting the big one (OSH)) gone skiing, rafting, to scuba certifying classes, directed parking and aircraft at our area air show, helped with our local EAA fly-ins, and the list goes on. I'll bet a good many people do not realize where all of the man (and boy g) power comes from, to push and park all of the airplanes in the homebuilt showplane area at OSH every year. It is all Explorers, and other adult EAA advisors. They also man the ropes at the taxiways in area 51, do crowd control and plane protection (from the few ignorant people watching the daily airshow) People over 18 that have been to OSH two times as an Explorer are eligible to be trained to flag aircraft on some of the active taxiway intersections off of 18/36, serving one year as apprentice, then on their own the next year. Shifts are 2 or three hours per day, with opportunities to work double shifts, if desired. The Aviation Explorers have a base on the airport grounds, down next to the North airplane camping area, next to the Civil Air Patrol base camp. There are usually a few more than 100 boys and girls, and 20 or 30 adult advisors. Units come from Cleveland, Kansas, Missouri, Texas, North Carolina, and some other far away places that I can't remember right now. I can't emphasize how good of an experience Aviation Explorers can be for you, and for our youth. For those people who really want to make a difference in keeping G.A. alive, and even growing, IMHO, there is NO better way to make it happen. Seriously, think of getting some buddies together and start a post. It is not hard, and very rewarding. I can point you to a person who is far more qualified than me, to give you the specifics of how to make this all happen. Contact me via back channels to get the contact person's name, at: Make the two obvious BIG changes in my addy. For other general questions, feel free to contact me, or better yet, post them here, in newsgroup land. -- Jim in NC Its odd that BSA's site http://www.scouting.org/ doesn't mention Explorers. I've not heard of them. Usually we try to get older boys involved in Venture scouting to keep them interested. -Robert |
#14
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote Its odd that BSA's site http://www.scouting.org/ doesn't mention Explorers. I've not heard of them. Usually we try to get older boys involved in Venture scouting to keep them interested. This explains it far better than I could ever attempt. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learning_for_Life Here are a couple other unit specific sites. http://www.lastfrontiercouncil.org/d...ingforlife.htm http://www.troop97.net/bsainfo.htm Notice that I put quotations around "division" of Boy Scouts, and that is not even right, because it is now called just "Scouting." Like I said, the divisions are not important. Helping our youth get "turned on" to aviation is what is important. Google "Learning for Life" if you want to know more, or even better, inquire about starting a unit, by contacting me and getting _my_ contact person's information. -- Jim in NC |
#15
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote:
As long as we are on the subject of becoming active in Boy Scouts, I should mention the Explorer program, specifically, the Aviation Explorer program. Its odd that BSA's site http://www.scouting.org/ doesn't mention Explorers. I've not heard of them. Usually we try to get older boys involved in Venture scouting to keep them interested. It is not the least bit odd. The BSA organizes career programs for charter organizations such as government agencies or corporations that may have difficulty with belief in God under the Learning For Life banner, a subsidiary of the BSA. Exploring and learning for life have no Oath or Laws as Scouting does. Exploring falls under this banner. For more on Exploring and Learning For Life visit: http://www.learning-for-life.org/ http://www.learning-for-life.org/exploring/index.html http://www.learning-for-life.org/exploring/aviation/index.html -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA http://scouters.us |
#16
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M. Fricker writes:
No, the airport manager didn't say that. The airport manager is no more qualified to determine the state of maintenance of the gear than I am. In any case it really doesn't matter to the people reading this does it. It might. GA aircraft suffer far more incidents and accidents than commercial airliners. One reason is less rigorous maintenance. It's important to make it clear that much of the additional risk of flying in GA aircraft is avoidable, and very often GA accidents are avoidable instances of simple carelessness (or recklessness) on the part of flight crews or aircraft owners. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#17
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: M. Fricker writes: No, the airport manager didn't say that. The airport manager is no more qualified to determine the state of maintenance of the gear than I am. In any case it really doesn't matter to the people reading this does it. It might. GA aircraft suffer far more incidents and accidents than commercial airliners. One reason is less rigorous maintenance. Mostly it's because they outnumber commercial aircraft by a huge margin, fjukkwit. Bertie |
#18
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Bertie the Bunyip writes:
Mostly it's because they outnumber commercial aircraft by a huge margin, fjukkwit. Unfortunately, no, it's not that. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#19
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On Mar 20, 7:56 am, wrote:
Seconds before the plane came down, Riegel said, the pilot told his passengers he would land on the grass next to the runway. Wonder why the pilot chose to land on the grass instead of the hard, I thought that too. When flying a retract that won't let the gear down I always thought the preferred landing places were in this order Best...........: sealed runway Less Good......: grass runway Really Bad Day.: anything else |
#20
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On Mar 19, 10:18 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
The airport manager is no more qualified to determine the state of maintenance of the gear than I am. Lets see...he's an aviation professional, running the local airport where the aircraft was based. He'd know the aircraft owner, and all the A&P's at the field. As airport manager, I guarantee he's spoken to all of the parties involved, probably had a look at the plane and the maintenance records, and he may very well have been a witness to the landing. You were 6000 miles away from the incident, you haven't left your apartment since, your only knowledge of the landing was what you read in the links posted above, you have no aviation background, and you've never been in a light plane or seen a maintenance log. He's more qualified to determine the state of maintenance. |
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