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#11
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Are you kidding? If you have met Jay, you *know* Mary is a Saint! Bfg
Amen, brother! I'm the luckiest guy around, for sure. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#12
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From a hopeful future student who will park and plane watch at MKC
dreaming of the day his wife will let him learn to fly. Matt, do not, under any circumstances, wait one more minute. Call a CFI and set up a "Discovery Flight" -- it won't cost much. Then take your wife to the airport, and let HER fly in the right seat with the instructor. You sit in the back. Watch her have fun. That's what I did when I needed to convince Mary that flying was worth emptying our bank account. And, as you probably know, it worked! Just be careful -- if it works as well as it did for me, you'll end up splitting left-seat time for the rest of your life! :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#13
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Great story, Jay. It's funny how many ways there are to meet interesting
people. Last year I was on ebay bidding on a sextant for celestial navigation. I used to navigate a ship that way while in the navy 35 years ago and wanted to see if I could still do it. I lost the bid to a retired TWA captain in Kansas City. I emailed him to find out what he intended to do with the sextant. It was then that he told me he was a prominent member of that museum restoring old TWA airplanes. Turns out he flew many LA to London flights back in the 70s and I was on quite a few of those flights. TWA was the best way to go in those days. Rod "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:CP_Id.25749$IV5.23830@attbi_s54... http://www.airlinehistorymuseum.com/ So we used our own webpage today, trying to find something new to do with the kids. My first plan had been to fly to Rantoul, IL (the old Chanute Air Force Base), which has an outstanding aviation museum on the field -- but my kids whined so much about having been there too many times that I dug around the webpage, looking for other fly-in destinations nearby. Flying south seemed better than east, given Saturday's gigantic snowstorm, and Kansas City's connection to the new movie about Howard Hughes ("The Aviator") that the kids had just seen made Kansas City Downtown Airport sound a lot more exciting than Rantoul. It turned out to be a delightful place to visit! Kansas City was the home to TWA, owned by Hughes, and there were once many Lockheed Constellations based on the field. TWA's old world headquarters building is still on the field, right across from the museum, and Howard Hughes' office is now prominently pointed out during the tour. Flying into the museum is very simple. Downtown (MKC) is under the Class Bravo veil of Kansas City International, so by using Flight Following all the way we naturally ended up talking with Kansas City Approach. Traffic was light, and after being handed over to Downtown Tower by KC approach, we were cleared for a sort-of straight-in to Rwy 19. The whole, incredibly smooth flight took just a shade over 1.6 hours, bucking a moderate headwind. With progressive instructions we were able to easily find the museum (which is not clearly labeled from a distance -- just look for the big number "9" on the hangar) in short order, and were pleased to find that we could park right outside the museum entrance! Now THAT is an aviation museum! The museum itself consists of an exhibit area, a gift shop, and a very large hangar (which was World War II surplus, and brought here from Texas after the war!) that houses their three prop-liners -- a Douglas DC-3, a Martin 404, and a Lockheed Super G Constellation . The DC-3 is undergoing a ground-up restoration, while the 404 is currently grounded with tail spar corrosion that will likely mean the end of its flying days. (It's made of magnesium, and no one knows how to work on them anymore.) The centerpiece of the museum is the "Save-A-Connie" Constellation that is a regular on the airshow circuit. Purchased from a desert graveyard in the 1980s for the unbelievable sum of just $4000 (its scrap value alone was four times that amount!), it has been lovingly restored by former TWA employees and hundreds of volunteers to pristine condition. We were lucky enough to visit during the Connie's certification checks (basically an annual inspection on a grand scale), so every access panel was open or removed. Talk about an unusual tour! We were able to see many fascinating internal structures and systems that are usually hidden from view when the Connie is on tour. You're allowed inside the Connie and the 404, and it's just amazing to see the luxurious passenger livery -- imagine, real silverware, and real food! Admission is reasonable, at just $7 per person, and a personal tour guide was assigned to my family. He gave us a terrific tour, literally taking as long as we wanted at each exhibit . The tour guides are all volunteers, too, and giving tours is clearly a labor of love for them. We arrived right after noon, and were famished. To our disappointment, we found no restaurant anywhere on the field, but after some consultation with the museum folks we were able to call a Pizza Hut that would deliver lunch to the museum! The kids were ecstatic, and our tour guide kindly interrupted our tour when the pizzas arrived, giving us a chance to eat while the food was hot. Our visit lasted around 3 hours, which allowed us time to see everything (although I would have liked to spend more time perusing the exhibits), and made for a great day trip. Why in the world we've never flown to Kansas City before is beyond me -- at just 1.5 hours, it's closer than many of our "regular" flights. (I suppose it's because it's off our "home" sectional...) Reluctantly saying goodbye to our friends in the museum, I went out to pre-flight and take some pictures of Atlas against the city backdrop. The airport really IS "downtown", and the big buildings are quite close-by, visually. It makes for an almost "Meigs-like" panorama, which we really enjoyed. Upon departure on Rwy 19, I was cleared for a northeast departure. When I inquired as to whether they wanted me to do a right- or left-hand departure, the controller replied (to my surprise) "Your choice." Upon hearing this, the kids begged me to do a left-hand departure, as this would take us literally right over (at?) the big downtown buildings -- so I announced my intention to do so. It was AWESOME! However, with many giant towers and buildings all around, I was glad it was cold, we were light on fuel, and we had 235 horses pulling, cuz those buildings looked MIGHTY close. I know one thing's for sure -- I wouldn't try that on a hot summer day! All in all, I highly recommend this museum. It's small, but intimate, and if you're at all interested in TWA, Howard Hughes, and the pre-jet airline days, this is *the* place to visit. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#14
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![]() Matt, do not, under any circumstances, wait one more minute. Call a CFI and set up a "Discovery Flight" -- it won't cost much. Then take your wife to the airport, and let HER fly in the right seat with the instructor. You sit in the back. Watch her have fun. Trust me I've had those thoughts, I just have to wait untill the grad school bills quit coming in. It get's pretty tough to justiy flight training on top of that. But that ends very soon and I'm already planning (scheming) to make all this happen. Just be careful -- if it works as well as it did for me, you'll end up splitting left-seat time for the rest of your life! I would be thrilled to do nothing more! Matt |
#15
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Great story, Jay. It's funny how many ways there are to meet interesting
people. Last year I was on ebay bidding on a sextant for celestial navigation. I used to navigate a ship that way while in the navy 35 years ago and wanted to see if I could still do it. I lost the bid to a retired TWA captain in Kansas City. They have a very interesting collection of sextants at the museum, all used for navigating the Connies across the Atlantic. Apparently there was one very bad accident when the astrodome they used for taking sightings shattered in flight, and the navigator was sucked out of the plane while using his sextant. After that, they changed the design so that you inserted a tube on the sextant up into the astrodome from inside the cabin. It's amazing how far we've come in so short a time. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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