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#12
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Dave Doe wrote:
What were you flying? - the Tigermoth? or Stearman? DH82 |
#13
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#14
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Dave Doe wrote:
In article , , george152 says... Dave Doe wrote: What were you flying? - the Tigermoth? or Stearman? DH82 My late Dad did his training in one, on the West Coast. It was very cheap due to being heavily subsidised as part of the war training effort back in the early 40's. Yes. Sadly I didn't get in on that scheme as it was on offer until the mid 50s. |
#15
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![]() "Dave Doe" wrote in message ... In article , , birdog says... "Dave Doe" wrote in message ... In article , , crashdummy says... just a curiosity question: is anything wrong, illegal, or dangerous in entering a c150 into a spin at 9,000' and holding full elevator to maintain it down to 2000 before recovering since spins are often prohibited at lower altitudes? Gee that sounds like fun! ![]() *that* much. That said, only had two instructors that were into teachign me spin recovery. It was not *manditory* when I did my PPL in NZ - and don't believe it is still. However I think it's near essential to learn - as well as a chitload of fun. I asked to do spin recovery under the hood - which was a heap of fun too. And it was great to be able to suceed in doing it. Others have answered your questions about the plane - is it approved for spinning etc. Only other comment is that it may not be that wise to recover by 2,000'??? - I was always taught to recover by 3,000' AGL. I guess that's really an instructor/club thing - and therefore where you should direct your question. You'll be spining with an instructor anyway right? (dual?). In NZ you'd need to be approved for aerobatics (and that particular manoeuvre) to spin solo. -- Duncan. Gee, how times have changed! In my formative days(late !940's) you didn't solo until you were able to recover from spins in both directions. Before the ppl, we did recovery from unusual attitudes, needle, ball and airspeed navigation, all under the hood. And it was all fun! What were you flying? - the Tigermoth? or Stearman? -- Duncan. Started with J3's and civilian instructors in Gulfport, Miss. while waiting to get into cadets. Due to normal gov't. screwups I never got there. Got the ppl after discharge in 1946. |
#16
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![]() "birdog" wrote in message ... "Dave Doe" wrote in message ... In article , , birdog says... "Dave Doe" wrote in message ... In article , , crashdummy says... just a curiosity question: is anything wrong, illegal, or dangerous in entering a c150 into a spin at 9,000' and holding full elevator to maintain it down to 2000 before recovering since spins are often prohibited at lower altitudes? Gee that sounds like fun! ![]() *that* much. That said, only had two instructors that were into teachign me spin recovery. It was not *manditory* when I did my PPL in NZ - and don't believe it is still. However I think it's near essential to learn - as well as a chitload of fun. I asked to do spin recovery under the hood - which was a heap of fun too. And it was great to be able to suceed in doing it. Others have answered your questions about the plane - is it approved for spinning etc. Only other comment is that it may not be that wise to recover by 2,000'??? - I was always taught to recover by 3,000' AGL. I guess that's really an instructor/club thing - and therefore where you should direct your question. You'll be spining with an instructor anyway right? (dual?). In NZ you'd need to be approved for aerobatics (and that particular manoeuvre) to spin solo. -- Duncan. Gee, how times have changed! In my formative days(late !940's) you didn't solo until you were able to recover from spins in both directions. Before the ppl, we did recovery from unusual attitudes, needle, ball and airspeed navigation, all under the hood. And it was all fun! What were you flying? - the Tigermoth? or Stearman? -- Duncan. Started with J3's and civilian instructors in Gulfport, Miss. while waiting to get into cadets. Due to normal gov't. screwups I never got there. Got the ppl after discharge in 1946. Supplement: As to military trainers, did fly a PT-19 and an AT-6 in after the war. A Stearman was on my wish list, but never realized. |
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