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#11
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: It was great meeting you, Hai. I sure hope you drag Rick to the party next year -- and I hope to get a glimpse of your beautiful Cardinal, too... -- Jay, Unless I can talk Rick into going back to Oshkosh and either bring a bike or buy a bike next time, there is no way that I can drag him to a party after several days of walking on his bad ankle. The perimeter bus system was totally inadequate. The morning which your family rode by while we were waiting for the bus, after three fully loaded buses passed us, we had to take the one going the opposite direction touring the entire campground before getting to the show. BTW, if you and Mary had heard me and stopped that day, you could have had more than a glimpse of my Cardinal ;-) It was great meeting your family and several of the r.a.p regulars. Hai Longworth |
#12
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I will chime in with my adverture to osh this year. It was my first
time to the"event" and I was planning to fly there in the firebreathing monster, N801BH. I called flight service the thursday before and quizzed them on details. Winds at 12,000 msl were favorable, 17@280, a nice tail wind for me for sure. What I didn't know was the balloon they send up also sends back temps too. So, silly me I ask for the currecnt temps at 3000, 6000, 9000 and12,000. I was shocked to hear the gal say the temp at 12,000 was 94 degrees F. YUCK............... it was about then I decided to drive the ol pick um up truck that had A/C. Left here at midnite Fri hoping to make the Alexis Park Inn party. Got to Iowa City about 4 pm Sat and called Alexis for directions and Gina told me "don't bother we are all booked up" Found a hotel right on I-80 and bedded down for the night. Drove in Sun morning. The whole time looking west toward Ripon/Fisk to see what would have been in store for me had I flown in. I was expecting to see planes lined up all the way to Nebraska, I bet between Fonda and Osh I saw maybe 5 planes converging into the show. Got in and settled at camp and went to dinner, that's when I was told of the closure. It all made sense then. After seeing how plane traffic flowed Mon, Tues, Weds I was impressed at how orderly at all looked. Zenith was kinda dissappointed I didn't bring the toy to display in their booth, Eaa had reserved me a spot in the Auto Engine Conversion line up front and the funniest of all, Some guys at Ford had suggested I park up next to the Roush display since N801BH has a NASCAR V-8 Ford in it. Ford Legal had emailed me just before the show and hinted that they didn't want "anything" to do with a Ford powered plane close to their spot. Funny how they sponsor the "experimental" aircraft assoc and shun planes with alternative powerplants,G I walked several miles in three days looking at as many planes as I could and I counted 8 auto conversions. I expected to see hundreds, boy was I wrong there. On Weds at 3PM I decided to bail and head back to Jackson Hole, since Sturgis was the same weekend I wanted to roll though there at 2AM to miss all the traffic. Worked like a charm, made it there at 1.45 am and nobody around, got home at noon Thurs. Glad I didn't witness the Sun mishap and other Sun mishap. I will be there next year for sure and hopefully fly in to make Jays party, Also the RAP/RAH/RAO mid week shindig will be on my things to do for sure. Tailwinds,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ben N801BH www.haaspowerair.com Longworth wrote: This was our first Oshkosh trip. We camped for less than three days but took lots of pictures and some videos. Here are the links to images we took from Sunday July 23rd to Tuesday July 24th. The last picture was taken at my brief meeting with some of the r.a.p regulars at Jay Honeck's campsite. The dazed and crazed look on Jay's face after the blinding flash convinced me to put my camera away ;-) http://makeashorterlink.com/?U12A2148D http://makeashorterlink.com/?E13A6448D While reviewing the images, Rick told me that he wished we had taken a picture of the DG while we were flying over Lake Erie enroute to Oshkosh. Here is the story of the missing picture. We delayed our Oshkosh bound trip until Sunday morning to wait for the front to pass. All through Saturday until early Sunday, there were quite a few of scattered thunderstorms. It was still quite hot and humid when we departed at around 8am. Rick flew the first leg from KPOU (Poughkeepsie, NY) to 8G2 (Corry, PA). After fueling both the planes and ourselves, we put on our life jackets in preparation for the flight over Lake Erie. The lake was at least 25nm away but it was easier to don the jackets on the ground. I was the PIC for the second leg from 8G2 to 3FM (Fremont, MI). We cruised at 8000' with the OAT over 60F. The cabin felt much hotter with the sun shining brightly from the East. After about 40 minutes of flying with the life vest, I was hot and thirsty and reached for the water bottle. Not sure whether the mouthful of water triggered some reaction or it was just a coincidence, I felt a tickle in my nose and had a spontaneous sneeze spraying water all over the instrument panel! We watched in horror as the tiny rivulets of water made their way down the panel. The most awful sight was the DG window. Within a few seconds, the water had quickly seeped inside the glass by capillary action forming tiny bubbles. The inside of the small round window was filed with expanding and exploding bubbles! I searched the center console in vain for some paper towels. With quick thinking, Rick reached for the towel on the backseat yanking it from under piles of approach charts and bags to wipe off the water. Everything dried off quickly but we could not get the water out of the DG window. I thought to myself "Oh my gosh, what have I done? We are flying over the lake on an IFR flight plan and the DG is dying. How do I explain it to ATC?" We nervously watched our DG heading, comparing it to the compass and the GPS. The indicated heading barely visible under bubbles inside the tiny cauldron still showed 290 plus or minus a few degrees. I did not remember how long that it took to cross Lake Erie but it seemed like a long time. The water 8000 feet below us and the water inside the DG got incorporated into my instrument scan with me trying hard not to fixate on them. The numbers in the DG gradually became clearer as the bubbles slowly coalesced into fewer and larger ones. By the time we reached the other shore, most of them were gone. I felt a few droplets of water on my knee. Not sure whether it was the water dripping out from the DG or my own sweat bullets. The DG was still rock solid. I felt a tremendous sense of relief. It was still hot and humid. My throat was dry. I reached for the bottle of water again. This time, I turned my head sideway, facing the copilot and not the instrument panel ;-) Hai Longworth N30703 |
#13
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![]() "Peter R." wrote in message ... : Longworth wrote: : : http://makeashorterlink.com/?U12A2148D : : http://makeashorterlink.com/?E13A6448D : : Great pictures. Thank you for sharing them. : : I especially enjoyed the caption of the meanest looking cloud I have seen : in awhile, "Uncertain weather." Hmmm, it seemed pretty certain to me what : that cloud was about to deliver to you campers that day. ![]() : : -- : Peter Actually, that one blew over... |
#14
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".Blueskies." wrote:
Actually, that one blew over... .... blew over several tents? ![]() -- Peter |
#15
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![]() "Peter R." wrote in message ... : ".Blueskies." wrote: : : Actually, that one blew over... : : ... blew over several tents? ![]() : : : -- : Peter I think that's the one I saw and was so worried about, and it only spit a little rain on us. It was the one late night Tuesday that tried to blow us down... |
#16
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In article om,
" wrote: Zenith was kinda dissappointed I didn't bring the toy to display in their booth, Eaa had reserved me a spot in the Auto Engine Conversion line up front and the funniest of all, Some guys at Ford had suggested I park up next to the Roush display since N801BH has a NASCAR V-8 Ford in it. WOW! I hope to see the beastie next year! |
#17
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In article ,
".Blueskies." wrote: I think that's the one I saw and was so worried about, and it only spit a little rain on us. It was the one late night Tuesday that tried to blow us down... I didn't notice any wind Tuesday night, but the on-and-off rain strumming on my tent would wake me up. I just rolled over and went back to sleep. Jay says earplugs work well, I will have to try them sometime. |
#18
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#19
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![]() "john smith" wrote I didn't notice any wind Tuesday night, but the on-and-off rain strumming on my tent would wake me up. I just rolled over and went back to sleep. Jay says earplugs work well, I will have to try them sometime. Foam earplugs make the insides of my ears "itch" after an hour or two, but I have found the very best ones (IMHO) to use for comfort, and sound. Go to Wally World and report to the hunting section, and find the round blue plastic case, with the soft blue plastic "ribbed" ear plugs, with an orange string in between the two. I always pull the string out, because the string rubbing on anything transmits a lot of noise, right into your ear. They are still easy to get out, and are the easiest to put in, of any I have ever tried. Lick them, and shove them in! Wear for hours, with no comfort issues! -- Jim in NC |
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