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#21
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James M. Knox wrote:
Tacky looking? Probably... What was "irritating"? My elbow/arm kept hitting it. --- Jay -- __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino/ ! ! ! Checkout http://www.oc-adolfos.com/ for the best Italian food in Ocean City, MD and... Checkout http://www.brolow.com/ for authentic Blues music on Delmarva |
#22
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I had to replace the side window after it cracked starting from the rivets
attaching the Kool-Skoop. I won't have another one. Rivets? Both of mine have been installed with (extremely strong) double-backed tape. I would NEVER drill holes in the side window to install a Kool Scoop. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#23
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Mine was always in the way during flight. When retracted, it is right at
chest height in front of your arm. You also need a spot of velcro on it and on the window to keep it from swinging out in front of you during the flight. It doesn't fit well on framed windows, and frankly, you get a bunch more comfort by popping the door open, at least in a Six. I took mine off after putting up with it for more than a year. Hmm. When mine is retracted, it is behind and at approximately shoulder height. It was in FRONT of you when retracted? Mine can't swing open without my input, since I have lean to the right a bit to swing it into position. The hinge is pretty stiff anyway, (and it is tension-adjustable with a phillips screw driver) so that shouldn't be a problem. I wonder if the storm window on your Six is in a different position (relative to the pilot) than in my Warrior or my Pathfinder? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#24
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Paul Tomblin wrote: In a previous article, Dave Butler said: Jay Masino wrote: Jay Honeck wrote: 4. The Kool Scoop is the best thing ever invented for a Cherokee. That's a silly statement. My plane came with one, 12 years ago, and I found it irritating and tacky looking. I removed it. You can have it (as a spare) if you want. I had to replace the side window after it cracked starting from the rivets attaching the Kool-Skoop. I won't have another one. Rivets? Ours were glued on. It's been a while, maybe my memory is shot. No, on second thought, I -know- my memory is shot... but I remember rivets. Dave Remove SHIRT to reply directly. |
#25
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I took all the checklists and emergency procedures, printed them
on paper 4 in wide, 5.5 in high. Laminated and GBC bound into a little book that's 9 x 5.5 Couple rubber bands and it fits perfectly on one of those black plastic clip boards ($1.50 at a local office supply store). What makes this so useful, is that it fits perfectly inside the yoke of my cherokee. I have one of those broom-handle/big paper clip chart holders that clips to the tube of the yoke to steady the clip board. I'll post photos one of these days. Everything always handy. As for W&B -- since I don't need to do that while flying, I've got CoPilot. I've got the Type Cert for my aircraft and compared the details among the 3 ways (to make sure I have a warm, fuzzy feeling it's correct). 1) hard-core, hand calculations using the TC, latest W&B and getting the numbers 2) Excel spreadsheet (with the TC values loaded) that someone (I forgot who but they are on this newsgroup) created 3) CoPilot I'm a happy camper with CoPilot. And anytime the official W&B changes, I print a number of the spreadsheets with various options and keep them in the folder along with the official W&B, POH, etc. in the aircraft. |
#26
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James M. Knox wrote:
I wish everyone would make up their minds. I've been thinking about buying one (wonderful Texas summers and all), as I frequently find myself taxiing with my hand stuck out the vent window to "scoop" a little air. James: I've got one for use in the summer (Denver). Absolutely wonderful. Open the side door and it's fantastic. Warning -- the adhesive only lasts about a season. Hardware store for that 3M double sided sticky foam tape. |
#27
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I made some cheap light wheel-chocks from PVC pipe.
I used about 1.25 OD PVC glued together to make a |__| shape. The distance between the uprights being enough to slide around the main tires. They are a little bulky but light. I had them for 8 years and never had the airplane move. G -- Dale L. Falk There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing around with airplanes. http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html |
#28
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Saw the ad (Sporty's? Spruce? Somewhere) about the ABS box that holds
oil, spout, tools, etc. $140 or so. Back to the local hardware or household store. RubberMaid box (with top) for $10. Holds minimum tools, roll of paper towels, quart of oil, landing light, gloves, strainer, tie-down ropes. Goes into the corner of the baggage area. |
#29
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Is anyone collecting this list?
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#30
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In article , Dale
wrote: I made some cheap light wheel-chocks from PVC pipe. I used about 1.25 OD PVC glued together to make a |__| shape. The distance between the uprights being enough to slide around the main tires. They are a little bulky but light. I had them for 8 years and never had the airplane move. G Custom sized for the aircraft's tires, with/with-out wheel covers. |
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