VA Vol 30 No 1 Jan 2002 - Member Home
Transcription
VA Vol 30 No 1 Jan 2002 - Member Home
VOL. 30, No. 1 STRAIGHT & LEVEL/Tom Poberezny 2 VAA NEWSIH.G. Frautschy & Ric Reynolds 3 MYSTERY PLANE 4 HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE - ROY WICKER 6 MY BARNSTORMING DAYS/William B. Dunn 11 PASS IT TO BUCK/Buck Hilbert 12 A FLIGHT/Bill McClure 14 MIKE'S OLD-WORLD MOTH/Budd Davisson 21 TYPE CLUB LIST/NEW MEMBERS 26 CALENDAR 28 CLASSIFIED ADS 30 VAA MERCHANDISE WWW.VINTAGEAIRCRAFT.ORG Publlsl,er TOM POBEREZNY Edltor-In-C/def scon SPANGLER Executive Director, Editor HENRY G. FRAUTSCHY VAA Administrative Assistant THERESA BOOKS Executive Editor MIKE DIFRISCO Contributing Editors JOHN UNDERWOOD BUDD DAVISSON Grapldc Deslglter OLIVIA L. PHILLIP PI,otograpl,y Staff JIM KOEPNICK LEEANN ABRAMS Advertising/Edltorial Assistm,t ISABELLE WISKE JANUARY 2002 STRAIGHT & LEVEL FROM EAA TOM POBEREZNY President , EAA What We Stand For THE ABILITY TO FLY IS something we have taken for granted since December 17,1903 , when Orville Wright successfully completed the first manned powered flight in history. Now another date is forever etched in aviation history September 11, 2001. On that day those seeking to destroy the freedom civilized nations cherish made aircraft their as sault weapons of choice. In doing so they called our free ac cess to the sky into question. As a member of the general aviation community, you know what a chilling time it was. I have never been prouder to be an EAA member than during the aftermath of the attacks of September 11. From the EAA Board of Directors and staff to the division presi dents, Chapt er leaders, and, most impor tantly, the general membership, there was only one relevant question: How can we help? And help they did. EAA's ability to defend the freedom of flight was not born on September 11. On that terrible da y we started collecting dividends on the accomplishments and credibility that EAA and its members have been investing in and developing for the past SO years. And EAAers from all walks of life and a myriad of aviation inte rests have con tributed to that investment at all levels, from their commu nity to the Capitol. Thinking about the programs EAA and the EAA Aviation Foundation have undertaken since our inception, I realized once again that virtually everything our membership has done has been aimed at preserving the freedom of flight and providing access to th e sky. Essentially, all of EAA's work falls into four categories: • Protecting the Right to Fly-This includes our gov ernment relations programs, our ongOing vigilance and communication with elected and appointed officials, and our well-established working relationships with govern ment agencies that touch general aviation. EAAers have worked on behalf of Chicago's beleaguered Meigs Field. Working in conjunction with the Tuskegee Air men, EAAers have given thousands of inner city youth a taste of what the sky offers through Young Eagles flights. In Southern California, EAAers saved the Borrego Springs aerobatic airspace with Young Eagles flights and visits in school classrooms to share information to turn negatives into positives. • Promoting Access to th e Dream of Flight-At our roots, EAAers are innovators. A group unique in aviation, we have said to each other, " If you have a dream of wings, and are willing to put hand, heart, and mind to it, we'll help you make your dream come true. " Today, through more than 1,000 local Chapters, traveling EAA SportAir Workshops, EAA AirVenture Oshkosh forums and workshops, the unique resources of the Boeing Aero nautical Library, our Technical Counselor program, the Auto Fuel Research, support of the ultralight movement, and many other initiatives, EAA continues to promote responsi ble access to one of America's most cherished resources-the sky above us. • Preserving the Heritage of F1ight Without understanding how America's free skies have been maintained and defended since the Wrights' first flight, there can be no resolve to carryon this vigilance in the fu ture. This is why EAA maintains an accred ited world-class museum. Preserving-and presenting-aviation his tory is why we continually tour America with one of the world's few remaining fl y ing B-17s. This is why the EAA Warbirds of America work tirelessly to "Keep 'em Flying." It is why we have created two flying reproductions of the Spirit of St. Louis and display many historically significant aircraft in the EAA AirVenture Museum. • Preparing the Future of Fli ght-You are aware of EAA's Young Eag les program, which has , to date, given more than 760, 000 young people the experience of flight. You may not be as familiar with EAA's other ongOing ed ucational initiatives for those who wish to continue their investigation of aviation as they move toward adulthood. These programs include the EAA Air Academy and the Sci ence-Math-Technology Project, which provides educators with a curriculum that uses the excitement of flight to mo tivate students to learn. Supplemented by fun, exciting extracurricu lar activities and competition, such as our Wild Blue Wonders, EAA provides well-rounded educationa l programs that are de signed to help young people follow their dreams and make them real. Protect. Promote. Preserve. Prepare. These are the four fundamental pillars of maintaining America's free skies for all of us. And they define the mission to which EAA has re mained true for nearly SO years. ~ Protect Promote Preserve Prepare VINTAGE AIRPLAN E COMPILED BY H.G. FRAUTSCHY & RIC REYNOLDS ENHANCED CLASS BAIRSPACE NOW HISTORY! Enhanced Class B Eliminated; FAA Issues New Series of NOTAMs Enhanced Class B airspace was eliminated on Wednesday, Decem ber 19, by a series of new NOTAMs issued by the FAA. In addition, the FAA reduced temporary flight re striction (TFR) locations surrounding New York City, Washington, D.C., and Boston, opening up several GA and reliever airports that had been closed to operations for 100 days following the terrorist attacks of Sep tember 11. "In the aftermath of September II, this is contin ued good news as we proceed on the road back to full FRONT COVER: Complete with a fabric instrument-training hood, Mike Williams' DH.S2A Tiger Moth motors above the country side. EAA photo by Jim Koepnick, shot with a Canon EOS In equipped with an SO-200 mm lens on 100 ASA Fuji slide film. EAA Cessna 210 photo plane flown by Bruce Moore. BACK COVER: Last Biplane Victory is the title of this oil painting by Domenic DeNardo, SO Carpenter St., Providence, RI 02903. It de picts Slovak Warrant Officer Frantisek Cyprich, in his Avia B.534-IV fighter, having shot down a Hungarian Junkers Ju 52/3m piloted by Gyorgy Gach . Mistaking a Hungarian's shaking fist for a friendlier gesture, Cyprich waves to the crew of the Junkers. The date, September 2, 1944, would mark the last aerial combat victory by a pilot using a biplane. Domenic's work was pre sented with a Par Excellence ribbon during the 2001 EAA Sport Aviation Art Competition. You can reach Domenic at his studio phone number of 401/421-2651. 2 JANUARY 2002 strength," said EAA President Tom Poberezny. "Our compliments to everyone who has worked to pro duce this result. I am especially proud of our EAA staff members who did their part in helping restore our flight privileges in this unprece dented series of events." These actions by the FAA are a di rect result of recommendations that FAA developed and forwarded to the Department of Transportation (DOT) on November 12, and subsequently to the Office of Homeland Security for final coordination and approval. The newly issued NOTAMs author ize blimp, news and traffic reporting, sightseeing tour, and banner-towing operations to resume in the three ar eas . (We highly encourage EAA members to check NOTAMs continu ally over the next several days, as we expect them to be modified.) In Washington, the IS-nautical mile TFR was replaced by a 15 statute mile special security area (per FAR 99.7). It is centered on the WaShington Monument and ex tends from the surface up to but not including FL1S0. The NOTAM also provided a special I-nautical mile ra dius cutout for Freeway Airport, Mitchellville, Maryland, which al lows operations to resume there for the first time since the attacks. Four airports remain "trapped" in the new Washington, D.C., TFR, includ ing Bower, Schman & Welch Heliport QY20); Potomac Airfield Airport (VKX); Washington Execu tive/Hyde Field Airport (W32); and College Park Airport (CGS) . In New York, the TFR was re duced to a 2-nautical mile radius from the disaster/hazard area at ground zero and extends from the surface to 8,000 feet AGL. All airports in the New York area that had been closed are now open for operations. In Boston, the TFR was reduced to 3 miles from the point 4 nautical miles on the 317-degree radial of the Boston VOR/DME and extends from the surface to 3,000 feet AGL. All the airports in the Boston area that had been closed are now open, with the exception of Logan International Airport unless authorized by ATC. The FAA has stressed to pilots that the NOTAMs issued regarding such sensitive areas as nuclear power plants and open air assemblies are still in ef fect. More details on these breaking developments are sure to come. Please note that these NOTAM restrictions apply across the entire United States and not just to the now-eliminated enhanced Class B areas. Of particular interest to vin tage aircraft owners... Some of the best news is that for the areas o utside of the remaining TFRs, vintage aircraft may now oper ate as they did before September's restrictions. Pilots can now fly vintage aircraft that does not have an engine driven electrical system without getting an FAA waiver for each flight. All references to the ECBs and their required waivers have been elimi nated. Therefore, the transponder rules contained within FAR 91.215 apply. This includes FAR 91.215(b)(3), which says that aircraft not originally certificated with an engine-driven electrical system, or which have not subsequently been certificated with such a system and had it installed in the airframe, may conduct operations in the airspace within 30 nautical miles of the Class B airport-provid ing you stay out of Class A, B, or C airspace areas (unless you have re ceived an ATC waiver for those areas via phone, radio, fax, e-mail, etc.). This is certainly great news for many pilots, and we look forward to the day when all operations, es pecially those still affected at College Park Airport and the other three fields near Washington, D.C. , will be open to law-abiding, free dom-loving aviators. continued on page 27 STERY PLA E BY H.G. FRAUTSCHY SEND YOUR ANSWER TO: EAA , VINTAGE AIRPLANE, P.O. Box 3086 , OSHKOSH, WI 54903-3086. YOUR ANSWER NEEDS TO BE IN NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 10 FOR INCLUSION IN THE APRIL 2002 ISSUE OF Vintage Airplane. You CAN ALSO SEND YOUR RESPONSE VIA E-MAIL. SEND YOUR ANSWER TO vintage@eaa.org . BE SURE TO INCLUDE BOTH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS (ES PECIALLY YOUR CITY AND STATE!) IN THE BODY OF YOUR NOTE AND PUT "(MONTH) MYSTERY PLANE" IN THE SUBJECT LINE. Not every Mystery Plane is a successful aircraft (I do re quire that, at the very least, it has flown once!), and the October Mystery Plane fits in the "not so good, but in teresting" category. Paul "CQ" Stephenson sent us the original photo graph, along with a note, which read, in part: "Enclosed is a photograph of what looks like a home built racer, a lot like the 'Travel Air Mystery Ship. I don't know where I collected it, but I ran across it when I was putting things away after the move up here to Utah. You're welcome to put it with the EAA files if you'd Iike-I just hate to throw pictures of airplanes away. "Also enclosed is the backing of the picture where the caption is noted on it. I'd be interested in knowing what W I LLARD PARKER "WINGED BULLET" it was, who built it, and where." The caption scrawled on the cardboard backing that came with Paul's submission reads: '''Winged Bullet.' Had it built for the Gardner Cup races, circa 1931? Cirrus 4 cyl motor. Too heavy when loaded with 60 gallons gas. Also too heavily constructed and poorly designed. Could not perform properly at sea level, let alone fields at 5,000' altitude. Finally sold the motor after 20 hours time, and junked the airplane. Cir rus motor was, as I remember, 90 hp." As pointed out by member Albert Aplin of Chuluota, Florida, the Winged Bullet is briefly mentioned in The Golden Age ofAir Racing, by Truman C. Weaver and Wes Schmid. A photo is published on page 189, and a listing of the little racer is on page 544. The Willard Parker Winged Bullet never did make the big time, probably for the reasons stated on the caption included with the photograph. George jevnager, Hop kins, Minnesota, mentioned in his answer that the airplane was also known as the 1929 Air-istocrat SR-5. Other correct answers were received from Don Hill, Belmond, Iowa (he was the longtime friend of race pilot johnny Livingston and once saw the Winged Bullet); Wayne Van Valkenburgh, jasper, Georgia; Larry Beidle man, Granada Hills, California. ~ This month's Mystery Plane is a biplane from a book print donated to EAA by Don Macor. VINTAGE AIRPLANE 3 2001 VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE Roy WICKER A lifetime of accomplishments behind him, Dr. Roy Wicker shows little sign of slowing down. As a World War II naval avia tor, he flew blimps, including the Goodyear Model K, on anti-subma rine patrols. Later, he flew fixed-wing navy aircraft including his favorite, the Douglass Dauntless (SBD). After discharge, he headed off to dental school and started a long career as a dentist in the Atlanta and then Quit man, Georgia, areas. He loves to fly, and his enjoy ment of aviation has never wavered. As soon as his practice was estab lished in the late 1950s, Roy bought a Cessna 170, then a 180, plus a club share of a Piper Colt. By the early 1960s, Roy chose to get even more deeply involved in sport aviation. Since he was a youngster, Roy was particularly fascinated with the airplanes and aviators of World War 1. The ieuport 24bis looked like it would make a great subject for a replica project, and Roy wasted little time in re-creating a stick-for-stick, 120-hp LeRhone-rotary-powered full size replica. Roy's biplane, finished in the markings of French ace Charles Nungesser, was completed in 1965. It proved to be a fascinating time ma chine for those who were fortunate to see the airplane fly and for Roy, whose admiration for World War I pilots ex panded. 4 JANUARY 2002 Roy's remarkable Nieuport 24bis replica, complete with a 120-hp LeRhone rotary engine, was built in the first half of the 1960s. Roy started the project with a hammer, hacksaw, and a rattail file. When the Nieuport was displayed at Huntsville, Alabama, Roy and his family, including daughter Cornelia, sons Roy III and Dan, and Roy's wife, Dollie, were visited by Dr. Werner Von Braun (right) and his son, Peter (in the sailor suit). Much of Von Braun's rocket work was done in Huntsville, the home of the Army's Redstone Arsenal. His experience with his new "old" airplane led him to the restoration arena, and over the years he's cre ated a steady stream of beautiful restorations, including a Warner powered Fleet 1 trainer and a Cessna C-34. His most recent restoration was chosen as the Grand Champion Antique during the 1993 EAA Sun 'n Fun Fly-In. In partnership with Barbara Kitchens, Roy restored a very special Davis D-1 W. Originally owned by Walter Davis, owner of Davis Air craft of Richmond, Indiana, it was dubbed Whistler II. lt had a bump cowl, sliding canopy, and wheelpants. As re stored by Roy, the D-1 W is the spitting image of its former self, and it continues to turn heads nearly a decade after its restoration. Along the way, in terspersed between his restorations, Roy built a Marquart Charger that also wowed spectators. His vintage orientation still showed in his homebuilt, as he finished it in the markings of a pre war Curtiss Helldiver as it flew off the Saratoga with the navy squadron Fighting 6. His latest proj ect is an RV-8 homebuilt he's building with Lee Ballard. Roy continues to offer his expert ise and skills to his many friends in the aviation world. He has left a lasting mark on the aviation and vintage aircraft world with his breathtaking craftsmanship and never-ending desire to re-create the glory days of the past. Our congratulations to Roy on his induction into the VAA Hall of Fame! ....... After graduation from the Citadel, Roy signed up with the Navy and flew Navy blimps from the Santa Cruz, Brazil , blimp base. The base was established near Rio de Janeiro because of the nearly new Zeppelin hangar built for the Graf Zeppelin. Roy's restored Cessna C-34 Airmaster in 1975. His first restoration was a Warner-pow ered Fleet Model 1 biplane , which de lighted Roy with its excellent flying qualities. Specta tors were equally thrilled by the out standing workmanship Roy, a career dentist, had used in re building the Fleet. VINTAGE AIRPLANE 5 Days WILLIAM B. DUNN efore Dutch Redfield started teaching secondary flight training, he was go ing up one day to practice acrobatics and invited me along. We put on helmets and gog gles, strapped on our parachutes, climbed aboard, and were off-it was a thrill even before we started any maneuvers. Dutch could talk to m e through a gadget called a Gosport, which was nothing but a hose running from his mouth to my ears, but I couldn't talk to him. I guess when he started instructing h e would ask the students if th ey under stood , and they would nod their h ea ds up and down-th ey probably wouldn't dare shake it Sideways. Dutch would practice snap rolls, slow rolls, loops, Cuban eights, the whole bit. Luckily, I didn 't get sick. Then he said, "Do you have a fear of heights? /I Before I could nod my h ead up and down, he rolled th e Waco over on its back, and holding it inverted, he told me to tilt m y head back and look at the ground. I'm now upside down, hanging by B 6 JANUARY 2002 Bill climbs out steeply with the New Standard in the summer of 1941. The col ors, as confirmed by Bill by looking at some old movie footage, are an orange fuselage and rudder with yellow stripes, and yellow wings and horizontal tail. m y seat belt, looking at the ground with nothing between it and me but space. Well, I'm here to tell you, it's the most fright ening thing yo u could pOSSibly imagine for anyone who even thinks he or she has a fear of heights. It was unbelievable. Looking over th e balcony in a tall building and straight down got me. This was the same, on ly 10 times more so! I was never overly enthused about aerobatics, a lth o ugh I did snap roll (slowly and poorly) and loop and spin my Taylorcraft. I rode with Harold in this Cu lv er Cadet while he snap rolled it at cruisi ng speed. Man, would it ever snap roll! Harold apparently didn't under stand about wing loadings any better than "Mac/l McGlynn. Later I looped so me other planes, which probably weren't meant to be, and I had some great rides in my Navy training. However, I really wasn't cut out to be a stunt pilot. I somehow survived my learning years-early learning years that is, in that you never seem to finish learn ing as long as you fly-and got my commercial rating. I passed the writ ten for my instructor's rating and was waiting to take my flight test when an eve nt took place that changed my plans. ConSiderably. It was early summer 1941, and I was standing outside of Harry Ward's hangar. Harry and I were chatting when a big old biplane taxied in. This was a BIG biplane. The pilot jumped out and walked over to greet Harry. His name was Ralph "Barney/l Barnard, and Harry introduced us. Barney told Harry that he had just accepted a job with Scintilla, a man ufacturer in Sydney, New York , flying a Stinson Gullwing. He would have to quit barnstorming with that big old biplane, a New Standard that was built in 1929, and he was look ing for a pilot. Harry told him that I was available and that I had a Barney signaled for me to keep commercial certificate. Barney it running. He climbed up on told me to jump in and take it the wing and told me that he around the field. This, too, knew I cou ld do better than was going to be one of my that and to take it around more memorable flights. again. What a great guy. The I had never flown anything next time around I made a but a Taylorcraft, although I good landing, and Barney gave had made the aforementioned me the job. What a great expe flight with Dutch. The only rience it was going to be! similarity between the Waco To qualify for the job I had and the Standard was that they to get a horsepower rating. were both open cockpi t bi The Waco UPF-7 biplane would fill the bill. I needed planes. As I stated, the Standard was BIG. It had a five hours, as I remember, to front cockpit that had a bench get the rating. The eAA inspector gave me in the back that could hold two normal size people or my flight test, which really didn't amount to much more three small ones. Ahead of that was two seats for two more. than a couple of landings and takeoffs. When we finished he The Standard was sometimes volunteered some advice. He referred to as a Bathtub Stan noted, from looking at my log dard because of that front book, that I had practically cockpit. The pilot's cockpit nothing but Taylorcraft time, was just behind. The plane and then he advised me had a SO-foot top wing, a against taking a job flying smaller bottom wing, and something like the Standard large, tall wheels. It had terrific lift from that wing, and the Only 19 years old with a fresh commercial pilot's that was sitting in the hangar tall wheels were designed to certificate in his pocket, and Bill Dunn thought he getting some work done. I go over woodchuck holes was a seasoned barnstormer as he herded the guessed that the word had got mammoth biplane around upstate New York. Bill has ten out about my new job. I and a lot of other things. Barney gave me a cockpit never stopped flying, only recently selling his beloved think what had him con cerned, and rightfully so, was check and pointed out the Grumman Widgeon after 35 years of stewardship. that a pilot named Pepsi had unique rudder controls and spun in the previous week up brakes. Two L-shaped bars over that huge, empty front cockpit, at Pulaski, New York, and killed the hung down in the cockpit to the two passengers in the front cockpit. right and left of the pilot's feet, with this flight reminded me a bit of my the bottom of the L facing inward. first solo. It was very exciting, but He had been flying a New Standard. The Standard was ready to fly on That's where your feet were to be lonely. I took off to the north and then that Friday, and we were to begin placed to control the rudders. Two more L-shaped bars or rods hung circled around to the left and pro carrying passengers the next day. I down inside of those facing in the ceeded to make my approach to took it out and shot a few takeoffs opposite direction . Those were the land in the same direction. I figured and landings and then proceeded to brake controls. You would have to I would land in full view of Harry Fulton, New York to get ready for take your feet off the rudder controls and Barney standing alongside my new job. The field at Fulton was just a big Harry's hangar. They would get to to use the brakes. Most unusual. Barney threw the prop, and I tax observe what was probably the worst grass field west of town. It had no ied out. Alone, of course, because landing that the poor old Standard hangars and, of course, no runways. there were no dual controls, and I could have ever suffered. I proceeded Our advance agent had circulated certainly couldn't expect Barney to to level off way too high, and it posters around town announcing that the Goodwill Flyers would be take a joy ride up there in the front dropped in. carrying passengers that weekend. We Kaboom! cockpit. Barney was foolish enough I thought, "That's great, idiot, had a sound truck with loud speakers to let me fly his airplane, but he on the roof and crowd control ropes you just blew a great job." wasn't that foolish . I taxied in, feeling very sheepish. to keep the crowd back. Our advance After I took off and looked out VINTAGE AIRPLANE 7 agent was Tommy Baker. He was an old parachute jumper and was nick named Diamond because he had a good-sized diamond in one of his eyeteeth. My boss was Woody Wis ner. Woody was only about 30. r was 19. We split the total take. My per centage was only 16 percent. I never did know what Woody and Tommy got. r always figured that Barney got SO percent, as well he should have. I made $100 a week at my percentage, and I was tickled pink, in spite of the fact that r was the only pilot and do ing most of the work. Fulton was where I got my feet wet. It was where my barnstorming career started, and almost ended! We started carrying passengers on Saturday. As the passengers boarded the plane I would stand up in my cockpit and lean forward and advise them on how to put on their seat belts. I was told to make very short flights. Just extend the downwind over Fulton and land. The customers were paying only SO cents a ride, so they couldn't complain. After two or three flights Woody came out to the plane and asked me why I was tak ing so long to leave the line. r told him about advising the passengers to put on their seat belts. He told me not to do that anymore as it was de laying the departures. He also told me that the belts weren't any good anyway. If they were anything like mine, then that was the truth. Mine was a big wide belt that was ripped half apart at the hinge. In fact, a couple of weeks later, when I got to be a hotshot, I would loop the Stan dard over the town when I arrived at a new location . I would put my shoulder under the cowl on the left side of the cockpit and hold on to the seat with my left hand after opening the throttle. If r should fall out of the loop, I didn't want to fall out of the airplane! While flying at Fulton, I began to gain more and more confidence. By Saturday afternoon, I would make a fancy climbing turn out, make a wide turn over town on my down wind, and side slip in on my final to 8 JANUARY 2002 a series of landings that were getting better all the time. I found that I had to side slip in order to see be cause r sat back so far I couldn't see over the nose. On Sunday I noted that a yellow Cub was also using the field for take offs and landings. I made it a point to be sure of where it was at all times. I was beginning to step up my taxi ing speed. We had a good crowd, and we wanted to get in as many hops as we could before dark. I had been carrying passengers for a cou ple of hours and started out for another hop when I noted that the Cub was coming in on its final ap proach. I poured the coal to the Standard and was taxiing really fast to my takeoff spot when suddenly I got the surprise of my young life. Right out from under my right wing taxied another Cub. The Cub pilot never knew how close he came to having that big Wright engine chew up his airplane and possibly anyone aboard. I was stunned. Apparently the Cub that I saw was another Cub coming in, and the one that I almost hit was the one that I should have been looking for. I was never going to learn any clearer, especially in fly ing, the phrase, "Don't assume anything!/I Woody told me that we would be using small airports like Fulton all the time because of my inexperi ence. He lied. Our next stop was Canandaigua . Our location there wasn't an airport, and I doubt that any airplane had ever used the field before-even in an emergency. The object, of course, was to find a field as close to town as possible. This was Diamond Baker's job. He would make a deal with the owner of the field, usually a farmer, we would deSignate it our airport, and then we were in business. This field in Canandaigua was close to town all right, but that was all I could say for it. It was right alongside a road and was about 1,000, maybe 1,200 feet long. The length was all right; it was the ap proaches that were challenging. Also, the field ran north and south. Trees pretty much surrounded the field on the north and west sid e, and high-tension lines on the south end. Unless I had a real favoring southwest wind that called for a takeoff over the power lines, I would take off to the north. Once off the ground , I would bank through a good-sized opening in the trees and fly over a golf course. Then I was over the lake, and the town would be on my right. To come in to the south I would have to approach be tween a nice clearing between trees, slipping, of course, most of the way to the ground. At the last moment I would completely reverse controls. With the stick all the way back I would set down usually nicely on all three pOints. Because I had been de scending so rapidly in my side slip, I found that because of the speed, the airplane settled right through ground effect and wanted to go fly ing again. To stay on the ground I had to immediately shove forward on the stick to keep it on the main gear. It was tricky. J felt that I was re ally getting good. This may all sound far-fetched, exaggerated at best, but it is true. I had one of my many interesting barnstorming experiences while fly ing at Canandaigua. J found that people enjoyed what they called the dip. They would tell me while get ting aboard to do a dip. The dip consisted of shoving forward on the stick while leveling off after takeoff. This would make them light in their seat and give them a thrill in their stomach . They loved it. I had to keep in mind that they didn't have seat b e lts on and not overdo it. Woody had told me about a pilot he knew who did overdo it, and his passenger left his cockpit and sat on the pilot'S windshield . Woody swore that it was true. Stranger things have happened. Anyway, I started to give all passengers a little dip, whether they asked for it or not. A young girl got aboard with her parents. She sat in one of the front "Captain " Dunn and Woody. The New Standard , never built in great num bers , was a tremendous load-hauling biplane. The upper wing spanned 45 feet, and the 220 hp Wright Whirlwind mounted on the front of the mas sive fuselage could easily haul four or five passengers plus the pilot. Even at just 50 cents a ride, the airplane made such a profit for the troupe that it would take Bill years before he'd earn $100 a week again! seats, h er folks sat in th e back, and th en we took off. As I leveled off I gave the plane its u su al dip . The young girl turned around laughing, but not her mother. I saw the mother's h ead fall over on her hu s band 's shou ld er. It stayed there for the rest of the sh ort flight. I th ought that she was just scared. But I learned differently. When we pulled up to th e lin e and stopped, the daught e r an nounced that her mother had passed out. She also announced that the dip that I had done had been th e cause of it. I was stunned. They lifted h er out of th e plane and ca ll ed an ambulance. I continued my flying but without any more dips . Each time I landed I inquired about the lady, but it was always bad news. She had not come to. I was getting frantic when finally they told me that the m e dics had brought her around and that she was going to be all right. What a relief. Things were more or less unevent ful for a while after that. We worked better fields, and I was getting rich . Anne and I marri ed, and she wou ld visit me m ost weekends. We would eat in diners with Woody and, some times, Tommy Diamond Baker, and we would stay in cheap hotels. All hotels in sm all towns were cheap in those days, as a matter of fact. Life was exciting and good. What a break for a 19-year-old g ree nh orn. We would sit aro und one of the hotel rooms on Sunday night, and Woody would count out my pay, usually in $1 bills. It was always around $100. I didn't know it, but I wasn't to make that kind of money again fo r a co u ple of years. A co uple of times I a lm os t dam aged Barney's beautiful bird. The first time was in a town west of Rochester up nea r Lake Ontario. We arrived on Friday and were all set for a good weekend. We had a ni ce farmer's field to work out of, except that it ran north and south. This was to cost us a lot of busi ness and nearly put us out of business for the rest of the summer. A strong wind came up on Sat ur day, right smack out of the west, 90 degrees across our fie ld. The people started arriving, and it was very tempting to take a shot at it. Sunday arrived, and so did a lot more people. We finally decided to give it a go. It turned out to be a very bad decision. My first trip was uneventful, ex cept that I knew that it was goi n g to be a long and exc itin g afternoon if we kept at it. I could t e ll by the amount of crab that I had to hold on fina l that the wind was really too much. I straightened it o ut and held the left wi ng down until it almost hit the ground and landed o n th e left wheel and tai l. Then when the right wheel touched down and the old bird naturally wanted to turn into the wind, I had to hold full right brake to keep it strai g ht. I sho uld have quit right th en and there, wh il e we were ahead. But no, with my head up and locked, (a n o ld Navy expression) we loaded up, and I took off aga in . This next landing was almost my last for the season. The plane took its expected dive to the left, and I took my right foot off the rudd e r bar t o take a quick shot at the brake bar. My foot hit the back of the front seat in stead of the brake, and th e sp lit seco nd that it took m e to get on it was all it took for th e plane to turn almost 90 de grees to the str ip . We litera lly slid Sideways to a halt. I never did know why it didn't go up o n a wing. Of course, that did it for the day. We were working Batavia when my next adventure came close to endi n g our season. Diamond had found us a pretty good farmer's field right on the edge of town. It ran east and west, and on Saturday, with a light west wind, it was perfect. We had a good crowd and had our sound truck and crowd control lines set up on the west end of the field. This field was good, but it had its pe culiarities. For instance, up near the west end where I would take off, the field had so m e pretty good rolls in it. Thi s was fine for departures for I could u se them to assist in gettin g airborne. If my timing was right, I VINTAGE AIRPLANE 9 would go down one roll and up the next, and then I was flying. However, landing was a bit differ ent. I had to come across a cornfield and land in the only really level por tion, which was perhaps only 200 or 300 feet long. Saturday was great. We had a good crowd, and with the light west wind I was able to take off to the east and land to the west into the crowd. I was averaging three min utes, gate to gate. Diamond was in good spirits as usual. When a pretty girl would get on board, Diamond would give me a punch signal with his left hand. When the girl would step up onto the wing with Dia mond's assistance, I would gun the engine a bit as if just clearing it, and, bingo, up would go her skirt. Re member, this was in 1941. Little things like that brightened our days. On Sunday, things got different. The wind shifted to the south. That meant about a 90-degree crosswind. It wasn't strong enough to cancel our flights, and we had a good crowd. I had worked an hour or two, making sure that I landed short of the rolls, but not in the cornfield . I was handling the crosswind like the real pro that I thought I was begin ning to be. Suddenly I landed just a tad too long and found myself in the first roll. The Standard dipped down, and the old bird almost got airborne. It started to turn into the wind blowing in from my left, and the rudder wouldn't straighten it out. I went over to the right brake, and being still light on the wheels, it had little effect. The plane was now heading due south, right toward a row of trees bordering the field . Finally the brakes took effect, and the plane started turning to the right. The left wingtip brushed the nearest tree and picked up a branch between the navigation light and the wingtip bow. With the branch hanging from the wingtip we taxied back to the line. When we arrived, Woody said over the loudspeaker, "Hey, Captain Dunn, I see you had a little frolic in the woods." Diamond pulled the 10 JANUARY 2002 branch away, and we continued the operation. The only damage was the lens in the navigation light. Woody always announced to the crowd that I was Captain Dunn with thousands of hours. If they only knew that I was just a 19-year-old kid with fewer than 500 hours! Summer had ended, and we were getting into the fall of 1941. The last place we worked on our barnstorm ing tour was Elmira. And we were working at an airport! It had only one grass strip, and I kind of missed the farmers' fields that we had all to ourselves. At Elmira the throttle was starting to bind, and I was having trouble getting it to close all the way. I had to work it forward and back a few times, and it was messing up my approaches somewhat. I found myself getting very irritated. What I didn't realize was that I was getting burned out. I don't believe anybody ever used that expression back in those days. I was the only pilot, and I had days, especially Saturdays and Sun days, when I wou ld fly from about nine in the morning until dark. The only time that I would be out of the plane was when we were gassing it. Even then I had to pass the 5-gallon cans up to Diamond on the wing. I always side slipped the plane with the nose pointed to the right. That meant that I had to hold full right rudder on every approach. Af ter landing I had to immediately get on the brakes hard in most cases. Some days my knees got almost too sore to touch. It was all worth it, however. To think that about only 40 of those great New Standards had been built, and by the time I got my job fewer than 20 of them were left. And, when I think of how privileged I was to get in on the last of real barn storming, I was very lucky indeed. I couldn't tell you how many take offs and landings I made that summer. I do know this, however, landings and takeoffs were never a problem after that summer. On the land, that is. I could size up a situation and know whether I could make it or not. The season ended, and I flew back to Syracuse from Elmira. But not be fore getting lost! Woody had told me not to pay any attention to my compass because of all the iron that we always had stored up in the front cockpit. He claimed that it threw the compass way off. I hadn't stored any metal up forward; therefore, I used it, except when I was sure of my di rection from landmarks. Then I would hold that heading, whatever it was. All we had to navigate with then was road maps. Well, I took off from Elmira and headed up what I thought was the right valley. The compass was in deed way off. Where it should have been showing a northerly heading, it was showing more easterly. I thought, "Wait till we get back home and tell everybody how I naVigated with such a lousy compass!" The Finger Lakes should have been showing up, but they weren't. Things were really getting confusing. I could n't believe what was happening. I hadn't been lost all summer. Sud denly I spotted an airport. I landed, and it turned out to be Endicott. In deed the compass was right. I had been going up the wrong valley. I re ally was heading east. I gassed up and flew home to Syracuse. In a northerly direction. I didn't bother to tell anybody about my great navigating. I asked Fred McGlynn what he thought I ought to do next. I really didn't want to instruct in Taylor crafts. Not that it wasn't a good job; nothing's wrong with Taylorcrafts. Mine has served me well. McGlynn advised me to enroll in Northeast Airlines Instrument School. He had taken the course and had purchased a Howard DGA to teach instrument flying. I took his advice. I was still 19 years old when I en rolled at Northeast in Boston. It was November 1941. Little did any of us know what was going to happen be fore the year was out. What was about to happen would change our lives forever. ...... CK BY E.E. "BUCK" HILBERT, EAA #21 VAA #5 P.O. Box 424, UNION, IL 60180 Reliving my past Back in '68, before the ea rth cooled, my friend Dario Toffenetti's wife, Ginny, dropped one on us about an old airplane she had known about since she was a little girl. We were stunned! She had never before shown any interest in our airplane diseases, so this was as if a bomb went off. That service was the beginning of the Civil Air Mail (CAM) system that resulted in the airline system we know today. United, American, Northwest, and the rest all got their start in 1926, most of them with open cockpit airplanes of the era. Capital with Wacos, Northwest with Wacos, and Delta with Huff-Daland Dusters. Varney, with the Swallows, later merged with Boeing, National, and Pacific to be come United. That's why four stars are in the pi lot's wings-each star represents one of the founding airlines. The Swallow I restored and flew back in the 1970s and early So much for the '80s. Thanks to the United Airlines Historical Foundation and background. The EAA, we 'll have a flying Swallow at Pioneer Airport. Ted Koston restored Swallow took this shot during the 1983 EAA convention in Oshkosh. now resides in the Museum of Flight Dario was flabbergasted. "Ginny, at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, how long have we been married?" after eight years of very enjoyable fly he asked. ing, during which I re-enacted the first "More than 20 years" was the answer. flight on April 6, 1976, (50 years after "And you n ever told me?" the first) of Varney carrying the same "You never asked." amount of mail. Later I traveled the Well, that bit of information led country to honor the pioneers who us to a commercial trucking garage built the wonderful transportation sys in Northern Chicago and the dis tem we have today. [With your dawn covery of a Swallow biplane. patrols, you also managed to wake up The rest of the story is that after many of us who used to camp in Paul's several yea rs of negotiations we were Park during the EAA conventions back in finally able to get the airplane and the early 1980s!-EditorJ then eventually restore that Swallow I've had regrets at seeing this won in the airmail configuration of Var derful old airplane hanging in the ney Airlines, the predecessor of museum. It represents an era long United Airlines that started airmail past and almost forgotten. It should be flying; its purpose is to continue service between Pasco, Washington, the honor that is so deserved by those and Boise, Idaho. people who started it all. Well, we're embarking on a proj ect at EAA, with the support of the United Airlines Historical Founda tion, to restore the EAA Swallow in the same airmail configuration for just that purpose. When completed, the airmail Swallow will be based at the EAA Foundation'S Pioneer Airport. It will be a flying tribute to the airmail pio neers. Not just the ones who started United, but for all open-cockpit air mail pioneers. It will be used to give riders a taste of what it was like to "fly the mail." The United Airlines Historical Foundation was formed to preserve the past and inspire the future. It's a nonprofit organization put together to save the artifacts and history of the early airmail days. The Foundation is not a part of United, but it is com posed of friends who have strong feelings about the heritage of United and the airmail pioneers. Cooperative efforts between EAA and the Founda tion on the Swallow project are a beginning. We hope to have the Swal low flying by next summer. More than 25 years ago I emu lated Captain Leon Cuddeback in that re-enactment. I'm looking for ward to seeing this airplane fly again in tribute to him and the others like him who did what they had to do. Over to you, t( ~tAr;}, K VINTAGE AIRPLANE 11 ~Ugust 1, 1999. What a day fm flying. The sky is that perfect cobalt blue. Just a few puffy clouds give per spective to the endless spaces above. The temperature is perfect. The heat of the last few days has broken, giving us, this old plane and me, one of those rare days where both man and machine just seem to run better. As I fly along, the side window is rolled down. My left elbow sticks out into the considerable breeze, and the sensation is powerful but very pleas ant on this day. The air flowing over the wings and control surfaces, and my elbow, takes on an entirely differ ent character at this speed. It becomes an almost solid thing, a thick river of wind that holds both the steel and fabric of this plane, and the weight of my body, aloft. Funny how so many folks have difficulty conceiving how a plane can fly in the thin air. They have never stuck their elbows into the wind at a speed like this. Thin indeed. Not many airplanes allow you to stick body parts out into the breeze these days. But my Staggerwing does. Those wonderful roll-down windows are bu t one classic fea ture of a ma chine whose every inch personifies the grace and beauty of a bygone era. I have been lucky to own this plane these last 10 years. We have flown to gether in almost every conceivable circumstance for more than a thou sand hours. More time have I logged in this seat than any other single plane I have flown. Yet none of those hours were for pay, or for war. These hours were for the pure joy of flight. And for learning. Ah, this plane. After many thousands of hours in the air, you thought you were getting this flying thing down, didn't you? The Stag knew more. But it was will ing to teach, and we caught up to each other down the road. But it 12 JANUARY 2002 never really stopped teaching this old dog a few tricks. Western Wisconsin now. I've never been over these parts, at least not at an altitude where I could actually see things on the ground. On this day, the world seems wonderful. The beauty of the countryside flowing along below restores the soul. I won der how we sound, how we look to those below. Doubtless our passage attracts the interest of some of those folks down there. The rumble of a ra dial is not that common a sound these days, and certainly those with any love of flight in their veins will take a look to discover the source of that wonderful noise. Hey look, over there. Down a dusty dirt road a horse drawn carriage is transporting a family. As I thunder overhead, it ap pears likely that those good folks are living a more fundamental life; per haps members of one of the religious societies I have heard are active in this area. Indeed, it is Sunday. I bet they are on the way home from church. I wonder about their percep tions at this moment. I guess what they are experiencing wouldn't vary much from what folks knew more than a hundred years ago. Me, at least for now, I'm stuck in 1937. The big biplane that transports me is a time machine. I share the same experience of the unknown pilot who first took it to the air more than 60 years ago. The moment seems perfect. Yet the day is not perfect. After these many years, the Stag and I will part com pany today. I still feel sheepish about the time, back at Oshkosh, when I sat down on my camp chair and felt the tears well up in my eyes. My friend Gary Street seemed to understand how I felt. Someone just said he would buy this plane from me, and some how I said I would sell. After the handshake , after he was gone , the emotions flowed. Never love some thing that can't love you back, they say. I suppose. But this plane did more than love me back. It flew me, and my family, over almost every part of this great land of ours, in all kinds of weather, for so very long. Our girls grew up with this ship, named it Big Bird. After the birth of our second daughter, Kelly, I emerged from the hospital into the bright midmorning sun. The parents, relatives, and friends were called; the excitement of the miraculous event still charged through my body. What to do now? Most would have many other ideas, but for me the almost Singular path led to the airport. The almost Zen-like state my mind assumes while working on planes orients my world. So, off to the airport to work on the Stag. Funny that Kelly has come to share my love of airplanes. Oh, yes. Working on the Stagger wing. More lessons. This plane was a great financial stretch for my bride, Kathleen, and me. How lucky can a guy be, but to have a wife who can ac tually understand the airplane nut's need for the aeronautical object of his desire? But, the endless hours laboring on maintenance and improvement projects would have to be done by my hands, and the hands of some very special friends. It has become almost a cliche that we in aviation spend our lives and money on flying machines, and come to find the highest value not in the planes themselves, but in the aviation people we meet along the way. Aero nautical serendipity. People like Norm Rowe. Many people have taught me a lot, but no one person, outside of my parents, taught me as much as Norm did. Indeed , had not arm told me that his good friend and aeronautical mentor Jim Spriggs had a Staggerwing he wanted to sell, none of this story would have happened. What can you say about somebody who spends countless hours in your hangar work ing with you, imparting knowledge, and demonstrating skills? So many airplane builders and restorers have their mentors. Norm is mine. And there are the Staggerwing peo ple. Down in the south central Tennessee town of Tullahoma you can find the Staggerwing Museum, head quarters of its foundation. There, each October, flock Staggerwings and their cousins from all corners of the world. John Parish and Dub Yarborough cre ated a magnificent organization for the preservation and celebration of this classic aircraft. If birds of a feather flock together, I am proud to have spent time with the members and leaders of this fine organization. Yes, this airplane made it possible for me to meet many wonderful peo ple. Like John Collins, who was restoring a very early Staggerwing out in California. Meeting him at Tulla homa, I asked how many times he'd flown in a Stag. Never, he said. That afternoon in Big Bird, we went aloft. What a smile on his face! John never finished his Staggerwing before he passed away, though through his gen erous donation of the aircraft to the Staggerwing Museum he and it live on. That afternoon our Stag was able to show him what it was all about. The Morrison brothers of the Chicago area inherited their dad's love of a Staggerwing. After he tragically passed on much too soon after com pleting the restoration of their F-17, the family then experienced another terrible misfortune when the Stag burned in a hangar fire. One More Time was the family's response. Mark and Ron, Mom Shirley, and all the gang joined forces and rebuilt the plane as a tribute to Bill. Meeting them through the Staggerwing Club, we became good friends. Later, my wife, Kathleen, introduced our daughter's first grade teach er to Ron. They were married and now have two children. It is inter esting how something that is supposed to be merely a piece of machinery can Xver fall in love wit~ have such a profound effect on peo ple's lives. Quite a few Young Eagles passed through this cabin. Two, Pete Henrik sen and Chris Martin, flew in Big Bird in completely different places. Chris flew with me out of Fall Creek Field, when we lived in Tennessee. Later, Pete got to know what it was like to fly in a biplane from Falmouth Airpark, our new home on Cape Cod. Although from widely separated places, these two young men met while in the same U.S. Air Force pilot training class. Ca sual conversation revealed a shared experience: Both had flown in a green Staggerwing! Pete is training now on the F-16, Chris on the B-l. Another youngster had a dream to fly that this Staggerwing fulfilled. He was referred to me by local EAA con tacts in Tennessee, and his mother told me the boy was very ill and was not expected to survive the cancer that afflicted him. His wish was to fly. That day, we arranged a ride for him in many different airplanes out of the Murfreesboro Municipal Airport. He wanted to save the Stag for last. Tired by that point, he and his mom climbed aboard . The sofa-like back seat was comfortable for them . As usual, I asked what he would like to see from the air. His home, his school. What was not usual was his telling his mom that he expected his school would look much like this when he looked down on it from heaven. Only God knows why a child is called home. He passed away a few short weeks later. Yes, this day is beautiful. It seems that the good Lord wants us to have one last perfect flight together, just the two of us this time. I feel like a Judas, somehow, passing this magnificent flying machine on for so many pieces of silver. Yet, I know that practical re alities intrude, and there seems to be a voice telling me it is time to move on. I never really felt that I truly owned it, anyway. I honestly felt that for the time we were together I was its stew ard. We kept it up and left it better in many ways than we found it. I hope all its future stewards do the same. How long will it fly? Its bones were put together way back in '37. It was a movie star at 2, Wom en in the Wind, RKO studios, Kay FranCis, William Gargan, Eve Arden. And Big Bird. Now at 63, it flies me across the upper Mid west. Will it be flying at IOO? Later? How many things were built so well that their life expectancy is indefinite? So, a few landings with her new owner, Bill Mavencamp, a skilled avia tor, and the Staggerwing passes into my history. I am glad a person like Bill has adopted it. He seems to under stand the difficulty of what I do today, and pretends not to notice when I fab ricate one more reason to go into the hangar to see it again. I suppose many aviators under stand that some airplanes transcend being mere machines. How many of us have given our planes an apprecia tive pat when leaving the hangar after a long trip? Why would you do that if you did not think that at some level, the thing could understand what you were doing that for? Well, Beech Stag gerwing E-17B NC18044, I thank you. And I think you understand that........ VINTAGE AIRPLANE 13 14 JANUARY 2002 most folks at EAA Air Venture kosh 2001, it wasn't until we ooked carefully at Mike Williams' Tiger Moth that we realized we sel dom, if ever, see an actual English Moth. We see lots of what we think are Tiger Moths, but they are actu ally built in Canada, and according to Mike Williams, there are more than 500 differences between the English and the Canadian versions. Most of us would be hard-pressed to list more than 450 of the differences (yeah, right), but Mike can regale you for an hour or two, listing all of them if you are willing to sit still long enough. Of course, the big differences that are noticeable include a canopy on the Canadian birds as well as an ab sence of the horizontal slabs (spin strakes) ahead of the horizontal sta bilizer. Then there is the cabin heat to minimize the Canadian weather, the lack of slats on the upper wings, a plywood leading edge on the lower wings, and a tailwheel rather than a skid. Of course, we all knew those differences, right? Mike's Moth is the result of his long climb up the airplane ladder that started with his father, a pilot in both World War II (B-25s in the Pacific) and Korea (MASH DC-3s). His dad liked all sorts of airplanes and got Mike started right by skip ping to the unusual to be had in aviation. The Williams' airplanes, father and son's, ranged from a Cur tiss Robin and Ryan PT-22 to a Fairchild 24, a Monocoupe, Waco RNF, KR-34C, and many others. In fact, if you ask Mike to list the air craft he has owned and restored, he'll rattle off the list, but when you continue the conversation , he'll continually interrupt with something like, "Oh, yeah, I for got the .... Count on it. Mike started officially taking flight training when he was 17 years old, taking less than four and-a-half hours to solo a 7 AC /1 VINTAGE AIRPLAN E 15 The aft cockpit is neatly restored and comes complete with a Sutton harness and Gosport speaking tube. Champ. Guess being around his dad helped. He flew for quite a while, then , sti ll not having a cer tificate, he bought a Cessna 140 that was badly in need of eve ry thing. He tore the airplane down to its und erwea r and started on th e long road even a minor restoration represents. He did the work himself, including the paint, interior, and e ngine. This was the airp lan e in which he got his pri vate certificate. Even though he set up his own business specializing in the repair of Mercedes and Porsches, he con tinued buying and restoring airplanes on the side. Most he so ld; some he kept. His 14S-hp Swift was a keeper. "When I went out to buy the Swift," he says, "it had been sitting in the same spot for at least five years. There was an unreal amount of dirt and bird droppings on it. The fellow who sold it to me, how ever, said he'd warranty the airplane ' s basic condition, so I bought it. I spent an entire day with a hose, buckets, and a broom trying to dig down to the airplane I knew was beneath all of that crud. It turned out to be a pretty good airplane, and I flew it home." 16 JANUARY 2002 Mike has a definite idea about old airplanes, their place in history, and his role in working on those air planes. "They aren't making those airplanes any more, and every time we modify one, that 's another one that our children and grandchildren won 't get to see in its original con figuration. I feel it's important that [ bring the airplan es back to as close to original condition as I can, while making them safe for flight, so fu ture generations will know what they looked like. When [ found the Swift, I knew I was lucky to find one so origina l, so [ avoided any of the airframe mods or hop-up goodies that are so popular these days." The Swift has stayed with him and serves as his normal mode of aerial transportation . This is evi denced by the fact that the airplane logs more than 300 hours a year. Increasingly, the airplanes began to overtake hi s normal business in terms of time and certainly in terms of desire. He wanted to work on old airplanes. He didn't want to work on expensive sports cars and big sedans, so he put the automotive business up for sale. " I was at Oshkosh '98, and Wednesday of that week the deal to sell my business went through ," he says. "Instantly, I went airplane shop ping. I looked at a lot of airplanes and even thought about buying a Waco. Then I met Leon Welcher, who was here with his Tiger Moth. "I really liked th e airplane and went over to the EAA library at the museum to look up some informa tion on Moths, which included the address and phon e number of the American Tiger Moth Club presi dent. I ca lled him that day, and he sa id they had just rece ived a "for sale" ad for a Moth project that would run in the next issue of their newsletter. No one had seen the ad yet, so I called the owner that night. This was Wednesday of Oshkosh week . The next day, I hopped in the Swift and flew down to Tullahoma, Tennessee, to take a look at the project. "The airplane that was for sale had been imported into the U.S. from England in 1974. It had been sitting there for 24 years when I saw it. The airplane was complete, but much of it was in pretty sad shape. The wing spars looked good, but the glue in the tail had given up, and the tail was literally falling apart. It was still wearing its original English cotton, which was pink, and you could stick a finger through it with no effort at all." Mike struck a deal and came back down with his truck to carry it home to his shop in Columbus, Indi ana, on November 28, 1998. "I spent a long time just taking stuff apart and inventorying the pieces," he says. "Then, I made a ro tisserie jig for every major part of the airframe, including the wings, the fuselage, and the engine. I work alone, so it is essential I be able to move stuff around and change its position with no help." Since it was an English airplane, as he was taking it apart, Mike knew one of the problems wasn't just fig uring out what he needed to restore, but he had to keep careful track of what bolt went where be cause of the British predilection for using different types of fasteners. "The bolts were a nightmare," he laughs. "It had every kind you could think of from Whitworth and British Fine to British Standard Pipe and Metric. Over the years even some AN hardware had sneaked in there. "For all intents and purposes, the tail was trash," he says. "The origi nal wood was warped and cracked, and most of what appeared to be ca sein glue had failed . I completely disassembled it and made new pieces where necessary, then reassembled it using T-88 epoxy. This thing should last for another 100 years now." The wings and fuselage were in much better condition, but they still required a major amount of disas sembly to clean and paint fittings, replace bolts , and do away with questionable glue joints. "The airplane is much more of an antique than something like a Stearman, even though they come from the same period," Mike says. " Everything about its structure is very 1920s. Plus it adheres to the older English philosophy that says it's better to use a whole lot of little pieces than one bigger one. For that reason, the wings, for instance, have a lot more parts in them than a Stearman does. Because it had been Sitting so long and it had been a fairly humid environment , I couldn't let any piece go without taking it apart, cleaning the rust and corrosion off, and replacing the bolts because practically every thing had some sort of corrosion on it. None of it was bad, but it was time to remove it. I wanted to bring this airplane back to new condition all the way through." Further complicating much of the disassembly was the fact that many of the bolts predated the use of self-lock ing nuts. So, when the airplane had been assembled, the bolts the me chanics didn ' t want coming loose were locked in place by the simple ex pediency of peening the exposed end over with a hammer. Mike says the concept works because he had to work hard to get some of those bolts out. As he was proceeding through the cleaning phase to the more pleasant period of reconstruction and refin ishing, he became more and more fascinated with the history of the A rare sight on a restored Tiger Moth is this instrument training hood, which in cludes a pair of small skylights to allow for a bit of light in the cockpit. They' re placed well behind the student's head. With the hood up, there is little in the way of outside visual cues, which helps the student master basic instrument flight. VINTAG E AIRPLANE 17 Tiger Moth breed. When he wasn't working on the airplane, he was reading books and surfing the Inter net looking for information. He says, "As I looked at all the old pictures, I began to get this image of the airplane as it had been when it was in service. For one thing, even though it had been camouflaged on the upper surfaces at some point, it had started out as a Royal Air Force yellow trainer. Also , the more I learned about the airplanes, the more I realized I hadn't seen many of the pieces of equipment that had made them so unique. I decided that, when I finished the airplane, I wanted it to have as many of the accessories it originally carried as pOSSible." In the normal course of restoring an old airplane , it is precisely the types of items that Mike was looking for that prove the most elusive. This is especially true of an airplane that had once seen military service. Often, after the airplane is sold as surplus, much of the military equipment is re moved and usually discarded. Mike had a number of items on his shop ~ ping list that could have proved to be problematic. These included the nau tical-appearing binnacle compasses for both cockpits, the Gosport com munication systems, and the instrument flying hood, which folded up over th e rear cockpit like an opaque, canvas canopy. He expected the instrument hood to be nearly im possible to find. "One of the things that makes restoring an airplane like this much easier today than, say, 20 years ago," he says, "is the Internet. A huge per centage of the restorers and enthusiasts have banded together into web sites or e-groups. The Tiger Moth community has a really active e-group called 'Moth Speak.' If I had a question about how something was supposed to go together or how it should be finished, someone on the group would know the answer." "When I decided to go looking for stuff like the instrument hood , the group was the first place I went. On the hood, for instance, I put up my request and four hours later owned one. Malcom ~ijiiiilii• •~~~-,.r~~ri1~1:: a part-tihad me Moth Goosey, dealer in England, an original, complete with the covering, and sold it to me for $170 J:~~~;I;t~ii::l.~~~Z~ American. The covering had to .... be replaced, but at least I had it for 18 JANUARY 2002 a pattern. The Internet made the en tire restoration process much easier. "Another place the Net helped was in locating the right material for the wing walks. They were made of a slurry that used ground-up slate, just like that used on shingles, as the basis. I went on the Net and found the shingle company that made the stuff here in the States, and they weren't too far away from me. The problem was, however, they wanted to sell it by the ton, not the pound, and I only needed about a gallon. I spent a lot of time talking to their secretary and finally talked her out of a gallon of slate, if I' d come by and give her a ride when the Moth was finished." Mike made up a mixture of epoxy and slate and colored it with alu minum powder normally used to make silver dope. He practically had to trowel that onto the wing walks, but it came out looking very original. His Gosport system arrived thanks to contacts made on the Internet, too, but it was no joy on the Sutton harness seat belt system . The Sutton is a four-pOint system in which the straps were punctured by a series of large diameter eyelets that pushed down over a large conical post, through which a safety pin of a unique design was pushed. The sys tem is very identifiable and necessary The British-built Tiger Moths also have a pair of extended strakes added to the leading edges of the stabilizers, along the fuselage. The strakes slowed down the spin rate for the Moths when induced to spin. Many DH.82As were later modified by having the strakes removed. A slate, epoxy, and powdered alu minum slurry was made to replicate the heavy but authentic wing walk ma terial used on the British Tiger Moth. One of the most noticeable differences between the British and Canadian Moths is the use of automatic wing slats on the British-built aircraft. The four-cylinder, inverted de Havilland Gipsy Major engine became the stan dard light aircraft engine in Britain for an entire generation. for true authenticity in the restora tion. Mike e-mailed a digital image of the rotting original to Jack Hooker of Hooker Harness in Rockford, Illi nois, who made an exact duplicate. Hooker says what made it possible to duplicate the harness was that many Russian aerobatic aircraft like the Sukhoi use identical hardware that he was able to adapt. Since the belt doesn't have a TSO, Mike uses an additional standard belt when flying and tucks it away out of sight while the airplane is parked. Although Mike planned on flying the airplane off every type of runway, paved and otherwise, he couldn't bring himself to discard the tail skid in favor of a tailwheel, even though it would have been more practical. Instead, he cut a square hole in the middle of the steel shoe at the bot tom of the skid and installed a small roller, which works fine on pave ment. Steering is a little on the crude side, however, as it consists of the rudder slapping against the skid, causing it to offset sideways. To make up for the marginal steering of the skid, he added better brakes. Mike is justifiably proud of the fact that he did every single bit of the work on the airplane himself. "The only parts which left my shop were the instruments. I'm com pletely set up including an English wheel and Pull max machine, which I used to make a new cowling." When he rebuilt the engine, he used as many new parts as he could find, most of which came from Tom Dietrich of Guelph, Ontario, Canada. This included rods, pistons, valves, heads, and reconditioned cylinders. "Without Tom to help me with the parts, building up this en gine would have been an entirely VINTAGE AIRPLANE 19 different pro ject. It actually turned out to be enjoyable." When it came time to cover and finish the airplane, he stayed with the Poly-Fiber system all the way through. The co lors, along with t he correct color scheme, came from his Internet connections. In the course of painting the airplane he ran across a product that he thinks every airplane builder should know about. It 's a paint remover for your hands that is named Cupran Paint Re mover for Hands, and it is made by Stockhausen. He says it is fantastic and available in most automotive paint stores. A q u ick check on the Internet using the Google.com web site came up w ith many online suppliers for the product. The price for a tube ranged from $6 to $8. "The prop was originally painted black," he says, "but, when I started removing the finish, I found it was laminated with alternating layers of rock maple and something that Mike Willi ams wears the receiving end of a Gosport tube for communication from the inst ructor to the student . looks like mahogany. It was bea uti ful, and I couldn't bring myself t o paint it black again." He says, "Someth ing t h at shou ld be pOinted out is th at this may be one of the few a ll -English Tiger Moths, because the engine, airframe, and prop all came from de Havilland in England." The first flight was on July 12, 2001, just a couple of weeks prior to leaving for Oshkosh. On t he first flight it was a little left wing heavy, and it took four tries to get it rigged righ t. "It ran just fine, and I was re ally pleased with how well it flew. It made all the hard work worth while. " Mike says he works alone, but he is qu ick to po int out that his wife, Mamie, is his friend and partner in his airplane business, which is named Wingworks and has its own website, www.wingworksusa.com. He says he specializes in "un usual restoration work," especially metal forming and work. He can be reached at 812/375 or mike@Wingworksusa.com. He also says he means it wh en he says "un usual restoration work." So, what's next for the Williams fami ly? Just go to his website, and you'll understand when we say there is no possible way of knowing what Mike Williams is going to do next. .... Explore illlflWIDU ive the adventure and Lromance of the early days of flight with Will Turner, pioneer aviator, in Chris Davey's exciting new novel, The Aviator's Appn'lItice. Will earns his wings in Florida before traveling to England to prove himself as all officer in the fledgling Royal Flying Corps during the tumu ltuous opening weeks of the First World War. Fi nd out more about Will Turner's Flight Logs at t he com pani on Web site: www.turnerlogs.com Published by Lucky Press and available at all fine booksellers or call: 800-345-6665 ISBN : 0-9676050-3-2 448 pages $18.95 E-mail: books@luckypress.com Will Turner's adventures continue with Turner's Flight (Available early 2002) 20 JANUARY 2002 NASA, LANE WALLACE AND BAA PRESENT. .. F10883 $19.95 Wild Blue Wonders: Exploring the Magic ofFlight Wild Blue Wonders explores the dynamics of flight and aircraft design, prepares the reader to begin creating original designs, and provides infor mation about pilots and diffe rent types of planes. Lane Wallace wrote this wonderful book in collaboration with NASA and EAA, to help persuade a youngster to take that next step toward a life in aviation, with the Foreword written by Chuck Yaeger it is sure to be a success. Containing the components of aviation presented in a user-friendly way this aviation book provides logical analogies relating to flight, such as how a curve ball in baseball relates to lift and Bernoulli's Principle. To Order: Call BOO-B43-3612 Outside U.S. & Canada call (920) 426-4800 Visit us online at www.eaa.org Send your order by mail to: EAA Mail Orders P.O. Box 3086 Oshkosh, WI 54903 3086 Major credit cards accepted. WI residents add 5% sales tax. Shipping and handling NOT included. L National Aeronca Association Jim Thompson 806 Lockport Rd, P.O. Box 2219 Terre Haute, IN 47802-0219 812-232-1491 Dues: $25/yr US;$35/yr Canada;$45/yr Foreign Magazine: 4 per year International Aeronca Association Buzz Wagn er Box 3, 401 1st Street East Clark, SD 57225 605-532-3862 Fax: 605-532-1305 Dues: $20 per yea r Newsletter: Quarterly Beech T34 Association Charles H. Nogle P.O. Box 925 Champaign, IL 61824-0925 217 -356-3063 Beechcraft-Staggerwing Club Robert A. 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Box 1667 Leba non, MO 65536 417 -532-4847 ileadquarters@)cessllaI70.org http://www.cesslla170.or,{ Dues: $35 per yea r Magazi ne: Fly Paper-monthly 170 News-quarterly Cessn a T-50 "Ba mboo Bo mbe r" Jim Anderson Box 269 Sunwood Marin e on St. Croix, MN 55047 612.433.3024 Fax 612.433.5691 E-Ma il : iia@lvrmed.col11 i1ttp://www.cessnatSO.org Dues: Contact Club for Info Newslet ter: Quarterly Wes t Coast Cessn a 120 /14 0 Club c/o Don and Linda Brand 9087 Madrone Way Redding, CA 96002 530-221-3732 Dues: $20 per year Newsletter: Bimonthly VINTAGE AIRPLANE 21 Citabria Owner s Group Carl Petersen 636 lona Lane Roseville, MN 55113 E-mail: champ@Citabria.com Website: www .citabria.com Dues: $25 U.S., $40 Int'I (U.S. Funds) Culver Aircraft Assoc. Dan Nicholson 723 Baker Dr. Tomball, TX 77375 281-351-0114 E-mail: dann@gie.com For newsletter and dues info, contact the club. Culver Club Larry Low, Chairman 60 Skywood Way Woodside, CA 94062 650-8510204 Dues: $20 per year Newsletter: 3 issues annually Culver Dart Club Lloyd Washburn 2656 East Sand Road Point Clinton, OH 43452-2741 419-734-6685 Culver PQ-14 Assoc. Ted Heineman 29621 Kensington Drive Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 949-495-4540 Er coupe Owner s Club Carolyn T. Carden, Membership 7263 Schooners Ct. SW A-2 Ocean Isle Beach, NC 28469-5644 Voice/Fax 910-575-2758 coupecaper@aol.com Website: www.ercoupe.org Dues: $25 per year Newsletter: Monthly Ercoupe Owners Club - Wisconsin Wing Judi Matuscak 6 62 Brever Road Burlington, WI 53105-8915 262-539-2495 E-mail: jmatus@Wi.net Fairchild Club John W. Berendt, President 7645 Echo Point Road Cannon Falls, MN 55009 507-263-2414 E-mail: (chld@rconnect.com http://www·fairchildclub.com Dues: $15 per year Newsletter: Quarterly Fairchild Fan Club Robert L. Taylor P. O. Box 127 Blakesburg, IA 52536 641-938-2773 641-938-2084 E-Mail: aaaapmhlJ@f}csia.net Dues: $15 Newsletter: (3) 16 pg. Newsletters International Fleet Club Sandy Brown, Newsletter Publisher P. O. Box 511 Marlborough, CT 06447-0511 860-267-6562 Fax 860-267-4381 E-mail : flvboy@ntplx.net Dues: Contributions Newsletter: 3-4 per year, approx. 22 DECEMBER 2002 Funk Aircraft Owners Association Thad Shelnutt 2836 California Av. Carmichael, CA 95808 916-971-3452 E-mail: pilotthad@aol.com President: Jon Schroeder PMB 323 100 E. Whitestone Cedar Park, TX 78613 E-mail: [SCHRO@onr.com Newsletter: 10 per year Dues: $12 per year Great Lakes Club Brent L. Taylor, Editor P. O. Box 127 Blakesburg, IA 52536 515-938-2773 Dues: $15 Newsletter: (3) 16 pg. Newsletters The American Yankee Association (Grumman) Stew Wilson 3232 Western Drive Cameron Pa rk, CA 95682 530-676-4292 Web Site: http://www.ava.org Dues: $30 per year U.S., $30 Foreign (Initiation $7.50 1st year/ Foreign $10.00) Canadian Harvard Aircraft Association Greg Bu rnard P.O. Box 774 Woodstock, ON Canada N4S 8A2 519-842-9922 Website: www.hangarline.com Dues: $35/yr Newsletter: The "Roar" -Quarterly Hatz Club Robert L. Taylor P. O. Box 127 Blakesburg, IA 52536 641-938-2773 641-938-2084 E-mail: aaaapmhlJ@Jpcsia .net Dues: $15 for 3 issues Newsletter: (3) 16 pg. Newsletters Am erican Hatz Association, Inc. Mike Devroy P.O. Box 5102 Vernon Hills, IL 60001-5102 E-mail: thayerS@mindspring.com http://www.hatzbiplanes .org/ Dues: $20 per year Newsletter: Quarterly Heath Parasol Club William Schlapman 6431 Paulson Road Winneconne, WI 54986 920-582-4454 Howard Club David Schober P.O. Box 52 Volga, WV 26238 E-mail: HowardClub@aol.com www.members.aol.comlHowardClub Interstate Club Robert L. Taylor P.O. Box 127 Blakesburg, IA 52536 641-938-2773 Fax: 641-938-2084 E-mail : aaaapmhlJ@pcsia.net Luscombe Association Steve and Sharon Krog 1002 Heather Lane Hartford, W I 53027 262-966-7627 Fax: 262-966-9627 E-mail: sskrog@aol.com Dues: $25 U.S. & Canada, $30 Foreign Newsletter: 6 per year Conti nental Luscombe Association Gordy and Connie Birse, Treasurer and Secretary 29604 179th Place SE Kent, WA 98042 253-631-8478 E-Mail : wizard8E@msn.com http://www.luscombe-cla.org Dues: U.S. $15, Canada $17.50 U.S. Funds, Foreign $25 U.S. Funds Newsletter: Bimonthly (6 per year) Maule Rocket Associatio n (MRA) David E. Neumeister 5630 S. Washington LanSing, MI 48911-4999 517 -882-8433 or 800-594-4634 Fax: 517-882-8341 or 800-596-8341 aircraftnews@yahoo.com Dues: $23.50 for one year, $30.50 for 2 years Newsletter: 12 issues Meyer s Air cr a ft Owners Associatio n William E. Gaffney, Secretary 24 Rt . 17K Newburgh, NY 12550 914-565-8005 Dues: Postage fund donation Newsletter: 5-6 per year Monocoupe Club Bob Coolbaugh, Editor 18404 Bel Pre Road Culpeper, VA 22701 540-825-0141 or 540-829-9375 monocoupe@earthlink.net Dues: $15 per yea r Newsletter: Monthly, Approx. Mooney Aircraft Pilots Association Lela Hughes 100 Sandau, Suite 200 San Antonio, TX 78216 Western Association o f Mooney Mites (WAMM) Ben Favrholdt 757 W. Putnam Ave #6 Porte ville, CA 93257 559-782-8925 E-mail: n6mx@sosinet.net Website: http://www.mooneymite. com Dues: None Newsletter: via e-mail N3N Restorers Association H. Ronald Kempka 2380 Country Road #217 Cheyenne, WY 82009 307.638.2210 E-mail: wyn3n@aol.com Dues: $20 per year Newsletter: Quarterly American Navion Societ y Gary Rankin PMB 335 16420 SE McGillivray #103 Vancouver, WA 98683-3461 360-833-9921, Fax: 360-833-1074 Flynavion@yahoo .com Newsletter: Bimonthly Dues: $45 per year www.navionsociety.org Navion Skies Type Club Raleigh Morrow P.O. Box 2678 Lodi, CA 9524 1-2678 209-367-9390 E-mail : Navionl@inreach.com International Comanche Society Ha rley McGa tha 50 County Road 537 Centre, AL 35960 256-927-5044 http://www. navionskies.com Dues: $35 per year Newslette r: Monthly Dues: $45 per year Newsletter: Monthly, also via e-mail Brodhead Pietenpol Association Donald Ca mpbell 221 N. laSalle St, Ste 311 7 Chicago, IL 60601 http://www.pietenpoi.ofS( Dues: $10 per year US Newsletter: Qua rterly International Pietenpol Association Robert L. Taylor P. O. Box 127 Blakesburg, IA 52536 515-938-2773 Dues: $15 Newsletter: (3) 16 pg. 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Newsletters Travel Air Restorers Association Jerry Impellezzeri 4925 Wilma Way San Jose, CA 95124 408-356-3407 Dues: $15 per yea r Newsletter: Quarterly International Stinson Club James Cole 7305 Ll ano Road Atascadero, CA 93422 805-461-5522 E-Ma il: jimcoie@{ix. net Travel Air Div. of Staggerwing Museum Karen Ga rrick P. O. Box 550 Tulla ho ma, TN 37388 931-455-1974 www.aerol1lar.col1l/s wsc. htmi Dues: $40 per year Newsletter: 4-5 per yea r Dues: $30 per yea r Newsletter: 11 per yea r National Stinson Club George All eman 1229 Rising Hill Road West Placerville, CA 95667 Phone & Fax: 530-622-4004 E-ma il : nscgeorge@d-web.col1l Dues: $20 US & Ca nada; $25 Foreign Newsletter: Six per yea r www.staggerwing.col1l American Waco Club Phil Coulson 2815 Springbrook Dr. Lawton , MI 49065 616-624-6490 E- ma il: rcouison51 6@cs.com www.al1lericanwacocillb.col1l Dues: $25 per year, $30 Foreign Newsletter: Bi-monthly VINTAGE AIRPLANE 23 National Waco Club Andy Hein s 3744 Clea rvi ew Rd. Dayton, OH 45439 937-866-6692 E-mail: wllcollso@llo l.com Dues: $20 per year, $25 Foreign Newsletter: Bimo nthly Western Waco Association Barry R. Branin PO Box 706 Groveland, CA 95321 209-962-6121 OYWIlCO@jII110.COIII Dues: $5 per yea r ews letter: Occasional MULTIPLE AIRCRAFT ORGANIZATIONS Arctic / Interstate Newsletter David Neumeister 5630 S Wa shington Lansing, MI 48911 -4999 517 -882-8433 or 800-594-4634 Fax: 5 17-882-8341 or 800-596-8341 ll ircmft'l ews@Ylli1oo.com Dues: $16.50/yr; $20.50/4 yrs Magazin e: Quarterly Rorida Antique Biplane Association, Inc. Larry Robinson 10906 Denoeu Road Boynto n Beach, FL 33437 56 1-732-3250 Fax 561 -732-2532 E-ma il: BeyeView@llo1. com Dues: $48 yea r The Flyin g Wire Newsl etter National Biplane Association C harles W. Harris P.O. Box 470350 Tulsa, OK 74 14 7-0350 918-622-8400 Fax: 918-665-0039 E-mail: cWi1@i1VSll.COI11 www. llIltionlllbipllll1ellssn.org www.biplilneexpo.com Dues: $25 individ ual; $40 fam ily; add $10 foreign North American Trainer Association (T6, T28, NA64, NASO, PSI, B2S) Kathy & Stoney Stonich 25801 NE Hinn ess Road Brush Prairi e, WA 98606 360-256-0066 360-896-5398 E-ma il: llatrailler@aol.colII Web: wWlv. llatrailler. org Dues: $45 US & Ca nada; $55 foreign News letter: Quarterly, "NATA Skylines" ORGANIZATIONS American Aviation Historical Society Bruce Cunningham 2333 Otis Street. Santa Ana, CA 92704 714-549-48 18 E-mail: llai1s2333@earthlillk.l1et Website: www.aails.online.org Dues: $45 U.S. & Ca nada; $60 Foreign (U.S. Funds) Newsletter: Quarterly and Journ al Eastern Reg. U.S. Air Racing Association Jack Dian iska, President 26726 Henry Road Bay Village, OH 44140 440-871-3781 Flying Farmers International Ka thy Mars h 2120 Airport Rd P.O. Box 9124 Wichita KS 67277 316-943-4234 Fax: 316-943-4235 www.Oyingfarmers.or<{ Dues: $50/y r + chapter dues Maga zines: 6 magazin es per year Flying Octogenarians Erv Mart in P.O. Box 1055 Wisconsin Rapids, WI 54495 715-421-3763 The Howard Aircraft Foundation David Schober P.O. Box 252 Volga, WV 26238 (304) 457-5026 E- mail: HowardClllb@aol.com llttp://mel11bers.aol.col11/HowardClllb International Deaf Pilots Association Clyde Smith 1553 Gravel Sp rings Circle Jacksonville, IL 62650 Dues: $30 per year, active pilots Newsletter Int'l Fellowship of Flying Rotarians 203 Tom Surowka, World Sec/Treas. 203A Rubens Drive Nomis, FL 34275-4211 941 -966-6636 Fax: 941-966-914 1 E-mail : sllrowka@iffr.org Website: www.iffr.org International Liaison Pilot &: Aircraft Assoc. Bill Stratton 16518 Ledgestone San Antonio, TX 78332-2406 21 0-490-45 72 Voice/ Fax www. celltercomp.com /ILPA /index .html Taildragger Club Asa Dean 16216 N 34th Way Phoenix, AZ 85032-3 11 9 Cell: 602-622-8335 E-mail: Ilsa@taildmRgerclllb.org Dues: $35/yr US; $40/yr Foreign Newsle tter: "Liais·on Spoken Here" www.ta ildmggerclllb .org/tdc International Wheelchair Aviators P.O. Box 2799 Big Bear City, CA 92314 909-585-9663 WWI Aeroplanes, Inc. Leonard Opdycke 15 C resce nt Road Poughkeepsie, Y 12601 845-473-3679 Dues: $30/yr - $35 foreign Newsletter: 2 Journa ls each 4 years International Women in Aviation Dr. Peggy j. Chabrian 101 Co rsair Drive Daytona Beach, FL 3211 4 386-226-7996 386-226-7998 Website: www.wiai. org Dues: $39 per year - $29 students Magazine: Bi-month ly 24 DECEMBER 2002 Lake AmlJhibian Flyers Club Mark &: Jill Rodstein 7188 Mandarin Drive Boca Raton , FL 33433-7412 561 -483-65 66 Fax: 240-376-48 75 lakeOversclllb@avweb.com Dues: $54 per year Newslette r: "Lake Flyer" The Don Luscombe Aviation History Foundation 1890 E. Queen Creek Road Chandler, AZ 85249 480-917-0969 Fax: 480-917-4719 E- mail: silvaire@lllsco l11be.org Parts/Tech: tech@lllscombe.org http://www.lliscombe.org Dues: $25 U.S . & Ca nad a, $30 Foreign Newsletter: 6 per year National Air Racing Group Betty Sherman 1932 Mahan Avenue Richland , WA 99352-2 121 509-946-5690 E-ma il : betty.si1erman@gte.net Website: www.pylon. com Dues: $15 US/$20 ou tside US Newsletter National Association of Priest Pilots Mel Hemann 127 Kaspend Place Cedar Falls, lA 506 13-1683 319-266-3889 E-mail : N298MH@aol.cum Dues: $20 Newsletter: "NAPP" The 99's Women Pilots Faith Dunca n Will Rogers Airpo rt Box 965 7100 Terminal Drive Oklahoma City, OK 73 159 405-685-7969 Dues: $55 per yea r Newsletter: Bi-monthly OX-S Aviation Pioneers Robert F. Lang P. O. Box 201299 Austin, TX 78720 5 12-33 1-6239 Dues: $10 per yea r Newsletter: 6 per year Piper Aviation Museum Foundation John R. Merin ar One Piper Way Lock Haven, PA 17745-0052 570-748-8283 Fax: 570-893-8357 E-mail: piper@ClIb.kcnet.org Website: www.pipenm ISelll11.conl Dues: $30 per year Newsletter: Quarterly Replica Fighters Association Gerald Gerber 6956 E. Waco Drive Syracuse, IN 46567-9432 2 19-457-5924 Fax: 219-457-8272 E-mai l: 44GN@Kconline.col1l Web: www.replicafigi1ters.of'? Dues: $20 per yea r Newsletter: Bimo nthly Seaplane Pilots Association Michael Volk 4315 Highland Park Blvd, Suite C Lakeland, FL 33813 863-701-7979 Fax: 863-701 -7588 E-mail: spa@seaplanes.org Web: www.seaplanes.org Dues: $40 per year Magazine: Bi-monthly Sentimental Journey to Cub Haven, Inc. E. J. "Doc" Conway P. O. BoxJ-3 Lock Haven, PA 17745-0496 570-893-4200 Fax 570-893-4218 E-mail: Piper@cub.kCllet.org www.pipennuseum.col1l Dues: $10 per year Newsletter: Quarterly Silver Wings Fraternity P.O. Box 44208 Cincinnati, OH 45244 800-554-1437 E-ma il : BGeier3680@aol.com Website: www.silverwings.org Dues: $15/1st yea r, $10 renew Newsletter: Bi-monthly Society of Air Racing Historians Herman Schaub 168 Marion Lane Berea, OH 44017 440-234-2301 E-mail: i1ennan @airrace.com Website: www.airrace.col11 Dues: $20/yr US - $23 others Newsletter: Bi- monthly Taylorcraft Foundation, Inc. Forrest A. Barber, Exec. Dir. 13820 Un ion Ave. NE Alliance, OH 44601 -9378 330-823-1168 Fax: 330-823-1138 E-mail: (barber@alliancelink.com Website: www.taylorcraft.org Dues: $10 per year Newsletter: Qua rterly Vintage Sailplane Association George Nuse 4310 River Bottom Drive Norcross, GA 30092 770-446-5533 Dues: $15 per year News letter: Quarterly Waco Historical Society, Inc. Waco Aircraft Museum John R. Bosse, Treasurer P. O. Box 62 Troy, OH 45373-0062 937.335 .WACO 1-5pm Sat.-Sun. Dues: $30 per year, 9/1-8/31 News letter: 4 per year If you have changes related to your Type Club list, drop a n o te in the m ail deta iling your listing (use the forma t you see o n this page) . Send your n o te to: Edi tor, Vintage A irpLa n e; Vi ntage Air craft Association Type Clubs; P.O. Box 3086; Osh kosh, W I 54903-3086. or E mail it to vi ntage@eaa .org '~? a TM :kOmes NEW MEMBERS Bob K. Lehr ....... .. . Cardston, AB, Canada Norman J. Rix ...... Wetaskiwin, AB, Canada Peter Koller. .......... Oakville, ON, Canada David R. Kozak ... St. Catherine's, ON, Canada Yves Ayotte.. Trois-Rivieres Ouest, Po. Canada Tillman David Baker .... .. Phil Campbell, AL Glen n E. Bell . . .. . . . ......... Pine Bluff, AR Harold L. Black ...... . . . .. . .... Tucson, AZ K. Ralph Eddy ........ . ...... Chandler, AZ Paul R. Brunkhorst ...... . ....... Fresno, CA Kimberly DeSimone ... ... .. .. Livermore, CA Mike L. Gaylord . ......... San Francisco, CA Robert Hinsch ... .. . Rancho Palos Verdes, CA Sanford Hood .... .. .... .. San FranCiSCO, CA Ken Neff . . .. . .. ........... . . San jose, CA john Pehrson... .. . .... . . . .... . Sonora, CA Art Teeters ... .. .. .. . .... . ..... Salinas, CA Donald F. Daniels .... . ...... Evergreen, CO Wyman Varnedoe . ......... Monument, CO George Buzel .. . . .. ... . ... .. . Trumbull, CT Alphonse Gowlis .. . ... .. .... Waterbury, CT Rodney D. Daulton . ..... New Port Richey, FL jack De Niro ........... . .. Delray Beach, FL Blaine Hoffman ....... . ... ... . .. Ocala, FL John A. Ritchie ....... . ........ Duluth, GA Meredith j. Whillock . . . .... MCDonough, GA Dale R. Severs . . .... . ... .. ... .. . Gurnee, IL David L. Shadle . ......... . ... St Charles, IL Will iam R. Whitaker ..... . ........ Baylis, IL Thomas L. Brower .... . ....... Zionsville, IN john R. Norman ............. Newburgh, IN Daniel W. Patton ........ . .. . Columbus, IN Fredrick S. johnson .. . . . .... . Shelbyville, KY Richard Meier ........ . . ....... Benton, KY Mike Harris... .. .. . ... . ... Baton Rouge, LA Chris Cosentino .. ... . . ...... Bradford, MA DennisJ. Ellard . ..... . . . ....... Salem, MA john Keaney .. . ....... . . . ... . Auburn, MA james E. Masterson ............. Natick, MA Robert L. Morri ll . ....... . ... Stoughton, MA Ira Whorf .............. Yarmouth Port, MA Edward A. Dudgeon. ........... Okemos, MI Roger Gomoll ... ... .. .... .. Rochester, MN Walter I. Groskurth. ....... . . . Mankato, M jeffrey W. Kallberg .. .... . . Minneapolis, MN Kenneth Kuby .......... . West St. Paul, MN Raymond W. Caselman .... .. Meadville, MO Karen Rankin ............. Kansas City, MO E. Thomas Monroe . . .... .. .... Hickory, C Richard Williams .... . .. ... .... Raleigh, NC Ted Fox ....... . .... . .. . ... Cherry Hill, NJ Walter F. Schwarz. .. . . . ... .... Red Bank, NJ Richard Appling .. .... . ... Winnemucca, NV Robert A. Barrett ... . .... .. ... Rochester, NY Eric DeHorta . .... . .. . ........ Wooster, OH William S. Ennis, Jr. ........... .. Tiffin, OH Robert L. Schuette .......... Bartlesville, OK james S. Wilson .............. Portland, OR Bruce R. Sheaffer. . .. ... .. ..... ... Lititz, PA Todd Givens . ... .. ... . .. . . . ... . Ruffin, SC Robert S. Morris .......... . .. Ridgeland, SC Lourie Salley .. . ... . . .. .. ... . Lexington, SC Alan D. Basham . ... ... ... ... Clarksville, TN Gordon D. Webster ......... .. Kingston, TN Michael P. Anthony ......... . . Kerrville, TX Robert E. Brownell ........ . .. . Rockport, TX Donald G. Dickson ....... . ..... Seguin, TX Daniel A. Fox ............. Duncanville, TX Brian Loewecke .. . . . ..... . ...... Keller, TX William j. Taylor ................ Willis, TX Del G. Younglas .. . ..... .. .... Westlake, TX jeff H. Pierce . ... .. . ...... Salt Lake City, UT john F. Ward ............ Virginia Beach, VA Frank E. Almstead .. .... . ...... Everett, WA john Coussens.............. Stanwood, WA Richard S. Drury . ... .... . Friday Harbor, WA Rodney W. Fisher . .. ....... Gig Harbor, WA Paul E. Pearson ..... . ........ Olympia, WA Robert M. Prus .. .......... Fond du Lac, WI Robert Jagodzinski ............ . .. Gay, WV VINTAGE AIRPLANE 25 FLY-IN CALENDAR FEBRUARY 23-Fort Pierce, FL-EAA Ch. 908 Pancake Breakfast, 7-11 a.m. at the EAA Hangar, St. Lucie Interna tional Airport. Info: 561-464-0538 or 561-489-0420. FEBRUARY 28 thru MARCH 2 Bozeman, MT-Montana Aviation Conference, Holiday & Gran Tree Inns. Workshops, seminars, nation ally recognized speakers, trade show. Info: phone: 406-444-2506, fax : 406 444-2506, e-mail: dalke@state.mt.us. The following list of coming even ts is furnished to ollr readers as a matter of in formation only and does not constitute approval, sponsorship, involvement, con trol or direction of any event (fly-in, seminars, fly market, etc.) listed. Please send the information to EAA, Att: Vintage Airplane, P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Information should be re ceived four months prior to the event date. JANUARY 19, 2002 - Fort Pierce, FL EAA Ch. 908 Pancake Breakfast, 7 11 a.m. at the EAA Hangar, St. Lucie Internationa l Airport. Info: 561-464-0538 or 561-489-0420. FEBRUARY 100Mondovi, WI-Ski Fly-In at Log Cabin Airport. Info: 715-287-4205 . MARCH 1-3-Casa Grande, AZ-the Arizona Antique Aircraft Assoc is sponsoring the 44th Annual Cactus Fly-In, 480-98 7-5516. MARCH 23 - Fort Pierce, FL-EAA Ch. 908 Pancake Breakfast, 7-11 a.m., EAA Hangar, St. Lucie International Airport. Info: 561-464-0538 or 561 489-0420. APRIL 20 - Fort Pierce, FL-EAA Ch. 908 Pancake Breakfast, 7-11 a.m., EAA Hangar, St. Lucie International Airport. Info: 561-464-0538 or 561 489-0420. MAY 3-5-Cleveland, OH-18th Annual Symposium of the Society of Air Racing Historians. Sessions featuring talks by pilots, crew members and others at the Holiday Inn-Airport. Info: Herman Schaub, 440-234-2301 or Don Berliner, 703-548-0405. MAY 4, 5 - Woodland, CA-8 th Annual Great Valley Fly-In, Watts-Woodland Airport (041). Judging of antiques, classics, and homebuilts. Pancake breakfasts, food vendors, raffle, Young Eagles program. Info: 530-662 9631 or www.woodlandaviation.com. MAY 4,5 - Dayton, OH-Ch. 48 Annual Funday Sunday Regional Fly-In at Moraine AirPark (1-73) . Camping, awards, displays. Info: 937-859-8967 or www.MoraineAirpark.com. MAY 5 - Rockford, IL-EAA Ch. 22 Fly In/Drive-In Breakfast, Greater Rfd. Airport, Courtesy Aircraft Hangar. Info: 815-397-4995. MAY 18 - Fort Pierce, FL-EAA Ch. 908 Pancake Breakfast, 7-11 a.m., EAA Hangar, St. Lucie International Air port. Info: 561-464-0538. "I couldn't have won these swell trophies without Poly-Fiber!" Fly high with a quality Classic interior Complete interior assemblies ready for installation Roscoe Turner - Famous Race Pilot Custom quality at econom ical prices. • Cushion upholstery sets • Wall panel sets • Headliners • Carpet sets • Baggage compartment sets • Firewa ll covers • Seat slings ell, OK. .. maybe he didn't actually say that. .. but we bet he would have if Poly-Fiber had been around in the '30s. His plane would have been lighter and stronger, too, and the chance of fire would have been greatly reduced because Poly-Fiber won't support comb ustion. Not on ly that, but Gilmore's playful claw holes would have been easy to repair. Sorry, Roscoe. W Free catalog of complete product line. Fabric Selection Guide showing actual sample colors and styles of materials: $3.00, Qir'~RODUCTS' INC. 259 Lower Morrisville Rd ., Dept. VA Fallsington , PA 19054 (215) 295-4115 website: www.airtexinteriors.com Fax: 800/394-1247 26 JANUARY 2002 *** Really easy t o use 40 years of success New step-by-step video *** 800-362-3490 www.polyfiber.com e-mail: info@polyfiber. com FAX: 909-684- 0 S18 The best manual around Nationwide EAA workshops Toll-free technical support VAA NEWS CONTINUED HALL OF FAME HONORS GO TO VAA TREASURER National Bip lane Associatio n Chairman and Vintage Aircraft As sociation Treasurer Charlie Harris was inducted into the Oklahoma Aviation and Space Hall of Fame at the Omniplex in Oklahoma City on September 22, 200l. Charlie was one of seven Okla homans who was honored. The other six were around -the-world pilot U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe, former Braniff Airways Chairman Harding Lawrence, around-the-world Stearman p il ot Robert Ragozzino, former Tuskegee Airman Nathan Sams, former Bell Air craft test pilot Bob Stanley, and physicist Dr. Dean E. Wooldridge, one of the founders of Thompson, Reno, Wooldridge, or TRW. Incoming U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff and Four Star General John P. Jumper was the featured speaker of the eve ning, and since the event was held only 11 days following the terrorist attacks of September 11, se curity was extremely tight. Charlie joins the other Oklahoma National Biplane Association mem b e rs in the Hall who hav e been inducted in prior years, including Mary Jones Wilkinson, Joe Cunning ham, Mary Kelly, Jan Mauritson, and John Bouteller. The black tie affair attracted ap proximately 400 patrons and guests. During the presentation of Robert Ragozzino , an audio tape of the sounds of Robert's 450 Pratt & Whit n ey engine was played in the background. Inhofe's previo u sly o wned and flown Stearman was prominently shown during the video presentation honoring him, and Charlie was videotaped in front of his Pitts S-lS-placing biplanes in the spotlight for the large biplane contingent in attendance. Our hearty congratulations to Char lie on this well-deserved honor! ~ Workshop Schedule Jan 11-13. 2002 Griffin. GA Mar 1-3. 2002 TIGWELDING Jan 18-20. 2002 Corona. CA RVASSEMBLY Jan 18-20. 2002 Jan 19. 2002 Corona.CA Mar23.2002 Dallas. TX RVASSEMBLY TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT Oshkosh. WI TEST FLYING YOUR PROJECT Jan 19-20. 2002 Oshkosh. WI SHEET METAL COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT. ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS & AVIONICS FABRIC COVERING INTRO TO BUILDING Feb 8-1 0. 2002 Griffin. GA TIGWELDING Mar 1-3. 2002 Mar 22-24. 2002 Griffin. GA RVASSEMBLY Griffin. GA ADVANCED TIG WELDING RVASSEMBLY Mar 23-24. 2002 Dallas. TX SHEET METAL COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT. ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS & AVIONICS FABRIC COVERING GAS WELDING April 20-21. 2002 Watsonville. CA SHEET METAL COMPOSITE CONSTRUCT. FABRIC COVERING Oshkosh. WI RVASSEMBLY Visit www.sportair.com for a complete listing of workshops. S EAA IfJORT~'lR WORKSHOPS iro 1-800-WORKSHOP 1-800-967-5746 sportair@eaa.org VINTAGE AIRPLAN E 27 .*7 Aircraft Exhaust Systems JlUnping Branch, WV 25969 800-227-5951 " "~. • • 1M 30 different engines for fitting VINTAGE TRADER ~ Something to buy, sell or trade? Classified Word Ads: $5.50 per 10 words, 180 words m ax imum, with boldface lead-in o n first line. C lass ifi ed Display Ads: One co lumn wide (2.167 inches) by 1, 2, o r 3 inches high at $20 per inch. Bla ck and white only, and no fre quency discou nts. Adve rti si n g Closing Dates: 10th of seco nd month prior to desired issue date (Le., January 10 is the closi ng date for the March issue). VAA re serves th e right t o rejec t any advertising in co nflict with its policies. Rates cover o ne inser tion per issue. Classified ads are not accepted via phone. Payment must accompany o rd er. Word ads may be sent via fax (920/426-4828) or e-mail (c1assads@eaa.org) using credit ca rd payment (a ll cards accepted) . In clude name o n card, complete add ress, type of card, ca rd number, and ex pira tion date. Make checks payable to EAA. Address advertising correspondence to EAA Publications ClaSSified Ad Manager, P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. BABBITT BEARING SERVICE - rod bearings, main bearings, bushings, master rods, valves, piston rings Call us Toll Free 1/800/233-6934, e-mail ramremfg@aol.com Web site www.ra mengine.com VINTAGE ENGINE MACHINE WORKS, N. 604 FREYA ST. , SPOKAN E, WA 99202. Airplane T-Shirts 150 Different Airplanes Available WE PROBABLY HAVE YOUR AIRPLANE! www.airplanetshirts.com 1-800-645-7739 THERE'S JUST NOTHING LIKE IT ON THE WEB!! www.avjation-giftshoP.com A Web Site With The Pilot In Mind (and those who love airplanes) For sale, reluctantly: Warner 145 & 165 engines. 1 each. new OH and low time. No tire kickers, please. Two Curtiss Reed props to go with above engines. 1966 Helton Lark 95, Serial #8. Very rare, PO-8 certified Target Drone derivative. Tri-gear Culver Cadet See Juptner's Vol. 8-170 . Total time A&E 845 hrs. I just have too many toys and I'm not get ting any younger. Find my name in the Officers & Directors listing of Vintage and e-mail or call evenings. E. E. "Buck" Hilbert 1940 J-3 Cub project, disassembled, 65 Continental engine. $7,500 firm! 863-699-1911 1971 Bellanca 7ACA Champ project. 800 hrs. total time since new. $8500 . 757-357-0826, cheek@visi.net Wanted: Kinner #610 taper shaft prop hub. Russ, 610-372-7333 . 28 JANUARY 2002 ° "'The use of Dacron or similar modern maleriak os a substi.ule for (oHon ts dead giveaway 10 Ihe knowing eye. They simply do nOllook righl on vinloge aircroh,' from Rabert Mikesh, former curolor of Ihe Nolional Air and Spoce Museum, in his book Restoring Museum Aircraff. VltiTAGE. AE.RO FAP.>RICJ, LTD ;:;:; C");/lliJ fl/ fll ,\;:;:; Don't compromise your restoration with modem coverings , .. finish the job correctly with authentic fabrics. Certificated Grade A(allan Early aircraft (allan Imported aircraft Linen (beige and tan) German WWl lozenge print fabric Fabric tapes: frayed, straight, pinked and early Ameri(an pinked Waxed linen lacing (ord Antiques, Warbirds, General Aviation 304-466- 1724 Fax 304-466-0802 Pure cotton machine and hand sewing thread Vinlage Aera Fabri(s, ltd. 18 Journey's End, Mendon, VI 05701 lei: 802·773·0686 lax: 802·786·21 29 websile: www.avdalh.(am 'Original Nieuporl28 reslored by Vinlage Avionon Services' PRIME Wedell-Williams Air Service Authors: Robert Hirsc h & Barbara Schultz CLASSIFIED REAL ESTATE AVAILABLE ON THIS PAGE $20 PER I NCH/ pER MONTH TO MAKE 10,000+ IMPRESSIONS . CALL TAMARA AT EAA HQ 920-426-6565 FOR MORE INFO . A history of air rac ing at its best l 170 photos, 19 detailed drawings. $ 19.95 plus $3.95 shipping. Order f rom : Little Buttes Publishing Co. PO Box 2043 Lancaster, CA 93539 OR online: www. ·le.com want to see your plane or pearls of wisdom in print? Write an article for VINTAGE AIRPLANE We're always looking for technical articles and photos of your latest restoration. We can't offer you money, but we can make you a hero among fellow Vintage Aircraft enthusiasts! Send your submissions to: Editor, Vintage Airplane P.O. Box 3086 Oshkosh, WI 54904 e-mail: vintage@eaa.org For pOinters on format and content feel free to call 920-426-4825 Membership Services Directo~ VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ENJOY THE MANY BENEFITS OF EAA AND THE EAA VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATION EAA Aviation Center, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh WI 54903-3086 OFFICERS President Vice-President Espie ' Butch" Joyce P.O. Box 35584 Greensboro, NC 27425 336/668-3650 George Daubner 2448 Lough Lane Hartford, WI 53027 262/673-5885 vaaflyboy@aol.com windsock@aol.com Secretary Steve Nesse 2009 Highland Ave. Albert Lea, MN 56007 507/373-1674 Treasu rer Charles W. Harris 7215 East 46th St. Tulsa, OK 74147 9 18/622-8400 cwh@hv5u.com DIRECTORS David Ben nett P.O. Box 1188 Roseville, CA 9S678 916/645-6926 anUquer@inreach.com Jea nnie Hill P.O. Box 328 Harvard , lL 60033 815/943-720S dinghao@owc.net Robert C. -Bob" Brauer 9345 s. H0t?Qne Steve }(reg 1002 Heather Ln. Chi~~~?7~~210~20 Hartford, WI 53027 262/966-7627 photopilot@aol.com sskrog@aol.com John Bereodt 7645 Echo Point Rd. cannon Fails, MN 55009 507/263-2414 Robert D. "Bob" Lumley 1265 South 124th St. Brookfield, WI 53005 262/782-2633 fchJd@rconnect.com lumper@exeq>C.com Jobn S. Copela nd 1A Deacon Street North~8/3~~:4~f5 01532 copeland l@j uno.com Phil Cou lson 28C1~t~~i~r~fo~pr 616/624-6490 rcoulsonS16@cs.com Roger Gomoll 3R2~I!e;t~r,B~~r~~tl 507/288-2810 India:ftJ/z~j_!~366278 n03capt@fiash.net Dean Richardson 1429 Kings0jnn Rd n StoU$i?8 h _8~~l589 dar@aprilaire.com Geoff Robison 152 1 E. MacGregor Dr. New Haven, IN 46774 219/493-4724 chiel702S@aol.com S.H. " Wes' Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue Wauwatosa, WI S3213 414/771-1S45 shschmid@gdinet.com DIRECTORS EMERITUS Gene Chase 2159 cariton Rd. Oshkosh, WI 54904 920/23 1-5002 E.E. "Buck" Hilbert P.O. Box 424 Union, IL 60 180 815/923-4S91 buck7aC@mc.net ADVISORS AJan Shackleton P.O. Box 656 Sugar Grove, IL 60554-D656 630/466-4193 103346.1772@compuserve.com Steve Bender 815 Airport Road Roanoke. TX 76262 817/49 1-4700 sst IOOCalfmail.msn.com EAA and Division Membership Services 800-843-3612 . ... . ....... FAX 920-426-6761 (8:00 AM-7:00 PM Monday-Friday CSn • New/ renew memberships: EAA, Divisions (Vintage Aircraft Association, lAC, Warbirds), National Association of Flight Instmctors (NAFI) • Address changes • Merchandise sales • Gift memberships Programs and Activities EAA AirVenture Fax-On-Demand Directory ....... _... ..... .......... 732-885-6711 Auto Fuel STCs . .. . ......... . 920-426-4843 Build/ restore information ..... 920-426-4821 Chapters: locating/organizing .. 920-426-4876 Education _..... .. ...... .. .. 920-426-6815 • EAA Air Academy • EAA Scholarships Gene Morris 5936 Steve Court Roanoke, TX 76262 817/491-9110 rgomoll@hotmaii.com Dale A. Gustafson 7724 Shady Hills Dr. Phone (920) 426-4800 Fax (920) 426-4873 Web Site: http://www_eaa.org and http://www,airventure_org E-Mail: villtage Dave Clark 635 Vesl.1 Lane Plainfield, IN 46168 317/839-4S00 davecpd@iquest.net @ eaa_org Flight Advisors information ... . 920-426-6522 Flight Instructor informa tion ... 920-426-6801 Flying Start Program .. ........ 920-426-6847 Library Services/ Research ... . .. 920-426-4848 Medica l Questions. . .. . .... ... 920-426-4821 Technical Counselors ......... 920-426-4821 Young Eagles . ... ........... . 920-426-4831 Benefits Aircraft Financing (Textron) ... 800-851-1367 AUA ...... ..... . ... .... . .. 800-727-3823 AVEMCO .... .... .. ........ 800-638-8440 Term Life and Accidental ...... 800-241-6103 Death Insurance (Harvey Watt & Company) Editorial Submitting article/ photo; advertising informa tion 920-426-4825 ............ FAX 920-426-4828 EAA Aviation Foundation Artifact Donations .. .. .. ... .. 920-426-4877 Fi nancial Support ... .. . _. . .. 800-236-1025 MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION EAA Membership in the Experimental Aircraft Associ ation, Inc. is $40 for one year, including 12 issues of SPORT AVIATION. Family membership is available for an additional $10 annually. Junlor Membership (under 19 years of age) is available at $23 annually. All major credit cards accep ted for membership. AVIATION magazin e not included). (Add $10 for Foreign Postage.) WARBIRDS Current EAA members may join the EAA War birds of America Division and receive WARBlRDS magazine for an additional $35 per year. (Add $16 for Foreign Postage.) EAA Membership, WA RBIRDS maga zin e and one year membership in the Warbirds Divi VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION sion is available for $45 per year (SPORT AVIATION magaZine not included). (Add $7 for Current EAA members may join the Vintage Foreign Postage.) Aircraft Associaton and receive VINTAGE AIR PLANE magazine for an additional $36 per year. EAA Membership, VINTAGE A IRPL ANE EAA EXPERIMENTER magazine and one year membership in the EAA Curr ent EAA members may receive EAA Vintage Aircraft Association is available for $46 EXPERIMENTER magazine for an additional per year (SPORT AVIATION maga Zine not in $20 per year. cluded). (Add $7 for Foreign Postage.) EAA Membership and EAA EXPERIMENTER magaZine is available for $30 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included). (Add $8 for lAC Foreig'" Postage_) Current EAA members may join the Interna tional Aerobatic Club, Inc. Division and receive SPORT AEROBATICS maga zine for an addi FOREIGN MEMBERSHIPS tional $40 per year. Please submit your remittance with a check or EAA Membership, SPORT AEROBATICS draft drawn on a United States bank payable in magaZine and one year membership in the lAC United States dollars . Add required Foreign Division is available for $50 per year (SPORT Postage amount for each membership. Membership dues to EAA a nd its divisions are not tax deductible as charitable contributions. Copyright ©2002 by the EM Vintage Aircraft Association All rights reserved. VINTAGE AIRPLANE DSSN 0091-6943) IPM 1482602 is published and owned exclusively by the EM Vintage Aircraft Association of the Experimental Aircraft Association and is published monthly at EM Aviation Center. 3000 Poberezny Rd., P.O. Box 3086. Oshkosh. Wisconsin 54903-3086. Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh. Wisconsin 54901 and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to EM Vintage Aircraft Association. P.O. Box 3086. Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES - Please allow at least two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APO addresses via sur face mail. ADVERTISING - Vintage Aircraft Association does nol guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising. We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken. EDITORIAL POLICY: Readers are encouraged to submit stories and photographs. POIKoY opinions expressed in artKoles are solely those of the authors. Responsibility lor accuracy in reporting rests entirely with the contributor. No renumeration is made. Material should be sent to: Editor, VINTAGE AIRPLANE, P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Phone 920/426-4800. EAAtJ and SPORT AVIATIO~, the EM Logo® and Aeronautica flll are registered trademarks, trademarks, and service marks of the Experimental Aircraft Association , Inc. The use of these trademarks and service marks without the permission of the Experimental Aircraft Association, Inc. is strictry prohibited. The EM AVIATION FOUNDATION Logo is a trademark of the EAA Aviation Foundation, Inc. The use of this trademark without the permission of the EM Aviation Foundation, Inc. is strictly prohibited. VINTAGE AIRPLANE 29 INTAGE ME AND a. Fleece Youth Vests ....... $12.95 These soft fleece vests are ava il able in royal blue, grey. and green. blue sm V00587 grey sm VI0515 blue Ig V10509 grey md \100516 blue xl \110510 grey Ig \110517 grey xl \110518 green Sill V10511 green xl \I 10514 b. Zippered Sweatshirt..... 59.95 50% cotton/50% poly and machine wasb able, this top has an elegant outline around the Vintage logo with genu ine Austrian crystals. Comes in navy or for'fest green. navy md \I 10489 navy Ig \I 10490 nm')' xl \110491 green Iud \110492 c. Leather Val'slty Jacket ... $ 229.95 Leather aud wool are combined to create this classic jacket with embossed vintage airplanes and Vintage logo ottlthlYDti:l6 md \100344 Ig V00345 d. 'l'ravel lUug ... .. \100342 $ 12.95 Classic sta inless steel mug with plastic handle and cap. Standard base fits most cal' cup holder's. e. Coffee Mllg .... . V00234 $4.95 Enjoy your morning coffee with this blue trimmed Vintage logo mug. f. Youth Flight Jacket. • • •• $38.95 This classic jacket is sized for young people. Made of nylon with knit coilaI'. cuffs. aDd waist. Sports an ora nge liner. Youth sizes: sm \100605 md V00606 Ig V00607 TELEPHONE ORDERS 800-843-3612 FROM US AND CANADA ALL O T HERS CALL 920-426-5912 MAIL ORDERS P.o. Box 3086 OSHKOSH , WI 54903-3086 ORDER ONLINE WWW.EAA.ORG a. g. Crew Sweater . . ....... ~ This dal'k navy knit sweater has cotton patches at the shoulder' and elbows and sports the Vintage logo. ~~ .. sm V00516 xl V 10525 ~.E: md Vl0523 xxi V00517 Ig Vl0524 c..t 49.911 8a~s frOID Vinta~e Aircraft Leather An embossed logo graces each of these finely crafted, genuine leather bags, which come in either tan or black. h. Leathel' Pouch ........... $21.95 tan V00584 black V00513 Flapped. soft leather bag has shoulder strap. Approximate size: 7.5"h x 5'\v x 1.5"d i. Leathel' Bl'ie(case ........ $79.95 tan \100497 black \100510 Crafted with a rich design, this case has several interior pockets and goes from home to the boardl'Oom in st;yle. Appl'Oxi mately 12"h x 16"w x 4.5"d j. Leal,her Backpa('k ........ $49.95 tan V00498 black V00511 Perfectly sized with convenient zippered pockets on the inside and outside. Appl'Ox imately: 11"h x 9"w x 4.5"d k. LeatheI' Pocket Bag (black only) . .... . .... V00512 $46.95 Convenient phon e/sunglass pocket make this bag a definite accessory. ApPl'Oximate size: 9"h x 6"w x 3"d I. Adult Burgundy Fleece "est .. .. ... .. .. ............ $ ·14.95 Simi lar to the youth fleece vest, this adult version is a wel comed layer during cold winter activities. Ig \110506 sm V00586 xl Vl0507 md \110505 m. Youth Camo Shh't ....... $&9.95 Sport shir't features four buttoned pock ets and Vintage Logo. Made of 65% poly/35% cotton and is machine was hable. Youth sizes: SOl V00609 md \100610 Ig \100611 xJ \100612 TELEPHONE ORDERS 800-843-3612 FROM US AND CANADA A LL OTHERS CALL 920-426-5912 MAIL ORDERS ORDER ONLINE WWW.EAA .OR P.o . Box 3086 OSHKOSH , WI 54903-3086 r Russ King Aransas Pass, TX Private pilot in SEL in 1981 , A&P, IA, FAA-DAR Diredor of Quality for McTurbine, Inc., a 145 repair station specializing in Lycoming T53 Turboshaft helicopter engines AUAis ~ approved. 'And the award for Best Post War Custom Aeronca goes to... ' Russ King stands with his award from the June 2000 Middletown Ohio, National Aeronca Fly-In and his N238 7 E 1946 Aeronca 7AC. "This was the first airplane I ever flew in . My Dad sold it in 1964. When I member of the insurance company familiar with classic Association call 800-843-3612 lower liability and hull premiums Medical payments included that company. They understand classic Fleet discounts for multiple aircraft carrying all risk coverages airplanes, offer great service, and have No hand-propping exclusion very reasonable rates. Thanks, AUA, Vintage Aircraft Insurance Program re-acquired it in 1996, I wanted an airplanes to insure my prize . AUA is To become a AUA's Exclusive EAA Vintage Aircraft Assoc. No age penalty No component parts endorsements for helping to make it affordable to own and fly the classics!" Discounts for claim-free renewals carrying all risk coverages - Russ King The best is affordable . Give AUA a call - it' s FREE! 800-727-3823 Fly with the pros .. .fly with AUA Inc. Remember, We're Better Togetherl