August - EAA 430
Transcription
August - EAA 430
August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER EAA 430 FLYER Dedicated to having fun with airplanes and promoting General Aviation Serving Sequim, Port Angeles and the North Olympic Peninsula President’s Letter Volume 14, Issue 8 August 2014 Inside this Issue President’s Letter 1 Board & Officers 2 Calendar 2 John Cuny Wins Gold Lindy At Oshkosh! 3 Jay & Francoise Pearlman’s RV-6 4 Ken Brown’s RV-9A 5 Chapter Meeting Notes 5 35 Years of NASA ASRS Callback Wisdom 6-7 For Sale 8 Newsletter & Website Sponsors 8 Hi All! It seems like only a short time ago we were celebrating Sequim’s Centenary with the first ever Olympic Peninsula AirAffaire, and here we are about to again participate in what may become an annual event. The Air Affaire, on Saturday and Sunday of Labor Day weekend, will be our August Chapter event (no Chapter meeting) and I hope everyone will come out and participate. Chapter 430 will again be an Exhibitor with a booth and some display airplanes. Donna Sommer has been in contact with the organizers and we will be planning on putting the booth up on Friday afternoon (that’s the 29th). Willing and able hands will be needed as it was a somewhat difficult task last year. We will need to stake out our space for exhibiting airplanes. If you can help out please contact Donna, or respond when she asks. I know I am biased toward Van’s RV’s, and particularly if they have yellow in the paint scheme, so I am delighted to welcome Ken Brown’s latest wings, an RV-9A, to the Chapter fleet. Stop by his hanger at SVA and take a look. As you know our July Chapter meeting program was supposed to be a presentation by Jim Barnfather and the Clallam County Fire District #3. The wildfires in eastern Washington prevented that from happening, but I am glad to say Jim has rescheduled this for our September meeting. Hopefully a full demonstration of proper fire extinguisher technique can be included. More next month. In October we will have another presentation from Mike Lavelle who gave us the wonderful program on the history of Pan American World Airways. What the subject will be is yet to be announced, but we can be sure it will be interesting, and superbly presented. As I mentioned last month Jim Rosenburgh is heading up the development of a list of candidates for Chapter officer positions for next year. If he contacts you please consider taking on a Chapter position. Or you could contact him first. See you at the AirAffaire! Bob Hicks President August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER Calendar EAA CHAPTER 430 BOARD & OFFICERS Aug 13 Board Meeting, 09:30 PRESIDENT Robert Hicks 452-9399 Place: Mariner Cafe 707 W. Washington St, Sequim Vice PRESIDENT Jim Rosenburgh 681-0973 Aug 16 Young Eagle Rally, 1000-1400 SECRETARY Joe Platt 582-0721 TREASURER Gordon Tubesing 683-0108 Events & Programs Donna Sommer 681-7427 Tech Counselor Jim Cone & Flight Advisor 775-0311 Tech Counselor Dan Masys 797-3260 Raffle David Orr 670-9725 Webmaster Dan Masys 797-3260 Membership Jim Bettcher 683-4643 Newsletter Jim Bettcher 683-4643 Merchandise John Meyers 683-6526 Young Eagles Richard Bielawa 681-4441 Scholarship Dave Miller 452-7136 Sequim Valley Airport, W28 Bring your airplane or help on the ground as Chapter 430 provides airplane rides to kids 8 - 17 No August Chapter Meeting & BBQ Due to Air Affaire at Sequim Valley Airport! Come out and enjoy everything Aviation from 0900 to 1500 on Saturday and Sunday of Labor Day Weekend—August 30 & 31 Sept 10 Board Meeting, 09:30 Place: Mariner Cafe 707 W. Washington St, Sequim Sept 27 Chapter Meeting & BBQ, 10:00 Last Summer BBQ Meeting of the Year! Place: Hanger 10, Sequim Valley Airport, W28 Program: Aviation Fire Safety & Extinguisher Class Presenter: Jim Barnfather, District 3 Fire Commissioner Aug 16 Young Eagle Rally, 1000-1400 Sequim Valley Airport, W28 Last Young Eagle Event for 2014 Bring your airplane or help on the ground as Chapter 430 provides airplane rides to kids 8 - 17 Aug 30, 31 Sequim Airport “Air Affaire” 0900-1500, A Repeat of Last Year’s Successful Event: Fly-In, Skydivers, Fly-By, Biplane Rides, Wing Walker, Hot Air Balloons, RC Airplanes, Classic Cars, Vendors, Food, Live Music, etc. 2 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER Chapter News John Cuny wins a Gold Lindy at Oshkosh ! Chapter Member, John Cuny, is bringing home the award for “Best of Show - Seaplane”, the Gold Lindy for Seaplanes, at EAA Air Venture 2014. Seabee N6230K Panel — In Flight John Cuny’s 1947 Rebublic RC3 Seabee - 2014 Air Venture Gold Lindy John has owned this Seabee, number 433 out of 1050 built, since the mid-80’s. He needed more power to operate in the mountains of the northwest so 14 years ago started a rebuild that resulted in 14 new STC’s and many small changes to the airframe. Most of the work was completed in the last two years in Jackson, Michigan. There are a few small tweaks to make and the project will be complete. Once John brings his pride and joy out west, we’ll do a more complete report on this great post WWII amphibian owned and flown by one of EAA 430’s members. 3 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER Chapter News Jay and Francoise Pearlman’s RV-6 Nine Chapter 430 members visited the Pearlman’s home to see their nearly completed RV-6 on Saturday, July 19th. I have never seen an RV built with such attention to every detail and every option. This airplane will truly be one of a kind. Take a look at this panel: When we visited, the Dynon and other displays were out of the panel but it still was impressive! The paint scheme is set: Jay describing details of his Lycoming IO-360 installation The EAA 430 Tour Group 4 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER Chapter News Ken Brown’s New Aircraft - a Van’s RV-9A Long time member, Ken Brown, recently took delivery of RV-9A, N120LM, at his Sequim Valley Airport hanger, where his new airplane fit perfectly! Ken reports the engine and prop have just 140 hours on them and the airplane is currently configured for VFR with round gauges. Congratulations, Ken! Chapter Meeting, July 26 Excellent weather and another great BBQ - Gotta love summer meetings. Several members were at EAA Air Venture 2014 in Oshkosh and others were traveling but several visitors filled in for them. Our scholarship recipient, Mitch Hubbard, attended and spoke about his summer work and fall plans. Mitch will be a senior at UW this year. Our scheduled speaker, Fire Commissioner Jim Barnfather, was busy with the fires in eastern Washington and unable to attend but Dan Masys stepped in with an excellent video patched together from monthly EAA Headquarters videos. We saw EAA founder, Paul Poberezny, fire up his restored P-64, a pre-WWII aircraft that had not flown for 20 years. There was a good tour of the Van’s aircraft factory in Oregon, and also flight test photos of the Jet Sonex. 5 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER — Time Pressure — My first mistake came from reacting much too quickly. Take your time. Run the checklist when appropriate. Verify important switches with the other pilot before you move them. To the extent possible, always get prepared on the ground, not while in the air. Don’t let external pressures make you rush to do something without being thoroughly prepared. I was making a rushed approach to land. I have learned that when I am rushed is when I really need to take the time for the checklist. — Automation — I have learned a valuable lesson about my responsibility to make timely inputs to the aircraft when I realize that the automation isn’t doing what I expect it to do. Aircraft are machines subject to malfunction and we pilots who operate them are humans subject to human error. As a pilot who plans on remaining on the line, I have learned a valuable lesson— monitor the autoflight system like a hawk. I must keep in mind that the buttons on the Flight Guidance Controller are myth and what displays on the PFD (Primary Flight Display) is truth. In other words, I can’t rely on the aircraft to do what I command by simply pressing a button. I must verify that the plane is doing what I command by seeing what is displayed on the PFD. I was counting on the autoflight system to fly the departure as it was supposed to and I got a little lax. Lesson learned! Garbage in, garbage out. If the route isn’t in there or it drops out, you’re not going to fly what you’re thinking you’ll fly. — Fuel — We thought we had a pretty good handle on our fuel state. Another minute or two of fuel and we would have made it safely to the airfield. From now on I’ll visually check the fuel myself and I’ll keep track of the fuel I’m using in flight. Next time I’ll make sure I have enough fuel for the unexpected and I hope others might be able to do the same without learning the hard way. — Weather — I learned that it is better to divert early than to press on in deteriorating conditions hoping for a positive outcome. No one should attempt to “scud run” in marginal VFR conditions as I did— with a near disastrous result. Never again. 6 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER Even though I have been flying for a number of years, I learned a valuable lesson about how fast weather can close in and how stupid it is to “assume” that the weather will clear. — Miscellaneous — Not knowing if the other aircraft was being provided advisories shouldn’t have been a factor. It’s always, “see and avoid” out there. They say a good approach leads to a good landing. Early recognition of a bad setup will enable a go-around and prevent getting “into the hole” where few options remain. Always have Plan B ready in case something goes wrong—because it will. Line check airmen can make mistakes. Never get distracted from the first priority— fly the airplane! In retrospect, doing a go-around to troubleshoot the problem wasn’t too smart. We had a perfectly good runway right in front of us. I blame the mistake on simple overconfidence. Experience, it seems, is no replacement for doing one’s homework. I learned that if ever there is a doubt, not only as to what ATC said, but also what they meant, I should become absolutely clear about ATC’s instructions, especially before taxiing onto an active runway. It has been my experience that radio transmissions shouldn’t be made to aircraft during the takeoff roll unless absolutely necessary. Looking back on it, I learned two things: 1. Take the time necessary to do the work right even if there is pressure to get the plane out. 2. Always check the part number, no matter who says it’s the right part. The timely and accurate flow of information from the cabin to the cockpit was vital in resolving the situation. Lesson learned: CRM (Crew Resource Management) works! Once in a while a spelling error, an unusual situation, or a witty comment from a reporter can add a little spice to the thousands of reports screened by ASRS analysts every month. Here are a few examples: I no longer believe my problem was fuel exhaustion, but possibly carb ice. This was the first carbonated airplane I had ever flown. No APU or ground power was available so we did a crossbreed start. Event: Bird strike on Captain’s forward windscreen. Cause: Bird was apparently texting. It was very dark in the ramp area and the pilot didn’t have any lights on the airplane. His left wing struck a sign that said, “This is not a taxiway.” Tower said, “[Callsign] turn left and cross Runway 24L and contact ground on the other side.” I informed him that we were unable to comply as we were still on final. The Captain rounded out a bit late, touched down, and skipped back into the air. He was also tired and, not realizing we were airborne again, he pulled the speed brake lever. This time we knew we were on the ground. 7 August 2014 EAA 430 FLYER AVAILABLE from our Members Aircraft hangars for sale at the Port Angeles Airport. Nearly new, well built. $38,000 each. Call for brochure or more information. Alan Barnard Windermere 360-461-0175 Large T Hangar for rent at Diamond Point Airport. $200.00/month. George Llewellyn 360 477-8180 Got something to do with airplanes to sell? Contact Jim Bettcher, editor, at zoombag68@gmail.com or 360-683-4643 Newsletter & Website SPONSORS Advertise your business on our website & in our newsletter All artwork and business cards to be submitted in electronic format to: Webmaster Dan Masys at dmasys@uw.edu or Newsletter Editor Jim Bettcher, email: zoombag68@gmail.com 8