September/October - Oregon Pilots Association
Transcription
September/October - Oregon Pilots Association
Official Publication of the Oregon Pilots Association Oregon O P A Pilots Association www.OregonPilot.org SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 i President-Elect’s Message - By Mary Rosenblum, OPA President-Elect President-elect Mary Rosenblum here with my final message to you as President-elect of the OPA. Well, it’s August and our annual meeting looms. It should be a great program in Albany this year. Neal White has put together a fabulous and packed schedule of WINGS credit seminars and we have both Swift Fuel to talk about their drop-in 100 unleaded av gas, and Dave Ulane, our excellent AOPA Northwest Regional Representative, to offer a Town Hall talk about aviation issues in the Northwest. Add to that the Albany Art and Air Fair events and it’ll be a great place to spend your Saturday. Why not do the Madras Air Show on Friday and fly over to Albany Saturday morning? It’s also the day we hold our elections, and unless someone steps up who wants to head the Oregon Pilots As- sociation for the next two years, I will likely be elected president. This promises to be a very busy and momentous tour of duty. Every one of you is seeing the decline of General Aviation in this state, and it’s not likely to turn around any time soon, not with the cost of getting into flying initially, the price of av-gas, and the cost of flying and maintaining an aircraft. You gotta love it. And commit to it. And we who love it and would like to see this legacy continue are going to have to step up, if we want it to be available to more than an elite handful of people. We all need to come together, all of us GA pilots; experimental folk and backcountry, as well as aviation business owners and the Oregon Department of Aviation, to decide what we want Aviation in Oregon to look like 10 years from now. It won’t be what we have now, but it can still be viable. If we don’t define that vision for ourselves and work to achieve it, we are going to see more erosion of our aviation infrastructure in this state than in other states and ultimately, a lot of what we know now will be gone forever. I don’t want to see that. It is not inevitable. But it will require that we all work together. If we stand back and wait for that ‘Someone’ to deal with it, we’ll lose an awful lot of what we have. It took me a long time to be able to fly the way I’d dreamed of flying as a kid. I’d like to see that option there for other girls and boys who are dreaming about flying now. It will not be, if we don’t safeguard it. And we can safeguard it. If we work together. We all need to understand what is going on in the broader picture, so that we can protect what we care about. You’ll be hearing from me! D SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER FEATURED PILOT: PAUL EHRHARDT, OPA Public Relations Officer When I was very little, about preschool size, I loved airplanes and flying a fighter plane was my ambition. By the time I was in middle school, I had to relocate my bedroom to the attic of our home because I had over 500 model airplanes. Unfortunately, by the time I got old enough to fly, my dad had sold his plane due to a cardiac condition. In addition, my uncle was killed in a plane crash and a cousin and his son in a separate crash. My family did not seem to share my interest, so I decided to race cars instead. After the Army, I started flight school, but family matters took Cont. pg. 2 Paul Ehrhardt is an active 65 year old who has a passion for life and the outdoors. He and his wife Robin enjoy their little 150 Cessna, their homesteading lifestyle, family and their GSD named Shunka. Here Paul is shown with some of the lights the Maintenance Wing has acquired. He is in his hangar in Corvallis, under the wing of his 150. Oregon Pilots Association O P A September/October 2013 faded away. Hmmmmm…how to proceed? So I went to the 2011 OPA convention and asked to be considered for Public Relations Officer in an effort to stop chapters from disappearing from lack of activity and focus. As I looked over the problem, it seemed to me a lot of people do not have enough time and perhaps even less money. Looking back a bit, when I was little, airports were really interesting places to go. Heck, when I was 50, airports were interesting. However, today people are being shut out and most are afraid to go sit and even watch the planes. I would like to put a stop to that. I would like to create an atmosphere where people and especially kids, can snoop, ask questions and then learn to fly! I saw us losing small airports, so I started the OPA Maintenance Wing. To date, it is a part of OPA that has collected a significant amount of airport lights, pilot control lighting, lighted signs and even more. We have what we need to light an airport! The question now is where and when. The Maintenance Wing people have extended safety approach areas and do whatever is needed to any airport. Our newest activity is locating crashed airplanes in Oregon’s outback. We have 86 planes on our list all the way from a J-3 Cub to a B-24 Liberator and a DC-9. We just returned (late July) from locating a PA-28 above Oakridge. Now some of the Maintenance Wing members are considering getting a pilot’s license as their interest is sparked. I thought it might have the opposite effect, but not so! If we are going to have a next generation of pilots, we MUST get others involved! How many of you would like to find a WWII fighter lost in time, high in the Oregon Cascades? It’s out there and we are going. You are welcome to come along! front stage and I was unable to continue. I would try later, but as fate would have it, I was redirected once again. In 1994, I met my wife Robin. I helped her as she struggled her way through nursing school for her RN. She finished with her normal string of As. Then one day she told me there was a really good deal on a ground school. “Why don’t you take it,” she said. So I did! First I took the FAA test…then maybe a lesson now and then just for fun. I got my license on May 29, 2007, just AFTER I bought my first plane! I was ecstatic! Now that the initial part was finally over, I figured we needed to do something…make something better; maybe do something so people could have more fun. I looked at OPA. I did some work around McKenzie Bridge airstrip. I saw a sign that said OPA was doing volunteer work there. I looked to Corvallis Chapter; their name was on the sign, but was too late. That chapter faded away. Eugene OPA took over McKenzie Bridge but that chapter too just Know someone who wants to be a pilot? We can help. Hillsboro Aviation offers: • Airplane and helicopter instruction • Financing to those who qualify • 2 locations (HIO & TTD) • Sport pilot training (C162 Skycatcher) • 3-axis motion training device (G1000 & twin) • Frasca FTDs (airplane & helicopter) • Inadvertent IMC training • FAAST seminars • Flight reviews • IFR currency D 32 Years Experience in Flight Training hillsboroaviation.com I (503) 648-2831 I (800) 345-0949 [ Members - show off your photographs By Neal White, Willamette Valley Regional Director The Prop Wash editor is looking for photographs, one of which will be the “Feature Photo” in each issue of Prop Wash. Photos that are submitted: 1) must be of any aviation subject or theme. 2) an OPA member must be involved in some way, in the creation of the photo. 3) photo(s) should include a description. 4) photo(s) should include the OPA member’s name. Please send 1-3 photos in jpeg format to NealWhite@Q.com Oregon Pilots Association Pick up your 2013 Passport Book at LebanAir Aviation, Lebanon, Oregon Flight Tour website: www.WesternFT.com 13 airports selected including 1 grass strip. Sept. 21 is the conclusion of the Tour, celebration, BBQ and prizes. 2 September/October 2013 j OPA “Maintenance Wing” Wants the stuff you do NOT Want AT ALL ANYMORE! C Have an interest in the backcountry? By OPA Public Relations Paul Ehrhardt The Spring will see new people and equipment mowing on some The OPA has formed the OPA Mainteof these airports that need not only nance Wing. As such, Paul Ehrhartd, repairs, but changes and improveOPA Public Relations, has joined a ments. growing number of others who are Do you have a favorite airport you gathering equipment, whether runwould like to see made more userning or not, like old tractors and farm friendly? Come along and join us implements, such as the Ford 800 and be the first in line to make those tractor with an engine that ran just changes. Greg Hargan, Volunteer, long enough to reach the shop! Now OPA Maintenance Wing. Call Paul at 541-554-6143 for more we are rebuilding the engine and information. For those interested, have found a 60 inch deck mower, plows and a disc that there are some airstrips with large numbers of trees that will breathe new life and serve a new purpose. need to be removed - 100s of cords of firewood beckon! D OPA is on Facebook! Submitted by the editor Click on the link from the main OPA website or search for Oregon Pilots Association from your Facebook page. If you have an interest in Oregon’s numerous backcountry dirt strips and enhancing OPA’s strong stance on General Aviation, contact Bill Ables: 541-263-1327 or by email: bjables@eoni.com or OPA President Dennis Smith. Become an OPA fan today! nce Your Insuraals Profession John Day Valley Rentals Eastern Oregon Since 1978 ion Regal Aviat Insurance 800-275-7345 3 Vacation Homes www.johndayvalleyrentals.com jim@oejestates.com 541-932-2725 415-748-8697 Car available for Fly-Ins www.RegalAviation.com PHONE 503-640-4686 | FAX 503-640-3071 5625 NE Elam Young Parkway, Suite 100 | Hillsboro, Oregon 97124 C Marine Stratus Surges (or Pushes) Written by Clinton Rockey, Meteorologist, NOAA/National Weather Service, Portland Oregon strip and the Columbia Basin. Low altitude stratus clouds that form over adjacent ocean waters and moved by horizontal wind over land areas are called marine surges. These stratus type clouds are sheetlike, horizontally uniform base and top and extend for distances of 6-60 miles but are relatively shallow in depth. The process continues as areas east of the Cascades warm, and pressure there becomes lower than that west of the Cascades. How far inland the low clouds reach will depend on the strength of the marine surge, and how deep the marine layer becomes. Summer brings good flying conditions to the region. As many can attest, the most problematic issue for pilots, and forecasters, is the arrival and dissipation of marine stratus and is often a major headache in determining a ‘go’ or ‘nogo’ flight situation for many general aviation pilots who are VFR (visual flight rules) rated. On the strong and intense marine surges, the onshore flow is so strong that moisture rolling over the Cascades and into eastern Oregon and Washington will create streamers of clouds downwind of the passes in the Cascades. Gusty westerly winds can be found in the Columbia Gorge and downwind of the Cascades as well, with gusts of 35 to 45 knots. Marine surges can occur at any time during the year, but tend to favor spring through early autumn, coinciding with the temperature differentials between the coast and the interior. Despite the huge impact of marine stratus on aviation, both general and commercial, forecasters have become increasingly proficient at forecasting arrival and dissipation of the stratus, and its overall impacts during a marine stratus surge. This differential is often a direct result of the pressure pattern, where high pressure offshore battles for control with the thermal low pressure that shifts between the coastal Oregon Pilots Association D 3 September/October 2013 [ Aviation Helping Those in Need - 3rd Annual Oregon Air Rally, Twin Oaks Airpark Submitted by Brian Sheets, Event Organizer a drop only 39 feet away from the bulls-eye! Who knew a C-182 could fly that slowly?! Amidst the low clouds of a cool, mid-July morning, life awakened at Twin Oaks Airpark (7S3) on Saturday July 20th as the 3rd Annual Oregon Air Rally got underway. The Rally was established in 2011 to provide a fundraising venue for charities Afterward, Bob and Betty Stark treated all of the competitors to a home cooked barbeque lunch, complete with ribs and Betty’s secret recipe. Volunteer Sergio Tortuga measuring John Pavlik’s winning drop of 39’. Twin Oaks Airpark - 2013 host for the Air Rally. The post-Rally auction was attended by both competitors and folks passing by. In the end, we were able to raise more than $1300 for the Vasculitis Foundation and Angel Flight West. Mike and Deb Berck coaxing their Grumman in for the landing competition. The event owes its success to the generosity of aviation equipment suppliers, the participants, and volunteers. Hats off to Bob & Betty Stark for hosting the event, and volunteers Raoul & Cynthia Van Landuyt, Sergio Tortuga, and Linda Sheets. combined with the fun of aviation. While anticipating a great day of flying along the coast to some little used airports, the low cloud deck forced a hasty re-design of the competitive flight plan along the Willamette Valley to take advantage of the later afternoon sunshine. While waiting for the cloud deck to lift, competitors were able to take to the morning skies for the first competitive event - flour bombing at 500’ AGL. In what was a phenomenal show of airmanship, John Pavlik hung his C-182R on its prop over the target, enabling him to win the contest with More information can be found at http://www.oregonairrally. com/2013_oregon_air_rally_ Girl Power! Rally winners Teresa rev5_018.htm. Cluster Group - Summit on Sept.19,‘13 Submitted by Jake Jacobs - Oregon Aviation Industries Yes, the Oregon Aviation Industries group, part of the State of Oregon Economic Development Cluster Group organization, will hold its second annual Summit on September 19 at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville, OR. The Cluster Group was launched by the Oregon Business Plan. Members include aviation companies of all types located across Oregon and Southwest Washington, focused on creating jobs, driving the economy forward and producing quality products and services that are sold worlwide. They are leaders in Unmanned Aerial Systems, Worldwide Heavy Lift Helicopter operations, Avionics, Aircraft and parts manufacturing and general and commercial operations and maintenance. Attendance for the September conference will be limited to 250 people so be sure to Register. The Agenda can be viewed at this link. New OPA Members Ken and Nancy Ashmore, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boring, OR Devin Burroughs, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lebanon, OR Michael and Sandy Kuenzi, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Happy Valley, OR Oregon Pilots Association D De Mers and Emily Stark. [ B When the weather finally cleared, it was off down the valley for landings at five different airports prior to returning to Twin Oaks for the landing competition. D 4 September/October 2013 D Managing Airports has Little to do with Airplanes in Today’s Environment Written by David Ulane, AOPA Northwest Mountain Regional Manager for AOPA You know, I think I may have the best job in aviation. Each day I go to work with a singular goal of protecting, promoting, and growing general aviation in arguably the most beautiful region of our country. In my role as Northwest Mountain Regional Manager for AOPA, I get to live, breathe and immerse myself in general aviation every day - a dream I’ve had since I was six. And somehow, every couple of weeks remuneration for my work lands in my checking account. How did I get so fortunate to have my avocation also be my occupation? After 22 years in the airport management side of the industry, I was looking to do something different in aviation, something that could better utilize my passion for flying, airplanes and the aviation community. While I love airports, their energy and seemingly perpetual activity, it’s amazing how much of managing airports in today’s environment often has little to do with airplanes. When I saw the AOPA’s new Regional Manager positions posted in late 2011, I realized that I had found my something different in aviation, and was incredibly fortunate to have been selected to represent AOPA in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Wyoming and Colorado. So what exactly do I do? In my Regional Manager role, I have many responsibilities, but first and foremost I advocate on aviation issues for AOPA’s 37,000 members in the Northwest Mountain Region, including nearly 6,000 in Oregon. This advocacy comes in many forms, including collaborating with partners like OPA to support or oppose state and local legislation that impacts general aviation. This often entails meeting with individual legislators and other elected officials, educating them on the importance of GA, and helping them formulate legislation, regulations and policies that leverage the benefit of GA to state and local economies. Sometimes it means attending city council or legislative committee meetings to testify in person on an i item affecting GA. Many times it involves letter writing and phone calls, and working closely with others to coordinate engagement on a particular issue. In the 2012/2013 legislative session, there were 51 bills in the Northwest Mountain Region that had some impact on GA; 20 of those were in Oregon. While we don’t necessarily engage on all of them, myself and my six counterparts across the country diligently follow every bill in our states and weigh in on behalf of our members as necessary. Of course it’s not just legislative engagement. One of the most enjoyable parts of my jobs is getting out into the region and personally interacting with AOPA members at their airports, at fly in’s and airshows and other aviation events. This provides me an excellent opportunity to hear about what matters to AOPA members in our region, and how we can help. And that feedback is critical as we engage on GA issues at all levels. While the AOPA building at our Frederick, Maryland headquarters is filled with unbelievably talented and knowledgeable folks, local feedback, information and expertise is key to helping us formulate positions on a variety of issues from special use airspace to navaid decommissionings to airport matters. Please be sure to share your thoughts and concerns with us. And how do you do that? The most efficient way is to contact us directly at 800-872-2672, or online at www. aopa.org. And of course, you can reach me directly as well at david.ulane@aopa.org. While I might not be able to answer every question or concern personally, I pledge to point you to the people who can. And for you Twitter types, be sure to follow me at @AOPANorthwest for the latest affecting GA in Oregon and the Northwest. I look forward to working for you and the future of GA! D j Collecting Pet Peeves By Dave Gamble, RV12 builder, full-time curmudgeon These duties average about one hour each month except January which requires about three hours. I have pet peeves with Van’s. Now I may have mentioned before that I have a habit of collecting peeves like a lonely widow collects cats and it really labors the concept of a “pet” peeve to have so many, but this is one that really irks me. I’m speaking, of course, of their completely inconsiderate shipping practices. Look, I understand that I’m building a $60,000 airplane and the leakage of a few bucks here and there is small potatoes in a project of this magnitude, but it’s just so unnecessary, thus rude. I placed an order for two plexiglass bits and a special “zero flute” countersink bit. These $13.50 light weight items came wadded up in a thin envelope. Shipping cost: $6.63. That’s what I’m talking about. 1) Reconcile bank accounts monthly - OPA and ASEF. 2) Pay bills, approx. 50 checks per year. 3) File required IRS reports. 4) Complete required Oregon reports. 5) Prepare 1099 reports to vendors and file with IRS. 6) Prepare financial statements for board members. 7) Prepare treasurer’s reports for board meetings. 8) Attend OPA board meetings when possible. D Oregon Pilots Association OPA Members - a volunteer for our Treasurer position is needed. 5 If you are willing to be OPA treasurer, email our OPA President Dennis Smith: president-opa@oregonpilot.org. If you have any questions contact OPA President. September/October 2013 B Good Approach leads to Good Landing. In today’s parlance: “Stabilized Approach” From Vectors for Safety by Gene Benson of Hilton, New York might consist of seven elements. An eighth element simply states that if any one of the first seven is not being met, the approach is not stabilized and must be abandoned. We continue to see many preventable landing accidents. No group of pilots nor class of airplane seems to be immune from this kind of mishap. The airplanes involved in these accidents range from the smallest amateur built airplane to the unfortunate recent crash of the Asiana Airlines Boeing 777 at San Francisco. The pilot experience ranges from newly certificated pilots to airline captains with many thousands of hours. But many of these landing accidents have one thing in common - an unstabilized approach. Though pilots might argue some of the items, wishing to delete or modify some and add others, the following is a good starting point for the general aviation pilot: 1. The aircraft is on the correct flight path. 2. Only small changes in heading or pitch are required to maintain the correct flight path. 3. The aircraft speed is not more than the desired approach speed (VREF) +10 knots indicated airspeed and not less than VREF 4. The aircraft is in the correct landing configuration. 5. Rate of descent is no greater than 500 feet per minute; if a descent rate greater than 500 feet per minute is required due to approach considerations, special attention must be paid. 6. Power setting is appropriate for the aircraft configuration. 7. All briefings and checklists have been accomplished. 8. If the approach becomes unstabilized below the stabilization altitude, an immediate go-around or missed approach must be initiated. Everybody probably remembers a flight instructor saying that a good approach leads to a good landing. If a pilot is chasing the airspeed, struggling to get lined up with the runway, or trying to correct for being significantly too high or too low, the landing is probably not going to be pretty or worse. But just saying that we need to make a “good approach” isn’t really much help unless we can define what we mean by that. Over the past twenty or so years, we have quantified what we mean and renamed it the “stabilized approach.” The concept has been in wide use by professional pilots for many years but is not always embraced by pilots of small airplanes. The concept of the stabilized approach applies to both VFR and IFR operations. A general aviation adaptation of the stabilized approach D UNION COUNTY AIRPORT La Grande, Oregon Oregon Pilots Association 6 September/October 2013 [ Could Confucianist culture have contributed to Asiana Airlines accident? From Bangkok Post, July 13, 2013 South Korean aviation officials dismissed any suggestion that a deferential culture in which junior pilots were afraid to challenge their seniors played a part in the crash of an Asiana jet in San Francisco. Two people died and more than 180 were injured when a Boeing 777 crashed last Saturday after clipping a seawall short of the runway, skidding out of control, shredding the tail of the plane and catching fire. An investigation by the US National Transportation Safety Board is focusing much of its attention on Lee GangKuk, who was landing the 777 for his first time, and his trainer Lee JeongMin. “We’re certainly interested to see if there are issues where there are challenges to crew communication,” Deborah Hersman said, head of the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) which is investigated the crash. Aviation industry has been training pilots in order “to make sure that a junior pilot feels comfortable challenging a senior pilot and to make sure the senior pilot welcomes feedback in a cockpit environment from all members of the crew and considers it,” she said. But Chang Man-Heui, director of flight standards at the South Korean transportation ministry said it was “outrageous to suggest that traditional Korean Confucianist culture might have contributed to the accident.” “It’s true that authoritarianism existed in the cockpit until the late 1990s (of South Korean flights) but we have now a completely different culture,” he said, dismissing such a suggestion as “anachronistic.” One incident partly blamed on rigid relations between senior and junior pilots was the 1999 crash of a Boeing 747 Korean Air cargo shortly after takeoff from London. The plane’s captain, who had a malfunctioning cockpit indicator, censured his first officer who was communicating correct information to the control tower, according to British investigators. Another accident linked to a deferential culture involved a Korean Air [ Boeing 747 that prematurely descended on an approach and slammed into a hillside short of the runway at Guam in 1997, killing 223 of 254 aboard. The captain failed to respond to warnings from his junior pilot that they were flying too low according to reports. These crashes and other accidents sparked a hectic government-led campaign to improve cockpit environment as part of global efforts at better crew resources management, which have largely paid off, local experts said. Professor Jung Yun-Sick at Jungwon University, a former Asiana pilot, noted drastic changes had occurred not only in aircraft cockpit but the South Korean society as well. “I assure you that cockpit culture has undergone great changes and become as democratic as other countries,” he said. “But this does not mean there should be no hierarchical order in the cockpit as aircraft, as well as ships, need a strict command and control”, he said. D Straightforward no frills reminder . . . By PCOPA Secretary Dave Martin. After a demonstration of the Barany chair to illustrate spacial disorientation that often leads to fatal accidents when pilots enter IFR conditions unintentionally and are unable or unwilling to trust their instruments and return safely to visual conditions: Rule #1 - Don’t fly into clouds unless you are IFR rated, current, equipped and cleared by ATC to do it. Rule #2 - Believe and trust your instruments. D Oregon Pilots Association 7 September/October 2013 j Flight Levels: Human /Automation Interface remain co-dependent for best outcome By Capt. Gary Brown, Continental Airlines, Retired I have always contended that it should be against Federal Air Regulations to get hurt in an airplane. However, last week, a San Francisco bound Asiana flight broke that rule, and the result was injury, death, and airframe loss. A little history: Asiana is a Korean Air Carrier, similar to Korean Air Lines, a Seoul based international carrier. While I was flying for Continental Micronesia based in Guam, there was a similar accident, where a KAL 747 hit the hill above Agana airport, killing everyone on board with the exception of a small child. gine failure, the ramp is a good place to have it!) We all went home for the night. I was just getting to sleep when the phone rang. The Chief Pilot was Now fast forward to the recent San Francisco accident; I am getting déjà vu all over again. The Glide Slope was out of service, but the weather was good, and a hand flown visual approach would be an easy choice for most pilots. Even if the pilots wanted to leave the aircraft auto coupled to track the localizer, and use the vertical speed mode for the descent with the auto throttles controlling speed, it would have been perfectly manageable. Agana Granted, it was a really lousy night to fly. The weather was down around your boots in heavy rain showers, and the Glide Slope was out of service. I was inbound to Agana that night in a Boeing 727 with 151 on board, fighting turbulence, thunderstorms, and on approach had a partial flap malfunction. The book said to put another 20 knots on the clock and land with partial flaps, which we did. Since the Glide Slope was out of service, it required a Localizer DME “step down” to minimums. We broke out a bit above minimums, landed, taxied to the gate, and thought we were going to go home, since our aircraft had a mechanical (flap) maintenance issue. This was not to be the case, as we were re-dispatched to take another aircraft from Guam to Saipan and return, in the same rotten weather. We loaded up, ran the check list, started the engines, began to taxi out, and the #2 (center) engine quit! We taxied back to the gate on two engines, and shut it down for the night. (If you are going to have a total enOregon Pilots Association Also pervasive in the culture, is the absence of Crew Coordination, where the junior member of the crew is hesitant to bring to the attention of the Captain anything causing the junior member concern. asking for “all hands” to report to the airport to help with aiding friends and relatives planning to meet the Korean Air Lines flight that had crashed. It seems that the training convention for KAL and some other Asian carriers as well, is to always fly the full instrument approach, and leave the aircraft, including the auto throttles, auto coupled until time for disconnect just prior to landing. Since the Glide Slope was out of service, it appeared that the crew used the DME distance from the VOR, erroneously thinking it was the step down DME from the runway, and began their descent into the hereafter, impacting Nimitz Hill, where the VOR is located. 8 But from all reports, the crew attempted to hand fly a visual approach with the auto throttles disconnected. They flew low on the glide path, and attempted to remedy the vertical portion of their path by pulling the nose up, resulting in the degradation of airspeed. As the aircraft pitched more nose up to avoid the ground, the Boeing 757 reached aerodynamic stall which results in a sharp nose up attitude, stick shaker and other stall warnings going off, and the tail low attitude causing the aft part of the aircraft to contact the ground, then slamming the remainder of the aircraft abruptly down. The big Boeing had just crossed the ocean, it was light, and would have responded rather quickly to throttle application. When the crew first perceived that the aircraft was not on the desired glide path, a simple application of Cont. on pg. 9 September/October 2013 Cont. from pg. 8 required thrust should have arrested the sink rate. It may be a year before we find out all the details from the NTSB leading up to the accident, but I anticipate that there will be a long discussion on the human factors and crew interaction, and their handling of the auto- i mation. At Continental Airlines, we became concerned with the crews relying on the modern automation on many of our “push button” jets, and the resultant deterioration of basic stick and rudder skills, therefore we routinely failed the flight guidance systems on every check ride to train back these System Stressors that affect pilot decision-making skills. D TWIN OAKS AIR PARK, INC. Environmental: Conditions associated with the environment, such as temperature and humidity extremes, noise, vibration, and lack of oxygen. Physiological Stress: Physical conditions, such as fatigue, lack of physical fitness, sleep loss, missed meals (leading to low blood sugar levels), and illness. Psychological Stress: Social or emotional factors, such as a death in the family, a divorce, a sick child, or a demotion at work. This type of stress may also be related to mental workload, such as analyzing a problem, navigating an aircraft, or making decisions. UNICOM 123.05 7 Miles South HIO, ID 7S3 CESSNA AIRCRAFT RENTALS Tie-Downs Available • Aircraft Maintenance Repair Station JL6R643N • Annuals & Service EAA Breakfast (1st Sat. of each month) FUEL: 100LL - Call for price. HILLSBORO, OREGON • 503-628-2817 D C rusty skills. We also incorporated “Crew Resource Management” into every check ride, and in annual recurrent training. As in all fixed wing aviation, “these things don’t back into mountains!” The human must control the aircraft, not the other way around! Fly Safely! Gary Brown For a Crew of One or More: “Crew Resource Management” i.e. Error Management Written by Gary Brown ATP; A&P; IA; CFI; DAR; First flight and Tech counselor, Independence, OR. In light of the recent Asiana Airlines Flight 214 accident, the Prop Wash editor felt a reprint of this Crew Resource Management article written by Gary Brown was appropriate and timely. After flying for Continental Airlines for 25 years, I flunked retirement, currently serving as Chief Pilot for three “135” operators. The FAA has just added FAR 135.330 to their bible, guaranteed to cure insomnia. It states that even we lowly 135 operators must now have mandatory “Crew Resource Management” training in the curriculum. Most of our operations are single pilot, therefore how to integrate CRM into the training took some thought. CRM, or “Charm School” as we called it in the airlines, was brought about by too many accidents caused by three guys in the cockpit not using resources available to them to collectively avoid the accident. The “last straw” accidents were a United DC-8 crew misreading the holding pattern in Salt Lake City, and flying into the Wasatch range; a TWA B-727 crew failing to follow proper approach procedures, and flying into the Poconos on the way into Washington DC; an Eastern L-1011 flying into the Everglades with all three crewmembers preoccupied with a burned out light bulb in the landing gear annunciator; and lastly, a United DC-8 crew running out of fuel on the approach into Portland, preoccupied with a mechanical problem. The “charm schools” were designed to make us aware as crew members to be more assertive in participating in the flight decisions in order to avoid any and all errors. Nice start, but it fell short of the mark, since none of us has ever flown error free flights. Oregon Pilots Association Continental was the first to add an “error management” segment to the syllabus, challenging every crew member to identify the potential “red flag” items on this date, with this crew, this weather, this aircraft, this route, etc. and devise a strategy prior to departure and enroute to deal with the threats, and a strategy to manage errors to prevent them from snowballing into an accident. During training, I asked some of the 135 pilots to discuss the most significant error they had made in an aircraft, and in most cases, what was told should have resulted in the loss of the aircraft and occupants. We then discussed ways to have identified the threat that lead to the error, and strategies that could have been effected to avoid or manage the threat and the error. In almost every case, there were precursors that should have been a wake up call that all was not well. So, how do we teach this as a crew of one? Same way! . . . We attempt to identify the threats as a crew of one, and develop strategies to deal with them. Bad weather? Perhaps more fuel, second alternate, change of route, or perhaps cancel! Squirrely winds? Perhaps longer runway, less flap, more speed? Flight into darkness? Perhaps a spare flashlight, clean windshield. Instrument approach? Perhaps a thorough briefing to oneself during the low workload phase of flight to avoid becoming overloaded (and more prone to errors) during the busier phases. There are a lot of ways we can employ these techniques and fly as a single pilot, yet manage our flights with a “crew” mentality. D 9 September/October 2013 C The Rebuilding of Big Creek Lodge Submitted by Bill Ables, Backcountry Chair On June 15th, the Idaho Aviation Foundation served 85 breakfasts at the site of the new Big Creek Lodge. Folks flew in from Washington, Montana, Oregon, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, Ohio and Idaho to help support this project. Now that’s fantastic support by you pilots! The folks who attended the Super Cub fly-in at Johnson Creek donated $1000 to the IAF for the rebuilding project. In addition the IAF received another $4500 in donations at the Super Cub Fly-in which included on-line donations during that weekend. The Backcountry Pilots organization donated over $4300 to the IAF during their fly-in two weeks later in addition to some $1500 raised from their raffle. The IAF has raised over $100,000 in the last 6 months, thanks to many of you! We have $450,000 of the $800,000 goal. The goal includes $100,000 contingency plus Big Creek Runway looking north Photo of the signing of the new Big Creek 30-year lease with the IAF and the USFS. Anthony Botello (seated) and Clem Pope from the Payette National Forest/Krassel District came to Big Creek in June to sign the agreement with IAF President, Jim Davies (seated) and IAF Vice President, Colleen Back. $100,000 ‘nest egg’ for ongoing operations, meaning the building itself is budgeted at $600,000. The IAF is right on track with where they want to be - and continue to ask each of us to think of others who might be good candidates to get involved (volunteer or donor). http://www. rebuildbigcreek.com/index.php/donate For you Facebook followers, here is a link so you can follow this project. You don’t have to join Facebook to look at our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/BigCreekLodgeIdaho. IAF intern, Scott Blades, keeps the material fresh with multiple updates every week. It includes an article the McCall Star-News ran about Big Creek in early July. D Fuel 100LL/Jet A at KHIO Unicom 122.85 Offering Quality General Aviation Products and Services Since 1980 Premier New & Used Aircraft Dealer in the Northwest Representing Bell, Cessna & Robinson FAA-Certified Repair Station & Service Center for Bell, Cessna, Caravan and Robinson Offering Complete Avionics & Maintenance Services Custom Panels, Laser Wire Marking & Bell Component Overhaul SPECIAL CUSTOMER OFFER BOOK YOUR ANNUAL INSPECTION OR AVIONICS INSTALLATION AND GET A FREE SPOT MESSENGER G500 & G600 with SVT (800) 345-0949 Oregon Pilots Association Reference this ad when scheduling your service. Offer good while quantities last. Learn more about the SPOT Satellite GPS Messenger at www.shopaviation.com. hillsboroaviation.com 10 GTN 750 shopaviation.com September/October 2013 [ ‘Gimli Glider’ - PIlot Recalls 100 ton Boeing 767 turned “glider” 30Years Ago Written by Jonathan Welsh, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL “SPEAKEASY” - 1983 Residents in the small town of Gimli, Manitoba, are celebrating today to mark 30 years since a BoeingBA -1.03% 767 airliner made an emergency landing there after running out of fuel. While not widely known in the U.S, the story of the “Gimli Glider” and its captain, Robert Pearson, is part of Canadian lore. On July 23, 1983, Pearson and his co-pilot Maurice Quintal tapped their most elemental piloting skills to guide the nearly 100-ton airliner on a powerless descent from more than 26,000 feet to a decommissioned Royal Canadian Air Force base. Before heading to Gimli for a week of special events, Pearson, now 78 years old and long retired from the airlines, spoke with Speakeasy about his flight. First, he said, modestly, that any good pilot could have made that landing. During a typical airliner descent and landing, the power settings are so low that the plane is essentially gliding anyway. “To some degree, every airline pilot is a glider pilot,” he said. But Pearson’s flight 30 years ago was anything but typical. And in the wake of the Asiana Airlines Flt. 214 crash in San Francisco–an incident in which details of what exactly happened are still coming out–Pearson’s story stands out as a textbook example of the importance of what pilots call “hand flying” instead of relying on automated controls. Pearson, who also flew 747s for Asiana in the 1990s after leaving Air Canada, recalled what seemed like a cultural divide across the air-transport industry between pilots who preferred to fly planes manually and those who relied on autopilots to do much of the flying, including the landing approach. Pearson’s jet was on its way from Ottawa to Edmonton when both engines quit. The ground crew, having teething pains with conversion to the metric system, had loaded it with fuel measured in pounds instead of kilograms. So it ran out roughly halfway through its planned route. After deciding Quintal calculated they could not make the glide to Winnipeg, they diverted, with the help of air traffic controllers, to the old Gimli base. D The pilots found they were too high as they neared the runway, so Pearson performed a forward slip, a maneuver that causes the plane to skid sideways and lose altitude quickly without increasing speed. Pilots do this often in small planes but never in airliners but Pearson had to because the wing flaps and speed brakes normally used for slowing down didn’t work without power from the engines. “When something like that happens, you just have to call on all of your training and experience,” Pearson said. Luckily his experience included years of towing gliders in a Piper Super Cub, a two-seat light plane that is as primitive as the 767 is high-tech. “After releasing the glider I would have this long tow line hanging under the plane, and I had to be careful not to snag it on the farmer’s fence as I approached the runway. So I would stay high until I cleared the fence, and then did a steep slip to make the runway,” he said. Pearson spent much of his spare time flying small planes and honing seat-of-the-pants piloting skills that helped him glide the big jet. As the 767 landed on the abandoned Gimli runway its front landing gear collapsed and some tires blew out, but Pearson kept it on the runway by adjusting brake pressure on the left and right main landing gear, and none of the 69 passengers and crew on board was seriously injured. This is the kind of story that makes skittish airline passengers wonder if the people in the cockpit are ready for the wide range of possible emergencies that can crop up. Clearly many pilots would have crashed under the same circumstances. Indeed, many have while trying to re-enact Pearson’s feat on flight simulators. Still, like Chesley Sullenberger, who landed on the US AirwaysLCC +1.38% flight 1549 on the Hudson River in 2009, Pearson said he was confident he could get the crippled plane down safely. “I knew we had enough altitude,” he said. “I told Maurice not to worry.” D Destination Mendocino/Fort Bragg - Oregon Antique & Classic Aircraft Club, Oct. 1-4, Everyone welcome! Submitted by Marilyn Husser, OACAC newsletter editor, Independence, OR Day 3: Thurs: Transport to Mendocino, a beautiful Victorian village by the ocean with restaurants, gift shops, Mendocino Botanical Gardens, followed by transport to Noyo Harbor for dinner at Silver’s at the Wharf. Day 4: Friday: Depart for home or elsewhere. Non-members are welcome to join us in this biennial event. For registration/information, call Judy Watkins at 503-837-0359, 707-357-0524 or contact Don at the Travelodge at 800-525-4055 or 707-964-4787 and tell him you are with the OACAC group. Day 1: Tuesday 10/1: Fly to Little River Airport, CA. Arrive between 11AM and 2PM. Transport arranged to the Travelodge in Ft. Bragg, check in, and you are free to explore the town and beach, both within walking distance, for the rest of the day. Day 2: Wed: Skunk Train trip through the Redwoods. The group rate is $45.30 per person (OACAC group rate) and within walking distance for most but transportation can be provided. Check in time is 9:30AM; return time about 2:15PM. Oregon Pilots Association D 11 September/October 2013 j Big doin’s at Port of Tillamook Bay ] Submitted by Michele Bradley, General Manager, Port of Tillamook Bay (edited for space) 2013 PROP WASH Deadlines TILLAMOOK, Ore. - When she arrived for a ribbon-cutting ceremony on July 19 at the new Near Space Corporation flight facility, Sen. Betsy Johnson (D-Scappoose) had no idea she was about to become the new facility’s namesake. The Johnson Near Space Corporation, has been christened and anchors Port of Tillamook Bay Airport Business Park. As thanks for her role in helping to secure match funding for the nearly $7 million flight testing complex, Near Space President Tim Lachenmeier announced the facility would be named the Johnson Near Space Center. About 75 guests attended the ribbon-cutting, during which Port General Manager Michele Bradley offered an overview of progress on the many completed and ongoing projects at the industrial park, of which the Near Space facility is one. Following the storms of December 2007 which damaged the Port’s railroad system beyond repair, the Port was eligible to receive more than $44 million from FEMA for use on alternate projects. Johnson was a key advocate for securing matching state funds for the projects. ] November/December Issue . . . . October 10 January/February Issue. . . . . . December 10 Please submit articles as Word or txt files. Send separate jpg files for each photo and do not embed them in the Word file. Advertisers: Please submit your ad in the correct size as pdf or jpg format. Questions: propwash-opa@oregonpilot.org [ Oregon Pilots Association Lending Library of Aviation DVDs The OPA Board has established a Library of Aviation DVDs available for loan to OPA members. Anyone wishing to checkout a DVD, please email Neal White at nealwhite@q.com. Borrower: • ask for the DVD by its title. • include your mailing address. • include your email address so Neal can advise you of the DVD shipping date. A postpaid/self-addressed envelope will be included with the DVD for easy return. Please return all DVDs within one month. If any OPA member has DVDs they would like to donate, we are always looking for opportunities to increase the size of this DVD Library. DVD Library Local and regional government officials join the staff of Near Space Corporation for a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Sen. Betsy Johnson performs the honor. The Johnson Near Space Center, is the first commercial high altitude balloon and UAS facility in the nation. It will allow the company to better serve its clients, which include NASA, NOAA, the US Department of Defense, universities, and an array of commercial entities. Near Space balloon flight payloads range from several to thousands of pounds in weight. Test flights often climb to 120,000 feet above sea level, allowing new technology demonstrations and scientific experiments to be conducted in a space-like environment above 99 percent of the Earth’s atmosphere. Johnson said, ¨This building sets really important, permanent roots for this company in Tillamook.“ NSC has completed more than 160 balloon flights since it began operating from Tillamook in 1996. Its management team has more than 75 years of combined experience designing, building, and operating high altitude balloons. D Oregon Pilots Association 12 Instrument Flying Tips: IFR strategies, ILS approaches, Nonprecision approaches, Instrument proficiency check, Self examination of IFR proficiency and Night IFR. The Prepared Pilot: Flight review, Personal minimums, Emergencies, Night Flying, Staying ahead of the airplane. GPS Techniques: GPS approaches, GPS enroute. Flying Weather: Frontal weather, Icing, Lows, Thunderstorms, and Turbulence. IFR Risk Management: IFR weather briefing, IFR crew of one, Datalink weather and Understanding ATC. Practical Airmanship: Preflight tips, Departing, Climb & Cruise, Descent & Landing. Flying Conditions and Terrain: Mountain flying, Snow & ice covered airports, and IFR in the Eastern mountains. Advanced equipment: High performance single engine, Multi-engine, Autopilots, Turbochargers and Flight level flying. Flying Glass Cockpits: Flying the Garmin G1000, Flying the Avidyne, and FlightMax Entegra. Flight Review: General instruction for the private pilot flight review. FAA Runway Safety: Heads up, Hold short, Read back, Face to face, Eye to eye. Samurai Airmanship: Rod Machado at FAA Safety Seminar 60 Degrees North at 500 Feet (a Canadian travel log) Attitude Flying (Vol. 1) Alaska’s Bush Pilots (an Alaska travel log) Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum Autorotation in the R22 September/October 2013 Airport Information Reporting for Oregon AIRO Program Update Rome State Airport (REO) 6000’ x 150’ gravel. Photo by Vince Nistico. Oregon State has been sponsoring airports since the mid-1900s to promote aviation and encourage private flying. Today, Oregon Department of Aviation (ODA) maintains a system of 28 airports with two operations specialists periodically travelling across the state. As current pilots operating in and out of these airports, it is important for us to observe airport conditions and report situational information to ODA. Please make it a habit to observe conditions, take notes and pictures any time you fly into one of the following airports. Copies of the inspection checklist are available at http://www.oregon.gov/Aviation/AIRO.shtml. Inform the AIRO coordinator of anything requiring maintenance, jeopardizing security, or affecting safety in any way. Debra Plymate can be reached at 503-428-7210, or email: dplymate@gmail.com. Unicom:122.70 - PCL:122.70 24hr self-serve card lock 100 LL JET A Prices subject to change Q QPilots Lounge Tie Downs Q Lodging & Food nearby 541-895-2913 ph 541-895-8904 fax Creswell, Oregon AIRPORT NAME OF VOLUNTEER Alkali Lake State Aurora State Bandon State Cape Blanco State Cascade Locks State Chiloquin State Condon State Cottage Grove State Crescent Lake Independence State Joseph State Lebanon State McDermitt State McKenzie Bridge State Mulino Airport Nehalem Bay State Oakridge State Owyhee Reservoir State Pacific City State Pinehurst State Prospect State Rome State Santiam Junction State Siletz Bay State Toketee State Toledo State Wakonda Beach State Wasco State VACANT Harper Poling Wayne Crook, Ray Kimball, Pat Mulligan George Welch, Pat Mulligan Dale Fillmore, Pat Mulligan, Mary Rosenblum, Jim Wisener Pegeen Fitzpatrick Pat Mulligan Cliff Cox Paul Ehrhardt, Robin Ehrhardt Debra Plymate, Ron Sterba VACANT VACANT VACANT Paul Ehrhardt, Robin Ehrhardt, Cliff Cox Dianne Johnson Robert Hall Paul Ehrhardt, Robin Ehrhardt, Dale Fillmore, Pat Mulligan VACANT Russell Elliott, Robert Hall VACANT Walt Ridge VACANT Paul Ehrhardt, Robin Ehrhardt, Pat Mulligan Pat Mulligan Jeff Bohler Pat Mulligan Martha Jacob, Richard Jacob Pat Mulligan AIRO - Airport Information Reporting Oregon - Debra Plymate is the AIRO Volunteer Coordinator. She is a pilot who flies regularly and has a background in flight data and aeronautical information as a retired FAA Air Traffic Control Specialist. Oregon Pilots Association Creswell Airport Hobby Field - 77S 13 h PROP WASH is the official publication of the Oregon Pilots Association. PROP WASH is published every other month and nearly 650 printed copies are mailed or emailed to all OPA members, advertisers, and FBOs around the state. There is no charge for this service. If you are out of town, you can view PROP WASH in full color on line from the OPA website or print your own copy. If you do not want to receive PROP WASH by mail, please contact Tricia at memberservices-opa@oregonpilot.org. Publication dates are January, March, May, July, September, and November. Deadline for article submission is the 10th of the month prior to publication month. Submissions should be brief and are subject to editing for content and space. Oregon Pilots Association 877-OPA-PILOT Oregon Department of Aviation 503-378-4880 h September/October 2013 j Polk County Ch. Flour Bombs - June 20 So much fun, a repeat next year probable. By Dave Martin, Secretary, PCOPA. Edited for space. j Check out OPA Calendar of Events Submitted by President Elect, Mary Rosenblum Stay motivated, keep your skills honed, sharp and current, fly someplace fun and maybe take the family and hang out with other pilots. Flying regularly and maintaining a high level of proficiency is an important part of safety. About every two weeks, I’ll send you an email with a list of everything going on soon, all over the state. If you know of an event, drop me an email. (Email: presidentelect-opa@ oregonpilot.org) I watch the aviation calendars and ask around, but miss things. If you don’t want these reminders, tell me and I’ll take you off my list. You’ll still get the regular OPA emails but not the updates on fun things to do. Several months ago, Vice President Neil White proposed a flour-bombing contest as a chapter program, and June 20 was the night! ODA sanctioned rules requires two people: a pilot and bombardier aboard each airplane, level runs not lower than 200 feet AGL, and a maximum of two planes in the bombing pattern at the same time. Mark Matthews made up 24 bombs. The 4 x 6-foot target was in place. Bomber pilots took off. Dave provided radio calls after each drop so pilots could correct their errors on the second and third runs…but it didn’t always happen. Bombing is harder than it looks. Frank and Marcia Noell were score keepers. Check out the OPA Calendar for all the up-to-date activities going on. www.oregonpilot.org/calendar.html The winners: 3rd place: Mark Matthews with young bombardier David - 54 feet. 2nd place: Vince Nistico with Rick as bombardier - 40 feet. And the big winner, 1st place: Neil White with his daughter Melanie 30 feet. Hmmm. Neil organized the event, bought the small, graduated-size trophies, and took home the largest of them! FOR SALE - $149,000 - 5 ac. homesite in The event was popular with the fliers and with the OPA chapter peanut gallery viewing from across the runway. As someone noted before the contest, official observers (Marcia and Dave this time) would have been safest standing on the target. D serene timbered setting 2.5 mi. N of New Meadows Airport (1U4); 12 scenic miles west of McCall. Underground power & phone; Paved roads - all year access; Septic approved; Driveway & building site roughed-in; 1/2 mi. to Little Salmon River; 2 mi. to Zims Hot Springs; 20 mins. to Brundage Ski Area Call or email Richard & Debbie Benson for details/ slide show of property & area. 3893072@gmail.com; 541-389-4523 “Baggage Compartment” This non-commercial advertising service of Oregon Pilots Association, is for current members only. If you wish to place an ad in Prop Wash, it will run for one issue only unless the editor is otherwise advised prior to the next newsletter deadline. Send ad copy as you want it to appear in the newsletter. If at all possible, include a photograph Send to: propwash-opa@oregonpilot.org. • 12V electric WINCH with mount and battery for towing aircraft back into hangar $100.00 • Universal aircraft TOW BAR will attach to any ball hitch (garden tractor, etc.) $50.00 Phone Gary Brown: 503-269-3907 namics Flyin AerodyMulino Airport (4S9)g Club Hangar #1 for Sale - Newport (ONP) Call Dave Wellman for details. 541-984-1442 Two beautiful & well maintained aircraft (1965 Cessna 172-F & 1975 Piper Archer) Low Rates / Affordable Flying JOIN NOW: Private Pilots and New Members Wanted Contact: Larry Stevens pilotstevens@gmail.com H-503-632-1944; C-503-816-9856 New Paint, great interior, electric gear, IFR Certified with GPS 3371 TT, 597 SMOH IO-360 200HP, 159 SNProp; 3/11/13 Annual. $58,900 or 1/2 share $30,000 financing available; 1/3 share possible. Hangared @ Troutdale, OR. Call Joe Smith 503-284-5552 joe@smithcompound.com FOR SALE FOR SALE - 1968 Mooney M20F Executive Oregon Pilots Association 14 September/October 2013 i That was quite a bump! h Heard on South African Kulula Airline flight 255: PROP WASH is the official publication of the Oregon Pilots Association. PROP WASH is published every other month and nearly 650 printed copies are mailed or emailed to all OPA members, advertisers, and FBOs around the state. Just after a very hard landing in Cape Town, the flight attendant came on the intercom and said: “That was quite a bump and I know what y’all are thinking. There is no charge for this service. I’m here to tell you it wasn’t the airline’s fault; it wasn’t the pilot’s fault; it wasn’t the flight attendant’s fault! If you are out of town, you can view PROP WASH in full color on line from the OPA website or print your own copy. If you do not want to receive PROP WASH by mail, please contact Tricia at memberservices-opa@oregonpilot.org. It was the asphalt! D Publication dates are January, March, May, July, September, and November. Deadline for article submission is the 10th of the month prior to publication month. Submissions should be brief and are subject to editing for content and space. Where to find a list of h h Ethanol-free Gas Stations? Oregon Pilots Association 877-OPA-PILOT Oregon Department of Aviation 503-378-4880 Go to the ODA website at: www.oregon.gov/aviation/E10.shtml Next, click on the 3rd button: Pure-gas.org where you will find a list of suppliers in Oregon and every other state. ] 2013 STATE OFFICERS ] h ] 2013 CHAPTER PRESIDENTS ] President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dennis Smith Albany. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dan Miltenberger 541-905-5281 . . . . . . president-opa@oregonpilot.org 541-926-9477. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . damilt@comcast.net President Elect. . . . . . . . . . . . . Mary Rosenblum Baker. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mel Cross 503-761-6702. . . presidentelect-opa@oregonpilot.org 541-523-4539. . . . . . . . . . . melcross9951@gmail.com Past President. . . . . . . . . . . Brendan Fitzpatrick Bandon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Beaverton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Central Coast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Central Oregon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gary Miller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .pastpresident-opa@oregonpilot.org Secretary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marcia Noell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . secretary-opa@oregonpilot.org Treasurer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .treasurer-opa@oregonpilot.org 541-383-2435. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . gem@rellim.com VP Legislative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 541-479-6059. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . truroy@clearwire.net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .legislative-opa@oregonpilot.org Public Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Paul Ehrhardt 541-554-6143 . . . . . . . . . . robinehrhardt@yahoo.com Regional Directors: Southern Oregon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Central/Eastern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Portland Metro. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joe Smith 503-986-1447. . . . . . . . . . . joe@smithcompound.com South Oregon Coast. . . Charlotte Echelberger 541-247-0283. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . charechel@charter.net Willamette Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Neal White 503-385-6649 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . opa.valley@q.com Prop Wash Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . Gail (GPS) Boyle 503-838-4734. . . . . . propwash-opa@oregonpilot.org Membership Services . . . . . . . . . . . Tricia Cook 877-672-7456. . . memberservices-opa@oregonpilot.org Webmaster. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kaaren McGlynn 541-726-4088. . . . . . . . kaaren@warmglassartist.com Oregon Pilots Association Grants Pass. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Roy Hogg Jackson County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Klamath Falls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steve Emley 541-892-7531. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . saemley@gmail.com Lane County. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Lebanon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill Case 503-260-2473. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . billcase01@msn.com Lincoln County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant Mulino. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Larry Stevens 503-816-9856. . . . . . . . . . . . . pilotstevens@gmail.com Polk County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marcia Noell 503-606-0870. . . . . . mnoell@channel-islands-sw.com Tillamook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill Goodman 503-812-2067. . . . . . . . . . hotshoe@embarqmail.com Troutdale. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jim Wisener. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jdwisener2000@hotmail.com Western Columbia. . . . . . . . . . . . . Rollin Mason 503-440-1007. . . . . . . . . . . . . . rollinmason@msn.com Yamhill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vacant 15 Oregon O P A Pilots’ Association O PA Thanks our Asso c iate Memb ers Abe’s Tie Down Systems www.abesaviation.com 541-263-1327 Brim Aviation www.brimaviation.com 541-488-1095 Butler Aircraft Company Nan Garnick 541-548-8166 LebanAir Aviation Larry@lebanair.com 541-258-5029 Oregon Aero, Inc. www.oregonaero.com 800-888-6910 Oregon Rangers Association www.oregonrangers.org 541-998-3788 Western Aircraft Propeller Serv. www.westernaircraftpropeller.com 503-667-8865 Willamette Aviation Services www.willametteair.com 503-678-2252 September/October 2013 Oregon Pilots Association 23115 Airport Road NE #13 Aurora, OR 97002 Aviation Businesses - Share Your News Prop Wash accepts press releases from businesses connected to aviation with news of interest to pilots in Oregon. Press releases should be in article format without formatting. Include graphics as separate PDF or JPG files. The editor and/or board of OPA reserve the right to edit for content, clarity and space availability. Send to propwash-opa@oregonpilot.org Objectives and Mission of the Oregon Pilots Association Oregon O P A Pilots’ Association Oregon Pilots Association Promote Flying Safety Promote Flying to the Non-Flying Public Monitor Regulatory & Legislative Activities Provide a Social Forum for Pilots and their Families 16 September/October 2013
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