January 2013
Transcription
January 2013
January 2013 Mike Morgan and His Helicycle Southwest Regional Chapters of the Popular Rotorcraft Association This Months Contributors: Chapter 6 Mid-South Rotorcraft Club Contact: Thom Francis 210 S 8th Street Gurdon, AR 71743 Email: thomefran@netscape.net Phone: 870-403-2888 Dean Dolph Mike Morgan Stacy and Barbara Maness Mike Stone Gary Hall Jim Edwards Chapter 20 Pelican State Rotor Club Contact: Bill Wieger 112 Gayven Dr. Pineville, LA 71360 Phone: 318-640-5656 Email: bwieger@suddenlink.net Website www.pra20.com Chapter 62 Lone Star Rotorcraft Club Contact: Steve Weir 3714 Tri City Beach Rd Baytown, TX 77520 Phone: 832-457-1785 Email: zsteve54@earthlink.net Website: www.gyrosaway.com Chapter 65 Central Texas Rotorcraft Club Contact: Paul Erb 9901 Brodie Ln. 160-283 Austin, TX 78748 Email: perbgyro@sbcglobal.net Phone: 512-680-1835 Website: www.centexpra.org Chapter 78 Texas Rotorcraft Association Contact: Bob Stark PO Box 428 Olney, TX 76374 Phone: 940-564-2938 Email: rgstark@brazosnet.com Website: www.txrotorcraft.org Oklahoma Contact: Robbie Hyde Duncan, OK Email: Robbie.hyde@yahoo.com Phone: 580-475-5261 Southwest Rotorcraft Southwest Regional Newsletter Club news and upcoming events Member profiles Member’s machines Chapter meeting minutes Projects, builds and modification Photos Family news Classifieds Newsletter Past Issues If you have missed an issue of our newsletter just go to www.gyrosaway.com to download past issues. Also available at www.pra.org. To subscribe to Southwest Rotorcraft just click the button below. Subscribing to Southwest Rotorcraft also automatically subscribes you to the Western Rotorcraft. At the beginning of each month you will be sent a link to Southwest Rotorcraft and Western Rotorcraft where you can read them online or download them to your computer. Click Here to Subscribe Now Page 2 January 2013 Send Us Your News Upcoming Events Project Reports Send us pictures of your project to include in future editions of the newsletter. We will post anything you have on your build, modifications, training, etc. Just send an email to tell us what you are doing and include some pictures if you have any. Progress reports are probably the most interesting things to read about and see. January 12th: Chapter 65 Meeting January 19th: Chapter 62 Meeting at Anahuac January 26th: Chapter 78 Meeting at Olney Your Pride and Joy February 9th: Chapter 65 Meeting Send us pictures of your machine to include as a feature in future editions. If you include some information on the details of your machine or a short bio of yourself we’ll also include this with your pictures. Brag about your aircraft!! February 16th: Chapter 62 Meting at Anahuac February 23rd: Chapter 78 Meeting at Olney Events and Meetings We strongly encourage all chapter members to become members of the PRA. By joining you will be supporting the organization that promotes our sport by representing us to the FAA and assist them on making gyro flying available for all of us. The new PRA website will have several members only benefits including: PRA’s electronic Rotorcraft magazines along with past issues chocked full of great information and historical data, downloadable plans, and a PRA supported forum. Please join today, you won’t be disappointed. Next time you’re at a fly-in or just out flying with a buddy, take some pictures and let us know about it. Have your club secretary send us your club news and tell us about your meetings. Send us names of new members so we can welcome them to our sport. We are interested in anything your club is doing. Family News and Announcements Our newsletter isn’t just all about the machines, it’s about the people of our region also. Any family news or announcements you want to share please feel free to send us so we can let everyone know. www.pra.org Southwest Rotorcraft www.rotaryforum.com Page 3 January 2013 From The Editor Great Reading Material Well, 2012 is now officially over and with four fatal gyro accidents , it wasn’t a great year for our sport. Let’s all pull together to make 2013 a safer year . Gyros are already the redheaded step child of aviation so we need to work very diligently in preventing accidents and make our sport as safe as we can. This is a book that I have and read, it is very good and I highly recommend it. Marion talks about how she got involved in gyros, many of her experiences, and some of her stories about training. Included in the back of the book are some write-ups about Marion from several of our highly regarded legends. It is certainly a must read. Another note from 2012 is that we saw great growth in the Southwest Rotorcraft and have been blessed with contributors that submit news about their chapter and their area very regularly. I want thank those of you who have stepped up to make our newsletter one of the best publications in the gyro community. Anther one that I really enjoyed was Short Hops by Shirley Jennings. This is a great book for beginners as it explains how gyros work and what to expect during your training. Ordering information for this book is on page 20. The last couple months have been a little sparse because of the holidays and the weather that kept most of us away from the hangar more than what we would like, hopefully things will pick up again in the next couple months. I do want to try and get the newsletter out before the second Saturday of each month so Chapter 65 can have their news out to their members before the monthly meeting. Please, if you want to send something in, try to get it to me between the last week of the month and the first week of the next month. Until then, fly safely. Mike Grosshans, Southwest Rotorcraft Editor Born Free - My Life In Gyrocopters ORDERING INFORMATION Born Free ................. $ 19.95 Sales Tax @ 8.50 % .. $ 1.69 (California residents only) Shipping .................... $ 4.00 in USA To Order By Mail Send check or money order payable to: Marion Springer 720 Mirage Lake Rd. Adelanto, CA 92301 Pay Online Through PayPal Email: ddakota@earthlink.net On the Cover We lost another brother in December, Doug Goodman (AKA: Dogman) from Arizona. No information on what caused the crash . We all send our prayers to the family and friends. Southwest Rotorcraft Page 4 Chapter 20 member Mike Morgan and his newly acquired Helicycle January 2013 Mid-South Rotorcraft Club If you happen to be in Arkansas on a weekend it would be well worth your while to visit the guys in Morilton. Located just north/west of Little Rock. Here you see Gary Hall showing off his newest creation and the guys (Richard, John, and Gary) hovering around a Dominator. If you get there soon enough you may be able to help Gary Lewis by letting him know what the arrow is for on the fuel filter. Above: Gary Hall’s highly modified Bensen. Right: John Ferguson and Gary readying the propeller. Below: the Ma nose is ready for the prop, Gary tightening the bolts after the prop is installed. Southwest Rotorcraft Page 5 January 2013 Mike Morgan and His Recent New Toy Mike tells us: the Helicycle was built in 2003 and has 1178 hours. Most of that time was flown between 2009 -2011 by the second owner, David Lyons of Lake Charles, LA. He purchased it for the sole purpose of building turbine helicopter time so he could go to work flying helicopters offshore. He was successful and is currently flying a Bell 206. I purchased it from David in October 2012 and began training in a R22. On December 13th I jumped in and said "now or never"......made three flights and had a blast. As of this writing, December 18th, I have about 2 hours of flight time so I am still trying to get comfortable with the machine. The turbine puts out approximately 160 hp but is derated to around 90-100 hp so it has tons of power since it weighs only 510 lbs. empty. Fuel burn is around 11 gph of Jet A or kerosene and it will cruise at 90-95 mph easily. It burns twice the fuel of the gyros but I promise......it is more than twice the fun!!!!! Congratulations Mike, hope to see you flying at a fly-in soon. Chapter Patches If you would like to get a chapter patch for your flight suit, favorite shirt, ball cap, or just whatever you want to stick it on, contact: Chapter 20; Rudy Graffeo at RLGraffeo@eatel.net Chapter 62; Danny Whitten at dannywhitten@embarqmail.com CHAPTER SHIRTS Chapter 62 has two styles of T-shirts available, if you are interested please contact Danny Whitten. He usually has these available for purchase at the meetings. They are $15 each Southwest Rotorcraft Page 6 January 2013 Christmas at the Hangar In December, Chapter 62 does not hold a regular meeting but instead invites the club members and one of their guests to attend a Christmas gathering. This year it was held at the Anahuac hangar. We had some flying going on, Mark got his Bensen out for some short, low flights over the grass field, Desmon brought Jarrod Perry over from Hooks and did some training, Steve got in some air time, Chuck flew over in his trike and did some flying around the airport, and Coda brought over his bi-plane. We met first at the hangar then everyone ventured over to Tony’s BBQ for lunch, the club flipped the lunch tab. Afterwards most of us returned and did some work on the hangar. Coda offered, and gave, rides in his bi-plane to anyone that was interested. This was a very fun ride and Coda is an excellent pilot (he should be, he’s a professional pilot). Southwest Rotorcraft Page 7 January 2013 Hangar Flying 13 - Good judgment comes from experience. Experience usually comes from bad judgment. Flying Rules 1 - Every takeoff is optional. Every landing is mandatory. 2 - Flying isn't inherently dangerous. It's crashing that's dangerous. 14 - It's always a good idea to keep the pointy end going forward as much as possible 15 - Gravity is not just a good idea. It's the law. And it's not subject to appeal. 3 - If you push the stick forward, the houses get bigger. If you pull the stick back, they get smaller. If you keep pulling the stick all the way back, they get bigger again, quickly, very quickly. 16 - Keep looking around. There's always something you've missed. 17 - The three most useless things to a pilot are the altitude above you, runway behind you, and a tenth of a second ago. 4 - It's always better to be down here wishing you were up there than up there wishing you were down here. 5 - The only time you have too much fuel is when you're on fire. 18 - Never let an aircraft take you somewhere your brain didn't get to five minutes earlier. 6 - The propeller is just a big fan in front of the plane to keep the pilot cool. If it stops, you will see the pilot start sweating. 19 - Stay out of clouds. The silver lining everybody keeps talking about might be another airplane going in the opposite direction. And mountains hide in clouds. 7 - When in doubt, hold on to your altitude. No one has ever collided with the sky. 20 - Always try to keep the number of landings you make equal to the number of take offs you've made. 8 - A "good" landing is one from which you can walk away. A "great" landing is one after which the airplane can still be used. 9 - Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make all of them yourself. 22 - You start with a bag full of luck and an empty bag of experience. The trick is to fill the bag of experience before you empty the bag of luck. 10 - You know you've landed with the wheels up if it takes full power to taxi to the ramp. 23 - If all you can see out of the window is ground that's going round and round and all you can hear is commotion coming from the passenger compartment, things are not at all as they should be. 11 - The probability of survival is inversely proportional to the angle of arrival. 12 - In the ongoing battle between objects made of aluminum going hundreds of miles per hour and the ground going zero miles per hour, the ground always wins. Southwest Rotorcraft 21 - There are three simple rules for making a smooth landing. Unfortunately no one knows what they are. 24 - When in doubt, take AMTRAK. They may crash more, but they don't have to fall out of the sky to do it. Page 8 January 2013 DREAM IT - BUILD IT - FLY IT The Building of N989MM Mike Stone’s MTO Sport Build December 4 - 5 Loaded up all parts at Stevensville, Maryland for what turned out to be a non-stop return trip; a little over 1500 miles! LLL. Elizabeth, the wife, did very well as co-pilot. December 14 Installed throttle/brake assembly to the frame December 16 Drilling out holes for the connection of the landing gear to the frame December 10 Did a complete inventory of parts, worked off same list that Terri signed off…all accounted for…a good thing! December 16 Attached Landing gear December 14 Installed the nose wheel spat, assembled nose wheel parts…not sure on what direction the fork slopes….will verify later. Update: Fork slope made obvious once linkage was added. Southwest Rotorcraft Page 9 January 2013 Chuck Beaty and Ernie Boyette Interview August 2012. Ten Good Men Great interview with Chuck Beaty, pioneer of the modern gyroplane, it’s construction, and its stability, and Ernie, manufacturer of the Dominator Gyroplane and Dragon Wings rotor blades on YouTube, very much worth your time to watch. The Lone Star Rotorcraft Club now has a group on Facebook. Please click on the logo to join us. Here’s the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=v5sPAsSzzTg&feature=youtu.be For Sale Sub EJ2.2 RAF Conversion, 130 hp, never ran - $3,700 Instrument Pod, Aurora Type $270 Pitot Tube, removable - $15 Kenny J Stab, fitted for RAF - $500 Not Pictured AAI Stab. Augmentation Kit For RAF, includes the anti-servo tab installed, Completed except for finishing the horz. Stab - $3500 RAF Redrive, RAF Prerotator Cluster, and RAF Motor Mount, Gold Anodized All for EJ2.2 engine $1800 Contact Michael Stone Michael.stone@mustangeng.com 713-350-7666 (w) Complete original Bensen gas motor pre-rotator "kit", asking $750. Includes drive pulley and belt. Jim Edwards @ jimedwards200@gmail.com Southwest Rotorcraft Page 10 January 2013 New Bensen/Brock Rotor Blades B&B Rotor Blade Price List July 9, 2012 Blades, either Bensen or Brock attach points $1,295.00 Hub Bars: 25”, 36”, or 48” Blades and Hub Bar Sets:; 21’, 23’, or 25’ Contact Roger Farnes at rotorsnradials@msn.com or (909) 519-4427 For Sale For Sale - Twelve volt electric winch. 2000 LB capacity Model 68146 Badland Winch. never used, still in the box. $50.00 paid $68.00 Danny Whitten at: DannyWhitten@embarqmail.com Sport Rotor blades; 8" cord X 25' long with approx 20 hours flying time, blades come with the 36" Hub Bar (Pitch Adjustable Hub Bar System and Track Adjustable, Self-Alignment, Coning and Dampening System). They are in great condition. They sell for $4495.00 new plus crating/shipping, I am firm at $3000. I will be attending the fly-in in Bastrop October 12-14 and I can bring them with me if needed. Kirk 225-279-1326 Gyros For Sale GyroBee Bensen, Waco Texas Area Bensen/KB2 gyro for sale or trade or combo cash and trade. Has Wunderlich pre-rotator, brakes on mains, instrument pod with usual basic instruments, 90 HP Mac, Troyer 50x30, 2x11'rotorblades w/3' hub bar (built by Neil Carnes). Will trade for a good used small car like a Mini Cooper, Tracker, Samauri, or fully rigged Goldwing or Goldwing trike. Cash of 6,700. Going with this gyro is a hand held portable Navcom, a hand held flight calc computer, a spare holly single carb, some little odds and ends. A pretty good entry package. Contact Larry Murphy at: loop_m@hotmail.com Southwest Rotorcraft Beautiful Amateur Built Experiential LSA Gyrobee with Starbee tail and rudder for sale. New Rotax 503 broken in and taxied. Power fin prop, 23' Dragonwing blades and head, CHT, EGT, tach, Radio, pre-rotator, rotor tach, auxiliary electric fuel pump, toe disc brakes, new aircraft tires, very nice instrument pod. Ceramic coated exhaust. Taxied, hang test done with 170 lb pilot. Trailer and rotor box $12,995 new kit cost $14,975 and you still have to build it. Have construction photos. Registered N number 949TL to Frank W. Dicorte (owner) DOES NOT have an Air Worthy Certificate. Contact: Craig McPherson Gyro CFI 468 FM 3049, Blum TX 76627 email craigmcph@hotmail.com Cellular (817) 517-3283 Or Frank Dicorte Cellular (254) 715-3056 Page 11 January 2013 Monarch Butterfly RAF 2000 Rotax 582, Metro Launch 300 RPM pre-rotator, Nose Cone & Windscreen, G-Force landing Gear, Wheel Pants (not in Photo). 35 hours TT and flown regularly. $19,750 OBO Buying a helicopter. Subaru 2.2 Carbureted, 30Ft RAF Rotors, Built in 2006, Cabin Heat, Pitch and Roll Trim, Belt Driven Pre-Rotator, Carb Heat, Rotor Tach, Engine Tach, Altimeter to 20,000 Feet, Air Speed Indicator. Reduced to $29,500. Contact Chuck Burgoon at 713775-5996 or cburgoon@msn.com Contact: Thom Francis, email thomefran@netscape.net, phone 870-403-2888. Located in Gurdon Arkansas EXCEPTIONAL RAF2000 GTX-SE 27’ Dragon Wings, 1982 1.8 Turbo Bratt engine, Tennessee prop, Aggressor air frame. Also have a 2.2 Legacy engine included. $8,000 Gyro is located at the PRA headquarters in Mentone. Contact John at johngillmore1959@yahoo.com or 317-840-2697 Dominator Dominator for sale. Built in 1999, I have owned since 2004, 120 hours TT on airframe and engine, 618 Rotax, blades 2 years old, never been damaged, $12,999. with Phase II Subaru 2.2L FOR SALE. 450 hours TT, Flies great, current annual. Features include Keith Dorton 500 cfm racing carb, tuned exhaust headers, full instrument panel, dual fuel pumps, Sigtronics dash-mounted intercom. REDUCED PRICE includes spare main drive belt, spare fuel pumps, new tires / tubes, GPS (Garmin 195) and mount, Icom handheld radio (A5), spare mast bushings and extra hardware. Hangared in Waycross, GA. Asking $24.5K OBO. Contact Jerry at 912-449-1140 or jrtiahrt@atc.cc Southwest Rotorcraft Aggressor, Plans Built Contact Mike Morgan at mwmorgan55@yahoo.com Page 12 January 2013 Parts and Supplies Gyro Books For Sale DAR Services, Prerotators, and Seat Tanks www.calumetair.com aircraftspruce.com Great books, DVDs, and CDs at www.gyrobooks.com wicksaircraft.com TRAINING OKLAHOMA TEXAS Paul Patterson, Edmund Oklahoma Paul trains in a modified RAF at the Guthrie/ Edmond Geoport (KGOK). His RAF includes both a stabilator and a horizontal stabilizer. 405-826-8443 PaulPatterson1@cox.net Henry Foster Trains at the Olney Airport in a Modified RAF, a SparrowHawk, and an Air Command hsf66@yahoo.com 214– 692-0727 ARKANSAS LOUISIANA James Chowns Bastrop, LA James trains in a tow glider at the Morehouse Memorial Airport (KBQP) in Bastrop. This is a great training aid for anyone just entering training in gyros. This was the way training was done before the two place trainers. GEORGIA gyrochowns@yahoo.com Southwest Rotorcraft Page 13 January 2013
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