spring 2015 - Redstar Pilots Association
Transcription
spring 2015 - Redstar Pilots Association
RED Alert THE MAGAZINE OF THE REDSTAR PILOTS ASSOCIATION SPRING 2015 2 Red Alert Spring 2015 Red ALERT Features 6 Capitalist Chang..................................................................................... 6 Or, How We Sell Groceries Nanchang Style Going to the analyst............................................................................. 12 Using Oil Analysis to Predict Engine Health Yak/CJ General Condition Inspection............................................... 14 Part 1: Preparation 12 Buddha's Calling Card......................................................................... 18 Mark of Disobedience Red Stars Honor Red Tails..................................................................20 Tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen Venting Installations On 14-Series Engines......................................26 Oil Plumbing Mod Yolo Jet Blast..........................................................................................30 14 Jet Formation Training Fly-By Timing........................................................................................ 32 Trigonometry to the Rescue How Well Do You Know Your Airplane............................................36 What the Heck Do I Do Now? Flying While Fatigued.........................................................................38 It's Not Just An Airline Issue 20 Jet Museum Buys A CJ-6 From The US Post Office........................ 40 Transition Trainer Formation Pilots: "We Few, We Happy Few...". . .............................. 44 Formation Training At Spruce Creek, Florida Columns 26 President’s Message. . ..............................................................................4 Elections, NWOC, and Spring Tune Up Wingman................................................................................................. 11 The "Right Stuff" to Fly Formation Website Update.. ................................................................................... 13 Latest and Greatest Aviation Medicine. . ...............................................................................22 30 Sleep Well—The FAA Wants To Help You John "Chevy" Ford's CJ-6A...................................................................24 Chevy's Chang RPA Financial Statements.................................................................. 46 Annual Report To Members 32 www.flyredstar.org 3 President's Message G reetings, Comrades, from bloomin’ San Antonio! By that I mean the colors, the f lowers, the fragrance, the new growth, and the sight of leafed-out trees are quickly forcing the memories of winter travel, to and from Colorado, into the deep recesses of my memory. Spring always seems to invigorate my desire to get back into the air and it is working its magic extremely well this year. So, let’s talk about the Regional Director elections, two topics from the National Warbirds Operating Conference (NWOC), and managing a Spring tune up. Our new web site handled the voting process very well. The Region specific ballot, easy access to candidate resumes, and the embedded survey resulted in a satisfactory or better evaluation. We will be tweaking the process to make the upcoming National Director elections even better. The membership re-elected three incumbents: Joe Griffith, Northwest, Scott Andrews, Southwest, and Rob Mortara, Northeast. Three new members were elected: John Casper, North Central, Mark Davis, South Central, and Cecil Boyd, Southeast. Their contact information is on the web site and in this issue of Red Alert. Personally, and on behalf of the RPA, I thank them for stepping up to serve both the membership and the RPA. I would also like to thank the outgoing Directors, John Shuttleworth, Joe Wilkins, and Dave Jester for their outstanding service to our Association, Well Done, guys! We will present the new Regional Directors to you in the Summer issue of Red Alert. The first topic from NWOC this year is an update on the 100LL substitute fuel. As you know, there are many challenges to finding a substitute fuel. 100LL is a low volume, broad distribution product. There will be no market for a fuel requiring recertification of the entire piston engine GA f leet. Despite 20+ years of research, no drop-in substitute fuel is available. The chemistry of unleaded fuel is dramatically different than 100LL, and its impact is unknown without impartial, standardized testing. In 2011, the EAA took the lead in forming a collaboration between industry and the government because of pressure from environmental groups, pending EPA regulations, and market forces because of a single source of TEL and the absence of lead from just about everything. This collaboration resulted in the formation of PAFI, the Piston Engine Fuels Initiative, under the FAA’s leadership. It has been fully funded and scheduled for completion in 2018. Its primary objective is not to pick a single fuel, but to qualify the best fuels for use by the diverse GA f leet. Nine fuels from five vendors were submitted to PAFI in July, 2014. Four fuels from three vendors were selected to enter Phase 1 testing in September, 2014. The next milestone will be selecting the fuels to enter Phase 2 in January, 2016. The FAA has said the supply of 100LL will remain stable throughout this process. We will keep you informed. The second topic concerns the impending release of FAA Order 8130.2G (Certification and Operation of Experimental Aircraft). Things addressed in the new order include: new information for program letter requirements, the removal of over 100 limitations, and a new Advisory Circular for stadium over-f lights requiring all f light members to be a member of ICAS or WOA. It also looks like the FSDOs want control of the stadium f lights. If everything can be agreed upon, the current restrictions on stadium over f lights could end by Fall, 2015. We will also keep you informed about the progress of 8130.2G. If you have experienced a significant reduction in f lying over the Winter, there are three equally important aspects of a Spring tune up you must pay attention to—your aircraft, your body, and your skill sets. Your aircraft should receive an expanded pref light check. Start with a look on the f loor under the aircraft for any unusual puddles, droppings, or unexplained debris. Open the cowling to check all f luid levels, search for uninvited guests, search for new f luid leaks, and ensure nothing combustible has taken up residence in any intake, vent, or small dark place. Check tire and pneumatic system air pressures. Shine a bright light in every corner of the cockpits and every open access location on the aircraft. If necessary, open panels into these areas to ensure they are free of critters and debris. Your body is not as tuned up for f lying as it was when your f lying season ended last year. This is especially true with regards to G tolerance. We all know a two week layoff can noticeably affect us. A two to three month layoff can have a catastrophic GLOC (G-induced loss of consciousness) effect if we don’t systematically ramp up the G over a series of f lights. Skill set muscle memory also atrophies from reduced use over a few months time. Start with a POH, checklist, and emergency procedures review. Then, spend some time in the cockpit reviewing switch positions, normal and emergency procedures, and your ground egress and bailout procedures. When you do f ly, start with the basics of transition f lying before advancing to aerobatics and formation f lying. If possible, f ly with an IP, CP, or fellow RPA aviator. Third parties can often notice performance deficiencies that we may not notice ourselves because of task saturation. Once you develop a Spring tune up profile, don’t hesitate to periodically repeat it throughout the f lying season. Proficiency and currency are the bedrocks of a safe, competent, and professional pilot. I am excited about our 2015 f lying season and hope to share the air with you at one of our many events. As always, train hard and train often. Best wishes, Terry “Mags” Slawinski 4 Red Alert Spring 2015 RedStar Pilots Association VOLUNTEERS OFFICERS President Terry Slawinski yakski@earthlink.com Vice President Scott McMillan aviatr@aol.com Secretary David Jester djester@gjtbs.com Treasurer Gil Lipaz glipaz@yahoo.com BOARD OF DIRECTORS Southwest Scott Andrews onthegoaz@aol.com Northwest Joe Griffith joegriff@chugach.net Southeast Cecil Boyd cecilboyd@bellsouth.net Northeast Rob Mortera robwork@robinhill.com Northcentral John Casper csprjm@aol.com Southcentral Mark Davis markdavis@wbsnet.org National Mike Carter beavcarter@cox.net National Scott Glaser scott.t.glaser@defiantco.com National Rich Hess hess737@aol.com MANAGERS Public Relations John Graham cubflyer1940@yahoo.com Standardization Skip Slyfield norske.fly@gmail.com Maintenance Jill Gernetzke jill@m-14p.com Flight Physiology Chuck Crinnian, MD chiefpilot@aviationdoc.net RPA Store Byron Fox byronmfox@gmail.com IT Dean Henthorn dinoh@clutchmania.com RPA/FAST Records Mark Weidhaas dicepilot@yahoo.com Senior Sales and Advertising Kirk Heiser kehpilot@gmail.com RED ALERT Editor Mike Filucci mfilucci@gmail.com Associate Editor Alan Cockrell yakpilot@bellsouth.com Associate Editor Robert Genat robertgenat@yahoo.com Associate Editor John Warwick john.warwick1@gmail.com Sr. West Coast Correspondent Robert Genat robertgenat@yahoo.com Contributors Craig Barnett craig@schemedesigners.com Greg Davis cactusinburner@yahoo.com Chris Dilley s3onewire@yahoo.com Robert Genat robertgenat@yahoo.com Thomas B. Haines thomas.haines@aopa.org Michael Mainiero mamainiero@gmail.com RED Bob Minkin bob@minkindesign.com Advertisers Ladd Gardner Aviation Insurance................. 2 Compressed Gas Systems.............................. 16 Pacific Coast Avionics.................................... 17 Flying Eyes....................................................... 23 M-14P ............................................................. 28 Retro Air Designs........................................... 36 Whirlwind Propeller...................................... 37 Don Mayer Parachute Shop.......................... 39 Mort's Aero...................................................... 42 CEP................................................................... 43 Air Power Insurance...................................... 45 Straube's........................................................... 47 Red Alert is your magazine and would not exist without your input-your stories and experiences are what bring the magazine alive. Mike NEXT ISSUE WRITERS' DEADLINE Summer: 25 May Please submit material to: Mike Filucci mfilucci@gmail.com Material contained herein is published for examination and evaluation of the reader. The RedStar Pilots Association has made no attempt to verify any of the contents and accepts no responsibility for any items printed in this publication. Articles written and published in this magazine are for entertainment only and are the opinion of the author(s). They are not intended to be instructional in nature nor promote deviation from a published flight procedure in any aircraft or technical flight manual, FAR, law or other regulation. The contents are not intended to be construed as offering legal advice or counsel. Alert THE MAGAZINE OF THE REDSTAR PILOTS ASSOCIATION Cover Tim "Teflon" Stevens executes a pitch-up break away from Tom "Cuda" Reynolds over the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Photo by Greg Davis SPRING 2015 www.flyredstar.org 5 Capitalist Chang Or, How To Sell Groceries Nanchang Style I was headed home on a Wednesday afternoon when my cell phone rang. At the other end of the line was an acquaintance of mine who just happens to be a local movie/TV/commercial personality and avid aviator. I had the privilege of meeting him a few years before at my local airport while I was fuelling the Chang, and then gave him a ride. “How would you like to be in a TV commercial?” he asked. What followed this simple question is still a big blur in my mind, but one thing is for sure, it was a fun and wild ride. The concept was simple, a local grocery chain was working on a commercial to promote the inauguration of their rewards program and wanted to feature a red airplane that could f ly upside down. I am told that in TV and movies things happen at a turtle's pace but in TV commercials things happen at lighting speed. Within seconds after the initial phone call, I was on the phone with an executive from the production company, negotiating prices for my services. He already had in front of him all the specs of my airplane and even some photos downloaded from the internet. We agreed on some basics and the first thing I knew, I sat in a room filled with TV people talking about the logistics of making a TV commercial. Producers, executive producers, directors, sound guy, camera man, president, accountant—there must have been 20 people in this small conference room, and all eyes were on me (or at least that is what it felt like) since everything in this project depended on what could be done with the airplane. After the customary introductions, the conversation (or interrogation) went something like this: Them: "So, how low can you f ly with your airplane?" By Dan "Bandit" Fortin dan@yakattack.ca Them: "You mean 300 feet!" Me: "No, I mean three feet." Them: "You mean 30 feet!" Me: (Holding my hand at my waist three feet off the ground) "No, I mean three feet!" Them: (Talking amongst themselves with weird looks on their faces.) Them: "So, how close to a helicopter can you get in f light?" Me: "Three feet." Them: "You mean 300 feet?" Me: (Just looking with a “are we going to go through this again” look on my face.) Them: (Talking amongst themselves with weird looks on their faces.) Director: (Looking around the room) "I think this will work." We spent the better part of an hour reviewing the scenario. Most of it was quite good, actually. There was only one scene that made the hair on my neck stand up. So we discussed it and they decided CGI was their best option. After the meeting I was assigned my very own production assistant who was tasked with making sure things went smoothly with my part of the production (and who became my BFF for duration of the production with countless emails, texts and calls everyday). The dates were set for the shoot. Their first choice was the following week, but there was a conf lict with my annual recurrent training (aka simulator training) and I was unavailable. We agreed for the following week and I now had to find a rent-a-pilot to cover me at work. Me: "Three feet." (What can I say, I like to f ly low!) One of many story boards used in the production 6 Red Alert Spring 2015 Left: production crew sets up for shoot. Above: front cockpit actor reviews his lines while back cockpit actor gets makeup touch-up. Two days after the original meeting, we had our first safety brief for the aerial part of the commercial. Present were the helicopter pilot, my new BFF and myself. We discussed every aerial shot planned and how we could complete them safely. We also came up with the basic plan for the one day we had to get all these shots done. Speed was a concern for me, the Twin-Star helicopter that would lead our formation was fitted with one of those big round camera balls on the nose which significantly increases drag. Maximum cruise speed: 90 knots. Flying formation at 90 knots is definitely not ideal, but it is certainly feasible. This would most certainly be a learning experience for both the helicopter pilot and myself, but we were confident after our initial meeting that we could pull it off without a hitch. The next order of business was finding the field from which the ground-to-air shots would be filmed. This was actually not my job per se, but I did negotiate in the contract some veto powers over everything aviation, so I needed to approve their choice. The first field they found was perfect. Lots of free space around in all directions, no buildings in the ingress or egress routes. Perfect. Except for one little detail, the farmer/owner sold his carrots to the competing grocery chain. Back to square one. The second field was also good, but not as good as the first. Unfortunately, I was unable to view it for myself since I was out of town, so I had to rely on Google maps for my safety analysis. Ingress and egress routes were not as clean as I would have liked, which increased my workload on filming day, but it was an acceptable site and I gave my go-ahead for the production to proceed. The endless stream of emails, texts and phone calls continued even as I was away on simulator training. Finally we had a sound plan (or at least a good plan to deviate from) and upon my return from the sim we plunged into one of the two busiest f lying days of my career. DAY ONE: Ground to Air The driver showed up at my house at 0530. Yes, I had my own driver. He drove me to the location (just outside of Montreal) for one last safety briefing with the people involved, and also to put on my costume (as if they will actually see me on TV). All looked good and we were ready to go. I had designated my 500 foot line that no one could cross (a big ditch), and I was happy with the set up. Next came make-up, costume and hair. Yes I did say HAIR. The male hair dresser did not seem to like me. At all. I think he failed to understand that I am bald and would be wearing my helmet while f lying. The irony escaped him totally and I could see the frustration in his every move. Finally I strapped on the Chang and it was time to go to work. After a quick aerial survey of the field we lined up for the first shot—me doing a simple banana pass. All is good, I was holding until the director screamed “ACTION!” on the discrete frequency. I turned in, dropped to three feet and f lew by the robot camera in the middle of the field and egressed. “CUT!” followed by a semi-long silence. Finally, the radio broke: “Dan that was good, excellent even, but can you f ly the next one a little higher?” "OK", I replied, thinking to myself, which part of three feet did you not understand ;-)? Dan, in "costume." www.flyredstar.org 7 The first shot went quite well, actually. We only needed to do it three or four times. The other shots were a bit more complex. Shot number two was me simulating rolling the Chang inverted for a CGI inverted carrot pick up pass. The third shot was a head-on pass trying to hit the robot camera. The complexity of these shots, combined with lens changes (so they can have plenty of varied raw footage), and countless factors out of our control made it difficult for these things to happen rapidly (I don’t really mind, I am getting paid by the hour, but being 6’ 4” and 230 pounds, the Chang is a tight fit). Just as an example, I had to hold for the better part of 20 minutes because a bird decided to use the robot camera as a perch. The TV crew had to chase it (I suggested we use the Chang, but I was vetoed), but not before it left them a nice parting gift. You can imagine how sensitive a piece of equipment like this is (probably worth more than the Chang), and how delicate they must be with its care. So patience truly is a virtue. We went at the last two shots for the rest of the morning and most of the afternoon. We did break for lunch (we are civilized after all) and my driver picked me up at the airport to drive me to the site. For some unknown reason, everyone in the crew of over 100 (yes there were over 100 people on site working the ground part of this gig) were looking at me with wonder in their eyes. A few even came to see me and said they are amazed at what I did with the airplane. I guess when you live in our warbird world, it is easy to forget how truly amazing what we do really is. Finally, around 1600 hours, after sortie number four, the radio came alive: “Its a wrap!” and I was free to travel to Quebec city where operations would resume the following morning. Twin-Star helicopter with gyro-stabilized camera rig. Day one ended in a Quebec city restaurant with a last minute meeting between the helicopter pilot, the camera operator and myself. We reviewed our safety procedures, the weather (which could NOT have been better) over dinner and called it an early evening. The rest of the team (reduced team, only three in the chopper and four in two chase cars) arrived long after I fell asleep. Dan's "GIB." Total for day one: three official shots, miles of raw footage, five sorties, and 5.5 hours in the Chang. DAY TWO: Air to Air Day two began even earlier: 0430 hours in the hotel lobby. We had to take off 30minutes before sunrise so we could be at our first location for the best light of the day. I strapped my “GIB” in the back seat. The scenario required me to have a lady passenger in the back seat of the Chang, but my insurance company outright refused. So we had to come up with a plan B—a six foot tall male mannequin with a blouse and a wig stapled to it’s head. On day one, our friendly hair dresser had given me specific instruction to regularly brush the mannequin’s hair between shots so it’s hair would remain perfect. He even gave me two different hair brushes! Needless to say, the brushes remained with the chase crew. The helicopter departed first, as they are much slower than the Chang. I took off approximately ten minutes later and rendezvoused with them over the St. Lawrence river. Per our brief, the helicopter pilot worked both his radios, one on ATC and one on our discrete frequency. Everyone else, the director, my BFF, the camera operator and I were on the discrete frequency. As I first approached the helicopter, I called my distance to the crew, so they knew where I was. As briefed, I joined on the right side (where the helicopter pilot sat). We traveled approximately five minutes like this before my BFF finally looked out of her window and saw me. You should have seen the look on her face. Priceless. I could see her pointing at me to the others in the helicopter and saying “He’s right there!” I clicked the mic, asked Lead permission to cross under so the people on the other side could see me. He approved and I crossed. Exact same reaction from the rest of the crew. 8 Red Alert Spring 2015 Minutes later, before our first shot of the day, the helicopter had to do an unscheduled stop on the side of a road. Some nasty business about a bug smashing in the camera lens. Finally, we were ready to work. We ran through the same five or six shots at different locations so they could have all the raw footage they needed for the final cut. They wanted shots of the Chang passing the helicopter and crossing it’s f light path. They wanted shots where the helicopter followed the Chang. They wanted shots of the Chang with the mountains in the background. They wanted shots of head-on passes. I had the scenario schedule on my kneeboard and the director called the shots: “OK Dan, next shot is number 27. Let me know when you are in position.” Then after the shot “Excellent! Reset and do it again.” Countless times. During the day we traveled approximately 100 nm east of Quebec city along the St. Lawrence river, and then back to Montreal, filming different shots along the way. Every time I got out of the airplane, I was startled by the quiet demeanor of my GIB. So quiet that I constantly forgot he/she/it was there. Wig and all. We had planned fuel stops at various airports along the route and at every stop one of the chase cars was waiting for us. Mainly they supported the film crew, swapping memory cards on the camera, but they also had some of my stuff, like my engine oil and my emergency tool kit. The toughest shot of the whole shoot came just before we broke for lunch. I had to f ly directly underneath the camera mounted on the nose of the helicopter. Forget FAST standards, with nose to tail separation, this was 100% nose-to-tail overlap. This was the shot that took the longest to film, or at least that’s what it seemed like to me. Perhaps it was because I was f lying formation on a Twin-Star helicopter less then 10 feet below it, looking directly up at my limited references (namely the camera and the skid) with reduced f light controls authority, trying to smile for the camera. Luckily, the air was clean because even at this slow speed, all the rotor wash from the helicopter was well behind us, and the sides were perfect for ingress and egress from the shot. camera followed me. It turns out that this was, to me, the most beautiful shot of the entire process. Seeing the Chang from this unusual angle is quite unique. Unfortunately, it didn’t make the final cut and isn't in the commercial. Towards the end of the day came the most logistically complex shot of the entire shoot. Although it is simple in principle, timing and proximity to the Montreal International airport made it a difficult one. Basically, the helicopter hovered at 1000 feet AGL over downtown Montreal as I did countless runs at it so they could have the Chang with the city as the back ground. The complexity came because ATC refused to allow us to use a dicrete frequency and required everyone to be on the tower frequency. You can only imagine the ease of communication between the director, the helicopter pilot, and myself on tower frequency during the peak arrival hours when all those tired airline pilots are lining up to land from their oversea’s trips. But we did make it work. Later I was told that we were directly over the production company’s head office and that a lot of people came out on the street to see us work. Finally, the words I never thought I would hear: “It’s a wrap!” Total for day two: countless shots, five sorties, 9.1 hours in the Chang, all in formation on a helicopter. (Yes, 9.1 hours. I had to double check my log when I did research for this article. My longest Chang f lying day, ever.) When I finally landed I had cramps in my legs and took it 10 minutes to unfold myself from the seat. Dan, in his other costume. One other shot had me f lying up and down a mountain following the terrain as the helicopter followed me from above. The beauty of the helicopter is that they can follow from above at a certain distance and keep visual on Lead through the lower part of the bubble canopy. So, basically, for this shot, I took the Lead and they followed me. As I reached the summit of the hill I had to chop the power, follow the terrain down and remain at the same speed so I would not drive away from the camera. It did take us a few takes to get the speed right, but this was actually quite fun and relatively easy to film. One other shot required me to f ly underneath the camera and overtake them as the www.flyredstar.org 9 DAY THREE: Ground Filming Or, as I like to call it, sleeping under the wing of the Chang while they film. For me, the biggest part of the work was done. My role was now changed from “stunt” pilot to simple safety guy. Basically, I had to make sure no one got hurt by the airplane or no one damaged the airplane. My safety briefing went something like this: “So, this is the propeller. If you touch it, you die. Because if it doesn’t kill you as the engine starts, I will!” Of course, I had a radiant smile while saying it, so they understood the importance of not touching it and to this day still think I was kidding. To their credit, they avoided the propeller like the plague. This day was very long for me. Other than starting the engine with the robot camera inches away from the spinner, I did nothing but sit in silence as they went from take to take, to the actor forgetting his line, or improvising a few new ones, to the director having a tantrum over a reason long forgotten but that seemed important at the time, to the sound guy dropping the microphone during the shot, to the clouds being at the wrong place, to the hair dresser complaining because of the wind, to the… As most of you know, there isn’t much cooling in our airplanes on the ground while the engine isn’t running. And day three was a hot summer day. Hot and humid. So both actors had a tough time sitting in the Chang all day even if they were in the shade. Between takes, they would turn on a giant ventilator so they could cool down a bit. At one point in the afternoon there was a small issue, we needed to rotate the propeller because it was in the shot, so they woke me from underneath the wing (it is unbelievable how many people are hanging just outside each shot) to fix it. Since I am not looking for a callsign change anytime soon, I first went on the wing to make sure the mags were off. When I Cocpit mockup used for inverted f light CGI scenes. turned to step off the airplane I was taken by surprise by the actress in the back seat. Her pants were neatly folded on the side of the seat and she sat there in her panties. I guess I must have had a funny look on my face because she burst out laughing out loud. I guess movie people are used to these shenanigans the same way we are used to meaning three feet when we say three feet. Around 1900 hours, they were done with the airplane and it was time for me to take her home. Needless to say, I did a very thorough pre-f light inspection, inside and out. There were plenty of carrot leaves on the f loor of the airplane, and it seems that for months after the shoot, once in a blue moon, a leaf would appear, f loating at the top of a loop. Eventually they disappeared. As I was strapping on the Chang, I could see the team still working in the hangar. They still had some shots to film, but didn't need the airplane because they were using a contraption they had built, outfitted with a canopy purchased from Doug Sapp, and painted the same red color as my bird. Even if I was dead tired, half of me wished I could stay and watch what was happening. But after three long days of an endless blur, it was time to put the Chang to rest and enjoy my driver for the last time as he drove me home. I was told the team wrapped up filming at approximately 2300 hours that night. Following this, all the raw footage went through an endless series of transformations and approximately one month later the commercial was broadcast on TV. It can still be seen online at: jetfilms.com/fr/adbrault#695 Kudos to everyone involved in the production of the commercial. Although their aviation experience was limited, they all performed with the utmost professionalism and made this production a very fun experience for me. I kept in touch with many of the people from the production company, which led to my cell phone ringing once more. But this time it was for something completely different than a TV commercial. Perhaps when this next story ends it will be my pleasure to share it with you. Daniel Fortin f lies as a corporate pilot in Montreal, Canada. He has been a Nanchang pilot since 1996 and has logged more than 1000 hours in his Red Beast. Dan holds type ratings on the Fouga Magister, L29 Delphin, and Hawker Hunter. He is also the Team Lead for YakAttack airshows (www.yakattack.ca), a member of the Redstar Pilots Association, the Classic Jet Aircraft Association, the Canadian Owner and Pilot Association, the EAA, and a lifetime member of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum for which he is a FAST Check Pilot. 10 Red Alert Spring 2015 Wingman The "Right Stuff" To Fly Formation By Bill Cherwin t34lead@aol.com W hat does it take to be a good formation pilot? In my opinion, there are three things, or qualities. First, you must be a good pilot. You do not have to be a "Lindbergh," but you must be above average. Second, you must conquer the "psychology" of formation flying. And lastly, you must be disciplined. A good pilot can handle his airplane in all situations with good stick and rudder coordination. He can fly his airplane well, through its full operating envelope if necessary. He has good judgment and a cool head. The formation pilot must know his airplane so well, that he can operate any switch or control by feel. Some acrobatic experience is also desirable. Now for the psychological part: Most of us in general aviation get introduced to formation flying when we obtain or buy into a warbird. We have lots of flying time (I had close to 15,000 hours when I started.) and have learned to make decisions as the pilot in command. We are alive today, in part, due to our skill, cunning, and decisiveness. We may have had some good luck along the way, but we long ago learned to look out for our own ass. Military pilots learned to fly formation early in their flying careers, so their command posture had not become so deeply rooted. Most of us are in vocations where we are "in charge.” We make all the critical decisions in our businesses, hobbies, and at home. We have above average egos and are generally "the boss." Now we want to become a formation pilot. When you become a wingman, you must be prepared to give up most of your command authority. You never give it all up, but you certainly give up 99%. If you try to retain too much, by second-guessing the leader, or dwelling on things other than “holding station," your formation flying suffers. Like a computer trying to multitask, your brain cannot do two things well at once. Concentration (110%) is the secret to good formation flying. Learn to hold stations and ignore the attitude of the leader. Trying to remain oriented to the world will only tax your already overloaded brain. The leader is your only world for the moment. You must have absolute trust in your leader. If not, then go find a leader on whom you can bet your life. Experienced formation pilots can remain oriented to the world, but only because their formation flying skills are so honed, that they have occasional fleeting milliseconds to ponder their attitude and speed. Believe me when I say that seasoned formation pilots still concentrate 110%! Formation flying is so much easier when you concentrate. The third aspect of formation flying is as important as the other two. Just as each leg of a three-legged stool is vital to the support of the stool, discipline is essential to formation flying. Discipline starts with a thorough knowledge of the formation manual, standard operating procedures, and hand signals. Discipline is holding station with a high level of precision. Discipline is taking on a subordinate role as a wingman, and not trying to second-guess the leader. Radio discipline is also critical to any formation flight. Items of emergency nature are always appropriate over the radio. Chatter at altitude, en route, if allowed by the leader is OK, but any other transmissions should not be made. Wingmen are always second-guessing the leader, and tend to want to make their ideas known. Disciplined wingmen maintain radio silence, so as not to break the leader's concentration on his job getting the flight safely to point B. As the instructor admonished the student, “I only want to hear two things from you over the radio Your number when you check in, and Lead, you’re on fire!" The leader is constantly thinking and planning ahead, and does not need any unsolicited advice from his wingmen. In fact, pressure from a flight member could distract the leader and cause an accident. A formation flight is not a democratic body. It is a dictatorship, run by the flight leader, whose qualifications should have been determined before the flight ever left the ground. Do not volunteer information over the radio unless it is of an emergency nature. In summary, to fly formation, a pilot must be "a good stick," be prepared to give up 99% of his autonomy, exercise discipline in holding station and maintaining radio protocol. Even the best formation pilots are never in “perfect position,” they are merely passing through that spot, and constantly making very small and timely corrections towards it. Bill Cherwin is a retired United Airlines B-747 Captain, former Formation And Safety Team (FAST) President, former Lead pilot for the Lima Lima Fight Demonstration Team, current FAST check pilot, and formation aerobatics instructor. www.flyredstar.org 11 Going to the analyst Using oil analysis to predict engine health W aiting for an oil-analysis report is a bit like waiting for test results from your doctor. What will it show, how life changing might the results be, and how much might the problem cost? When it comes to our aircraft engines, the “how much” part can quickly become a five-figure problem—making health care seem cheap. Just as we work hard on preventative maintenance in caring for our bodies (how’s that New Year’s gym membership going for you?), we should be so proactive in the care of our engines. One tool (and just one of several you should use) is oil analysis. The process is simple: Get an oil sample kit from one of numerous providers. Grab a sample midstream when draining the oil during an oil change. Record the number of hours on the oil and the engine, the type of cylinders, and the number of quarts of oil added between changes, and send it to the lab that provided the kit. A few anxious days later, receive a report, typically emailed these days, that shows an analysis of the types of metals and other particulates picked up by the oil—and small enough to make it through the oil filter or oil screen. By Thomas B. Haines thomas.haines@aopa.org In addition to particulates, most reports include details on the viscosity of the fuel, f lash point, and other properties that can be helpful in noticing trends or problems. While reports from some companies only compare to previous reports, Blackstone Laboratories is one that compares the current report to previous reports and also to a set of standards it has developed over the decades. Its database contains many thousands of reports of normal levels of the amount of iron, for example, that a sample might contain given the number of hours on the oil and the engine. The Blackstone reports come with a chatty, personalized message at the top written in plain English. For example, a recent report on my Continental IO-550 came back with this message at the top: TOM: The viscosity of your oil was in the normal range this time, so we are happy to be giving your IO-550 perfect reports again. This was after a previous report where the viscosity was out of whack for some reason. The comments went on to relay a few more observations, including a reference to a trend from three years earlier—someone is clearly paying attention to what is happening over time with my expensive engine. Oil analysis is only helpful if it is done regularly—ideally at every oil change, so trends can be spotted. A hit-and-miss approach isn’t useful. What the reports can do is help you understand what parts of the engine are wearing, based on the types of metal found in the oil. High levels of copper, for example, might result from the installation of a new oil cooler. If no new oil cooler, then it might be as a result of the wearing of bronze valve guides in some types of engines. None of that would show up in an oil filter or screen—the particulates are too small. Partner oil analysis with regular examination of the oil filter for larger chunks of metal and you can more easily discern problem areas, such as valve train wear and especially camshaft wear. Expect to pay between about $15 and $20 per analysis, depending on the company and whether you choose to prepay for the analysis kits or not. With 50-hour oil changes, over the 2,000-hour TBO life of an engine, you’ll spend less than $1,000 on oil analysis, which buys a lot of peace of mind—and probably gives you a lot of comfort in f lying beyond TBO if the numbers all look good. 12 Red Alert Spring 2015 The range of tools available to an aircraft owner for monitoring engine health includes oil analysis for trend information, visual and magnetic oil filter examinations, oil consumption trends, cylinder compression trends, digital trend analysis from an onboard engine analyzer, and regular borescope investigations— ideally using a modern, digital borescope. Use them all, and the likelihood of an engine surprise right after takeoff is greatly reduced. Certificate of Formation Qualification Presented By The RedStar Pilots Association To: ____________________________ In recognition of the successful completion of the prescribed Wing Pilot course of formation training as required by the RedStar Pilots Association and the Formation And Safety Team (FAST) Aircraft Make, Model and Registration Number: ______________________________________________________ Recorded on this ______ day of __________ in the year __________ __________________________________ Qualifying Pilot __________________________________ Check Pilot A SAMPLING OF POPULAR OIL ANALYSIS COMPANIES: ALS (sold through Aircraft Spruce and other catalogs): www.alsglobal.com/ en/Our-Services/Industrial/Tribology/ Capabilities/Aviation-Oil-Analysis Analysts, Inc.: http://analystsinc.com/markets-we-serve/aviation/ Aviation Laboratories Metal Check (sold through Chief Aircraft and other catalogs): www.avlab.com Blackstone Laboratories: www.blackstone-labs.com Aeroshell, ExxonMobil, Phillips 66, and others also offer oil analysis services, typically private labeled by one of the above or other companies. Congratulations to our pilots who have achieved formation qualification Wingman John Warwick 12/14/2014 Scott Wallace 2/27/2015 Flight Leader Thomas Mitchell 2/28/2015 Originally published in the February, 2015 issue of AOPA Pilot Website Update By Gil "NAFOD" Lipaz glipaz@yahoo.com F olks, the website continues to improve each month and we hope you agree with us that it looks great and is finally functioning! We have really enhanced the content in the Library so check it out. Most every form you need is in there and can be downloaded, included the Formation Proficiency Reports that all patched pilots need to submit each year. We are now working on adding PayPal as a payment option which wlll help all our overseas members with RPA store purchases and membership payments. Stay tuned. We have stopped using our former mass email vendor, MailDog, since we can now do all emails to the membership through the website. That will save us $50 each month. Under the Training tab, we have now added a Check Pilot tab and an Instructor Pilot tab. Under each of these you will find names and contact info for CP's and IP's throughout the country. Please contact these wonderful folks to help you with training, qualification, or to help you set up a f lying event. They are all available and happy to help. Finally, we have organized ads on the website and are now in the process of attracting more advertisers to help subsidize our site costs and add more cash to the RPA budget to support more and better events throughout the country. www.flyredstar.org www.flyredstar.org 13 Yak/CJ General Condition Inspection By Craig Payne cpayne@joimail.com T he General Condition Inspection, an Annual by a different name, should be regarded as an opportunity to keep your bird in good condition rather than as a nuisance, even though it can be a nuisance with your busy schedule. If you are not certified to sign-off the General Condition Inspection, as specified in your Operation Limitations document, then your choices are limited. You could hand over the aircraft to a maintenance shop, get an A&P to perform the inspection, or work with the mechanic in an owner-assisted inspection. In any case, it is in your interest to understand the process by preparing for it. This article is the first of three parts that will remove some of the mystery from the process. Usage Interview As an A&P, I prefer to work on airplanes that have been f lying on a regular basis. Their squawks and issues are well known, unlike when approaching an airplane that has been sitting for months. For “hangar queens,” the unknowns are always an issue. Issues take time, and time is money. My process begins with interviewing the owner about the regularity and type of f lying the aircraft has experienced. There are different mechanical effects created from hard acro on every f light compared to occasional hops to pancake-breakfast f ly-ins. Hard acro stresses the airframe, loosens mechanical connections, wears control system bearings, and stretches cables. Regular wingman work works the prop and engine harder than normal cruise. Sunday breakfast airplanes seem to be susceptible to corrosion from sitting, as well as deterioration of rubber seals, and leakage of oil. • Squawk list: Usually it’s not hard to list what needs to be fixed or adjusted. Anything from a busted knob to a heavy wing. Perhaps an uneven fuel burn? A soft main strut? Ball off center in cruise? Not always safety of f light issues, but still an annoyance that detracts from the business of f lying the airplane. • Maintenance List: Research the logs and maintenance manual for what tasks are interval-specific and due—hose changes, air bottle service, transponder checks, ELT batteries, prop grease, wheel bearings, and such. These will become part of the work to be performed. I prefer that the owner do a fair share of “grunt work” as Part 43.3(g) allows. Tasks, such as removing the wheel bearings and cleaning them for my inspection, shortens my hands-on time and saves the owner money. Knowing what must be done also leads to having parts ready to do the work. Appendix A, Part 43(c) provides a list of preventative maintenance tasks that may be owner/ pilot performed. • Upgrade List: Certainly, “annual” time is also an opportunity to swap out an old gauge, add a modification, or install new avionics, since your schedule has built-in some down time for just this occasion. • Inspection Checklist: Yaks and CJs, as well as other Experimental-Exhibition certificated aircraft will specify Appendix D of Part 43 for the General Condition inspection The Owner-Assisted Inspection My preference is for an owner to be involved in the maintenance and inspection of their aircraft. In the long run it makes my job easier and the owner more knowledgeable. Knowledge is power when it comes to understanding what will happen when you hire someone to work on your bird. Making Lists Every few days I make a list of what I want to get done. I might not get it all done but at least I am starting with a road map. Do the same with your “Annual.” Certainly, there must be an inspection, some maintenance done, and maybe some upgrades. Break it all down. Specialized tools: Partial Yak set, plus bent 14mm for front mag nuts, offset 17mm open end, 22,24,27,28, and 32mm open ends. Large socket is for Huosai prop removal; digital level for prop angle. 14 Red Alert Spring 2015 Part 1: Preparation in their operations limitations document. While Appendix D covers a lot, it is general in nature. M-14P engines come with a detailed manual that includes dozens of “Tasks” to be performed, and there are interval-specific checks listed in the Nanchang manuals. Same with Yak airframes. However, for annual use, there is a checklist focused on these aircraft that can be found in the RPA Store under "manuals." I updated that list a few years ago and it is a good place to start. Review this list with your inspector and come up with an agreed upon inspection plan. There may be some overlap between the maintenance list that doesn’t need to be repeated. Cleaning While the airplane is sitting out for the run-up, it’s a great time to wash and dry it, especially the Common inspection tools: Plus mag timing equipment and torque wrench for spark plugs belly where all that engine oil ends up. Paragraph (a) of Appendix D of Part 43 specifies that the airframe and en- of a transponder check with the last 24 months. An instrument gine must be cleaned, as well as having panels and the cowling certified A/C also requires a pitot-static check. opened up and removed for inspection. Expect to find some oil on the inside of the belly panels. Now is the time to clean all of Following a recent engine change, my CJ was used in a weight that off, but take time to note where the oil was found. It could and balance demonstration for an EAA chapter meeting. I was pleased to see that only seven pounds were added since the last lead back to the leak. weigh-in ten years ago. EW was measured at 2350 pounds, and While cleaning the airplane, note where any “smoking” rivets that included 51 pounds of ballast and an aux fuel tank. I canare and mark them with a crayon for the mechanic’s inspection. not be positive about the accuracy of that old W&B because the The “smoke” is actually traces of aluminum resulting from the equipment used was not as good as the WiFi load cell setup used movement of loose rivets. Cracks in the cowling and fairings are for the recent demo. Check that equipment changes made over reason for concern, but cracks in the skin or airframe are reason the last few years do not affect your W&B. for alarm! Mark any cracks with that crayon or sharpie. Don’t forget to have all of your manuals handy, as well as logData Collection: Establishing a baseline books. While a propeller log is not mandatory, I prefer keeping The inspection checklist begins with an engine run-up—oil and one since my prop has spanned the life of two different engines, fuel pressure readings are recorded, idle RPM, magneto drop, so far. Above all, have paper and a clipboard to record each task prop governor operation, and other engine parameters are all to be performed and finished. The log book entries will be built noted. All are important to building a baseline. Note if any read- from these notes. ings are not within specification. At the end of the inspection and maintenance, the same run-up will be done to compare against Organizing the Hangar manufacturer’s recommendations as provided in Part 43.15(c)(2). Say what? I’m not making a big deal out of this but, in a profesThe best time to perform this task is just prior to going into the sional shop or military maintenance hangars, it is a really big deal. Get the equipment needed staged and ready: hangar for the “annual” work. • Hangar space—book at least two weeks if you do not norDocuments: It’s not done until the paperwork’s done mally hanger your bird. Every aircraft is required to have certain documents on board: Aircraft Registration, Airworthiness Certificate, W&B, POH. • Aircraft jacks and tail stand—I made a simple tail stand out of a sawhorse with concrete weights and a strap that attaches Additionally, “Experimental-Exhibition” also requires a current to the tail skid. Program Letter. In the airframe logbook, there must be evidence www.flyredstar.org 15 • Oil catch buckets • Ladder and mechanic's stool • Drop lights and overhead lighting • Air compressor for the differential compression test • High-pressure air bottle for system refill after gear swings • Nearby work table for parts • Cardboard or carpet on which to set the cowlings • Yak or Nanchang tool set. It does not matter which one, as they seem to be the same tools anyway. Some of the prop tools differ. See "Specialized tools" photo. • Metric wrenches and sockets—provide tools for each specific task • Mineral spirits and rags—a parts washer is a handy luxury • De-fueling barrel and pump if testing the fuel level sensors is required • Paper tags and zip lock bags for small parts Ask the mechanic which tools he will be bringing. Most likely a differential compression tester, a torque wrench, LCD borescope, and perhaps some custom tools as well. See "Common inspection tools" photo. I always place my cowlings and larger panels on carpet or big pieces of cardboard. Back in the days when most FBO’s did maintenance, it was common to see fresh “hangar rash” on your painted parts after an annual. Unbuttoning Once positioned in the hangar, the cowling, panels and fairings come off and are set aside out of the way. Strip out the seats, kick panels, and rear “baggage” hatch in the CJ, which once was the avionics bay. The integrity of the harness and security of the attachment to the seats will be inspected. Provide a furniture blanket or carpet to protect the rudder cables, as well as the inspector, when he or she is kneeling down in the fuselage. Bag and tag all the screws removed, as one never knows how long the inspection will take. If something comes up that creates a few days of interruption, you will wonder where all that unmarked hardware belongs. Miscellaneous: If an oil change will be part of the work, the oil cooler will slowly drain overnight into your bucket. The propeller reduction gear case and oil tank drain much more quickly. Notes on the Inspection The actual inspection will probably be done in a day or so but prep, maintenance, and re-assembly will consume a work week. I have done general condition inspections on both Yaks and CJs, and 40 man-hours is a consistent benchmark I experience. Expect that upgrades and modifications will add even more time. Clearly, the work that the owner does will substantially lower the expense of paying an A&P, but the big benefit is that the owner knows what went into the effort, and generally, a lot more about the airplane. Even after 20 years of working on these critters, I’m still seeing issues I never ran across before. Next Issue Part 2: The Inspection Process and Maintenance air tank hydro testing little sticker 16 Red Alert Spring 2015 big deal CGS Compressed Gas Systems www. CGS.aero 13829 Artesia Blvd, Cerritos, CA 90703 (855) 875-2226 FAA 20XR229C Veteran Memorials A N SALEO TAX! S 22 YEARS OF GIVING PILOTS THE BEST PRICING AND BEST SERVICE! ERVICE! CALL US FOR ALL YOUR COCKPIT ESSENTIALS! GARMIN ANR HEADSETS AVIONICS IPAD ACCESSORIES HANDHELD RADIOS SAFETY LET PACIFIC COAST AVIONICS INSTALL YOUR NEW AVIONICS Why Choose Pacific Coast Avionics? Simple. Because avionics is what we do, and we do it better than anyone. We install more Garmin avionics than anyone on the west coast! From basic installs to complete panel and glass retrofits – Call the leader in great service and low pricing – Call Pacific Coast Avionics. www.PCA.aero 1.800-353-0370 Aurora State Airport • 22783 Airport Road, N.E. • Aurora, OR 97002 Email: Info@PCA.aero • Mon. – Fri. 7:30 – 5:30 PST PCA_RedStar-HlfPg.1.indd 1 The RPA membership includes many former military aviators within its ranks, and has proudly taken on the vital role to provide aircraft for memorials, as well as other special events. The Missing Man Formation was originally a military aerial salute honoring a Veteran who had died—performed as an aircraft flyover at a memorial service. There are variations but most common is a 4-ship of aircraft with the Missing Man inside the flight, trailing smoke, and pulling up and away from the rest of the 4-ship as the flight passes overhead. The Missing Man aircraft represents the Veteran who has passed away, symbolizing their departure from their squadron, their friends, and their family. When that single plane pulls up, trailing smoke, and departs the flight, it is always profound. It will bring tears to the toughest among us. The tradition is long and the RPA is honored to make it available for America's Veterans. To learn more about the RPA's charitable Missing Man Flight Program, please email admin@flyredstar.org You’ll be glad you did. T ALL WE BEATISED ADVER ES! PRIC s part of the RedStar Pilots Association's charitable mission, the RPA has several airshow teams based throughout the country that are proud to perform flyovers for appropriate US veteran memorials. These flyovers, the venerable Missing Man Formations, have become a historic tradition in the military and, specifically, for veterans from the various aviation corps. US budget constraints have led to sequestration, and the military has reduced or eliminated its budget for these important flyovers. The RPA raises funds to help support this important and honorable mission. If you, or your business, would like to make a tax-deductible contribution to help sponsor the RPA's Missing Man Flight Program, please email: treasurer@flyredstar.org 6/2/14 10:19 AM www.flyredstar.org 17 Buddha's Calling By Alan Cockrell yakpilot@bellsouth.net S omething was wrong. The moving map display showed we had crossed over a waypoint where we should have turned. Yet I could clearly see Buddha’s jet out in front, wings level continuing straight ahead. I thought maybe my moving map display was lying. I was f lying f luid trail on him. It was actually easier to see his shadow zipping across northern Arizona 500 feet below us. The A-7 was the first fighter to have a moving map, maybe even the first aircraft ever to have one. Our Dash-1 called it the PMDS, or Projected Map Display System. In a nuts and bolts sense it bore little in common with today’s multi-function displays. Incredibly, it was actually a round scope that showed the movements of a tiny little low resolution camera somewhere in the plane’s innards scanning microfiche of VFR charts. These images were piped up to the cockpit and displayed on a scope with a rearscreen projector. The movements of the camera (or maybe of the microfiche—I don’t remember) were driven by signals from the inertial measurement system (IMS), which was also a “first” for fighter aircraft. My F-4 friends tell me the Rhino had a rudimentary IMS for navigation, but unlike theirs ours also computed aim points for our bombs. The F-4 guys drank a lot of beer while bemoaning our bombing accuracy vs. theirs. We had some other neat “firsts” on the A-7. The HUD, for example. That was the one that made us the envy of the aviation world. And the Allison TF-41 behind our backs was the first turbo-fan engine in a fighter. It was a good engine after they figured out how to keep the oil pump running. Some guys had to make nylon landings, and their planes are still available if you wish to buy an acre in southern Arizona. You can get one free if you dredge off the East Coast. Yet the TF-41 ran well when it ran, had decent power, and was satisfyingly noisy. The jet had a lot of other new stuff in it, but you get the point. You can get carried away with all the bells and whistles and find yourself a passenger and—whether it’s an A-7, Nanchang, Yak or Albatross—that’s bad. We didn’t regard the PMDS very highly. The thought of a little gremlin working like hell down in our avionics bay trying to focus that fuzzy TV camera on a piece of moving film came over to us as a smoke and mirrors scheme. It seemed like every time we loaded up with Gs he got off balance. That’s why we carried paper charts. Part of the job of every 2nd Lieutenant in the squadron (that would have been me, the squadron’s only 2nd balloon at the time) was to cut the paper charts into knee board-sized strips with the selected low-level training route drawn on it, and arrange them so that you could f lip the pages as you progressed along the route. (Okay, let’s get something straight: I did not get passed over for 18 Red Alert Spring 2015 First Lieutenant. Back then you had to serve two years in grade before promotion to 1st Lt. That’s why I was still a butter bar in an operational squadron. So quit laughing.) Seeing Buddha blast straight ahead over the turn-point made me check my strip chart. Yes, the PMDS was right. We were headed north when we should have been heading west. About then he made a slight right turn toward Humphreys Peak, the highest mountain in Arizona at over 12,000 feet. It wasn’t like Buddha to screw up like that. I got concerned. Could he be on autopilot and incapacitated? We were supposed to stay quiet on the radio so I hesitated to call him. But Humphreys was getting bigger fast. I glanced down and switched the transmitter to FM—“Fox Mike,” we called it. FM (another new innovation in fighters) was our link to Army units on the ground. We could talk to the grunts directly—didn’t need a FAC. But in all my time in the A-7 we never talked to the Army. We used FM for inter-aircraft communications and for com with the squadron back at the base, where the duty desk had a transceiver. I was concerned that if I called Buddha out on a deviation as serious this they would hear it back at the squadron. But FM was short-ranged and we had a lot of real estate between us and home plate. I called. “Buddha, you missed the turn point back there.” His response stirred me with both anxiety and excitement. “Keep quiet and hang tight.” Buddha was up to something, and it wasn't like him to deviate from the game plan. Found outside his hooch in Thailand sitting under a tree with his legs crossed and belly hanging out, somebody laughed and said he looked like Buddha, and so the moniker stuck and became his call sign. With his jutting jaw, linebacker neck (which he was at Oklahoma State), cocky swagger, and a combat tour under his belt, Buddha was a model fighter pilot. His name was a fixture on the monthly Top Gun board in our wing headquarters, and his skills as a f light lead were respected across the base. But Buddha’s time was approaching for his obligatory desk job. This was the pre-Reagan, post-Viet Nam era of brooding and reproving in the U.S. military. Realistic training took a back seat to CYA ops and not rocking the boat. This is amply demonstrated by the fact that we were f lying the “low-level” route at the required 500 AGL—hardly realistic. Once I was in a 4-ship in finger-tip headed to the gunnery range. Two F-100s from the Arizona Air Guard tapped us. Back then the Guard was a wonderful f lying club where pilots went to f ly Uncle Sam’s marvelous winged toys on their off days from their airline or whatever they did. Careerists in the USAF regarded g Card them as traitorous miscreants. But most of them were highly experienced, skilled and aggressive traitorous miscreants. The Huns rolled in on us and made gun passes. Dissimilar air combat training was several years in the offing. Joining the fight would have been a career-ending move for our f light lead. That humiliation was hard to suffer. It added to our collective mood of restlessness and frustration. I remember the banner painted on our base water tower: The Mission: Safety. My f light commander said it should read: The Mission, Safely. In that era of misplaced priorities the USAF grounded pilots as soon as they became seasoned. (They may still do it; I don’t know.) Everybody needed to get their career progression ticket punched. Buddha, a respected senior captain, should have been being groomed for squadron commander. Instead, he was heading for an ROTC unit to become a teacher of college kids, and after that, possibly a return to a f lying assignment, but no promises. Yet Buddha would not leave his cockpit kicking and screaming, as you might expect; he would depart leaving a single colossal mark of disobedience, which would remain known only to himself and a certain wingman who was expected to hang tight and keep his mouth shut. Humphreys towered above the canopy bow when Buddha started his pull. The mountain seemed to kneel and let us go over it. Within seconds I saw Buddha’s jet roll inverted at the top and disappear down the back-side. I was as excited as a kid on Christmas morning, and I followed his maneuvers exactly. It was so easy it felt like a f light through a fantasy world. We leveled out on the Kaibab Plateau, still ripping northward. I guessed now we would turn southwest and go pick up the published route. But still he didn’t turn. You didn’t need to be a rocket scientist to figure out what Buddha intended next. We were so low on the f lat plateau I couldn't see the gouge in the Earth ahead of us, but I knew it was there. I thought maybe he planned to f ly over the Canyon, perhaps buzz it from rim to rim, maybe zoom up high and roll inverted, looking up at it through the top of his canopy. Yeah, I thought, that's what Buddha planned. That would be a kick. I got ready to pull back on the stick for rocket zoom. Suddenly, his wings snapped steeply to the right and Buddha f lew down into the Kaibab Plateau—gone in a f lash. I swallowed hard, felt my adrenalin pick up to about the pressure of the A-7's hydraulic system, 3,000 psi, and in a few heartbeats I was across the rim looking at the Vishnu Schist a mile below. I snapped my wings past 90 degrees and followed Buddha into the Earth's butt crack. The canyon's tight meanders forced us up over the rim a few times, but we plunged back into it and followed its sinuous kinks, our senses buzzing, eyeballs dancing left and right, riding riproaring sky fighting machines not designed for underground work, fiery death only seconds on each side of us. A hundred or so electrified miles later Buddha hauled back on his stick and left the Canyon shrinking beneath his tail, and somewhere behind him—I'm sure he hoped—a silent wingman still hanging tight. Buddha left a mark on the world—a mark in the mind and the memory, the best place for marks, the only appropriate place sometimes. We were among the few in modern times who had f lown through the Grand Canyon, f lew fast and made a hell of a lot of noise doing it. Had our tour become known to the powersthat-be, that would have been our last f light, and if done today it would probably get us tossed into the federal penitentiary. He swore me to secrecy, but I figure his statute of limitations is up by now. It was a hell of a chance he took with his career and our lives. It dawned on me later that despite my newness he trusted me enough to stay out of the rocks, and I felt honored by it. But losing me against the canyon wall would have been haunted him the rest of his life. Shortly afterwards Buddha hung up his G-suit and helmet and went to his school room to teach frat rats air power doctrine, and after that he quit the Air Force and got into computers. Since then every time I have crossed the Grand Canyon, looking down at it from the lofty f light levels, it's Buddha I remember—Buddha and his trust in me to keep my mouth shut and hang tight. Our little deviation was a breach of f light discipline of the most serious order. We lived through it, but back then we were young and bullet-proof. And we didn’t have any kids. Our wives were young and pretty enough to easily replace us with more responsible men. We really didn’t have that much to lose. But today we have plenty to lose. Recklessness has no place in what we do. Flight discipline keeps us safe and lets us keep enjoying the freedom and camaraderie only sport aviation can give. We always have fun telling the old stories of daring-do, but the real satisfaction is in being professional and doing it the right way. Ironically, Buddha knew this. He was a consummate professional—his deviation was not impulsive. He precisely pre-planned his tour, not telling anyone until that unforgettable radio call: “Keep quiet and hang tight.” That desk job assignment was just too hard for him to accept without leaving his calling card in the Grand Canyon. His other call sign is Larry Mills and he’s somewhere in the Dallas area. If you know him, tell me. www.flyredstar.org 19 Red Stars Honor the Red Tails By Dave “Costco” King KingCJ6@aol.com T he administration’s sequestration had eliminated virtually all military f lying tributes for those who have served. One of the most rewarding aspects RedStar aircraft ownership is our ability to efficiently honor veterans, whether it's exhibiting or performing at airshows, ride alongs, or f lying Missing Man tributes. In February, 2012, shortly after MLK Day and the release of George Lucas’s film, the Red Tails, the Gnoss Field Community Association in Novato, CA hosted a special tribute to honor the 20 Red Alert Spring 2015 Tuskegee Airmen who broke the military’s color barrier in World War II—the Red Tails. The event included a breakfast, talks by the airmen and their family members, an aircraft display, rides for the airmen and their family members, and a Missing Man tribute f light. More than 200 attended the event, including two original Airmen, relatives of Airmen, aviation buffs, Marin County officials, and Civil Air Patrol cadets. Bob Minkin Red Stars takeoff from Gnoss Field Five RPA pilots f lew at the event and all had Tuskegee Airmen or their relatives in our back seats. Airman Lt. LeRoy Gillead was my GIB, and it was his first f light since World War II. Also f lying with our group was Capt. Leslie Williams, the first black bomber pilot. Flight Line-up: In her welcome, Marin County Supervisor Judy Arnold said, “They protected white bomber pilots, but weren't allowed to eat with those pilots. But events like this are a reminder that we're a country that welcomes everyone. We're proud of you.” 4 – Kurt Howerton 1 – Dave King 2 – Kirk Heiser 3 – John Long 5 – Blitz Fox Stu Eberhardt, a former RPA Check Pilot and Reno Air Race champion brought his pristine P-51 to the event for display and ended the day with several low, high-speed passes before majestically departing up through the clouds. It was truly a privilege and honor to f ly with Lt. Gillead and honor the men who contributed so much to the war effort and who, for too long, went largely unrecognized for their service and role in integrating the military. To view a video of the event: http://baybombersquadron.com/videos.php www.flyredstar.org 21 Aviation Medicine Sleep Well—the FAA Wants to Help You By Chuck Crinnian, MD ame@aviationdoc.net n theory, FAA regulations are to promote aviation safety. Many times, a regulatory change or proposal sounds the alarms with the EAA, AOPA and pilots. Opposition to change may or may not be in the best interest to the pilots that the regulation or proposed regulatory change is intended to help. One such relatively recent proposal was how the aviation medical examiner deals with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and the body mass index (BMI). New OSA screening guidelines will be published and take effect March 2, 2015. Major points in the new guidelines are as follows: OSA is just one of a list of sleep related disorders that can impact a pilot. Many health issues can impact good restorative sleep. Poor sleep hygiene will negatively impact cognitive functioning. Poor cognitive functioning can be a substantial contributor to an aviation accident or incident. Thus, the AME must be aware of sleep disorders. Examples are insomnia, restless leg syndrome, neuromuscular disorders and connective tissue disorders. Medicines for many of these disorders are also disqualifying as they can impact cognitive functioning and levels of alertness. I As far as OSA is concerned, it has been shown that it is universal in obese individuals who have a BMI over 40 and a neck circumference of 17 inches or more. Thus, the FAA wanted to push for AME screening of this set of physical exam findings. Anyone meeting these exam parameters would be “guaranteed” to have OSA and should be disqualified from medical certification…until effectively treated. It also should be noted that 30% of individuals with BMI’s under 30 also have OSA. OSA inhibits restorative sleep. The obvious effect of OSA is that of excessive daytime sleepiness and its impact on cognitive functioning. However, more ominous medical issues are linked to OSA. There is strong relationship to sudden cardiac death, stroke, hypertension and coronary artery disease, to name a few. Does this get your attention! However, OSA can be effectively treated. So I view the issues of failing an OSA screening not as being too restrictive. It can be a lifesaving finding that should prompt the airman to get treatment. Once treated, the airman gets their medical certificate and will live to f ly another day. The EAA, AOPA and other pilot groups strongly opposed this regulation. The basis for the opposition was the perception of an overly zealous FAA and more restrictive regulations. There was and is significant push back to initiate this proposal. In response to industry stakeholders and Congressional concerns, the proposed BMI screening guidelines give the AME are now “scrapped”. 22 Red Alert Spring 2015 • No disqualification of pilots based on BMI alone. The risk of OSA is determined by an integrated assessment of history, sympotms and clinical findings. • The OSA screening process must be completed and documented by the AME. • Pilots determined to be at risk for OSA will be issued a medical certificate and will be referred for evaluation. • If required, OSA evaluations can be completed by any physician (including the AME) using the American Academy of Sleep Medicine’s guidelines. • Evaluations do not require a sleep lab or home study if the evaluating physician does not require it. • Results of the evaluations will be forwarded to the FAA within 90 days of the medical exam to satisfy this new guideline. The pilot continues to f ly during this period. • Pilots diagnosed with OSA can send documentation of effective treatment to the FAA in order to receive consideration for a Special Issuance medical certificate. This time the FAA listened to pilots and industry groups and changed a rather restrictive policy. The result will benefit pilots as they can still f ly during the evaluation period and save months being grounded while the FAA processes a deferral. Overall aviation safety and pilot health will be positively addressed. And most important, the financial burdens and disincentives for obtaining OSA evaluation have been reduced. More Good News Over the past year the FAA Medical Certification Branch has changed the internal workings of how the AME can streamline the process for airmen to get their medical certificates in the face of a long list of health challenges. Traditionally, the AME had to defer issuing a certificate for most health issues. This process of special issuance has been a thorn in the side of many airmen. Now, for many of the more common health challenges and diseases, the AME has guidance on what to review, and if positive, can issue the certificate. This new program is known as “CACI”Cases/conditions AME Can Issue. Some examples of conditions the AME can now issue are: Arthritis, Glaucoma, Hypertension, Asthma, Hep-C, hypothyroidism, Renal Cancer, Prostate Cancer, and Migraines. The list is still growing. It is great to see the FAA decentralizing the authority to grant medical certification to the AME’s out in the field. Progress! INTRODUCING HEADSET-FRIENDLY SUNGLASSES PAIN FREE • ALL DAY USE • UNBREAKABLE Chuck Crinnian, MD is a RPA Member, FAAST Lead Representative, ATP, CFI and AME. Please call Chuck if you have any questions regarding the FAA Wings program, safety or medical certification concerns. Office#: 480-451-7676 or website: www.aviationdoc.net PRECISION VISION • PRESCRIPTION, BIFOCAL, PHOTOCHROMIC CONVERTIBLE • COMFORTABLE WITH HEADSETS & HELMETS • MICRO THIN TEMPLES INCLUDED • REGULAR TEMPLES INCLUDED FlyingEyesSunglasses.com TO ORDER, CALL: 888-568-8978 www.flyredstar.org 23 John "Chevy" Chris Dilley 24 24 Red Alert Spring 2015 Red Alert Spring 2015 Ford's CJ-6A Manufacturer : Nanchang (1969) Model: CJ-6A 360 HP M-14 engine with mt focke-wulf prop Dynon 10A in front and back cocpits dynon autopilot Garmin SL30 with glide slope, Garmin Sl40, Garmin GTX transponder, Garmin 796 Long range Fuel bladder tanks & fuel vent valve Malcolm hood canopy Smoke System www.flyredstar.org www.flyredstar.org 25 25 Venting Installations On 14-Series Engines B efore examining the different venting systems, a review of the CAA/FAA requirements is instructive. Civil Air Regulation 4 (1940) only had requirements for aircraft structures. CAR 4a (1950) requires that oil tanks be “suitably” vented. Federal Air Regulation 33.39 (current) requires that the crankcase be vented to the atmosphere to preclude leakage of oil from excessive pressure in the crankcase. This can be a serious problem, as we have an engine in the shop today that was somehow pressurized and blew out all seals and some gaskets. The repair requires a complete engine teardown. Since the FAA has no regulatory interest in oil streaks on the fuselage, it is at the discretion of the designer, manufacturer and, in the case of experimental aircraft, the owner to solve this problem. I would get an argument from some FAA persons, but FAR 43 Appendix A clearly does not classify alterations to the venting system as a major alteration. Therefore, per FAR 43, this can be accomplished and approved by an A&P mechanic with a logbook entry. The rule is the same for experimental exhibition, as there is no “major repair or alteration” under the operating limitations requiring notification of the FAA. Crankcase pressure is primarily created from combustion gases that blow by the rings. It is also created by oil introduced into the crankcase by the oil pump that is not counterbalanced by Figure 1 By Carl W. Hays, M14P, Inc. info@m-14p.com the oil removed from the crankcase by the oil scavenge pump. The power section, cam section, and nose case are vented to each other by more than 1.5 square inches internally. The accessory section and forward blower section plate are vented to the rest by approximately 0.3 square inches internally. For venting only, a 620 cubic inch engine should have a vent line diameter of 0.50.625 inches. When the vent is also used as an oil return, the diameter should be larger. First, we will look at the Yak-52 system with the M-14P. The Yak50, -55, -18T and Sukhoi systems are functionally identical. It is more complicated because it is an aerobatic aircraft with an inverted oil system. In positive G operation (Figure 1), the breather from the top of the nose case does nothing. The breather between intake tubes #9 and #1 breathes the entire engine. While it looks like it is connected to the blower, it is not. The passageway connects to the crankcase. With the engine running, oil is sucked from the oil tank by the oil pump, adding pressure to the crankcase, and sucked out of the sump and into the oil tank, reducing crankcase pressure. Ring blow-by and any pressure imbalance is carried to the oil tank. The oil tank has a f lop system where the oil pickup moves to the positive G area of the oil tank, while the vent opening moves to the opposite. Notice that there is no breather exit, so far. Unless there is a gasket or seal leak, there should be no oil on the engine. The breather opening (in Figure 1) is on the left side of the oil tank. From here it runs to an air/oil separator, entering at the bottom. Oil that separates is caught on the baff les and runs to the bottom of the tank and then to the engine sump. The gases go (as installed) over the top of the oil tank and exit the engine cowling past the firewall. Next, look at the same system during inverted f light (Figure 2). The lines that were on the bottom are now on the top and vice versa. The line on the nose case and the breather are now oil return lines to the oil tank. The oil return line from the separator to the sump is now the breather for the entire engine. What was up on the oil tanks is now down, except for the f lop system. It still f lows oil to the oil pump and the vent still goes to the separator. The separator no longer 26 Red Alert Spring 2015 Figure 2 separates. Instead all of the breather gases and oil mist leaves the aircraft through the same outlet breather. If this engine is to be used on a positive G-only aircraft, the sump opening and top of the nose case opening serve no purpose and can be capped. Every American-made radial engine installation has a breather line connection between the engine and oil tank. I suggest doing this is a good idea. Next, let's look at the venting systems on the Wilga and CJ6 (Figure 3). These are the only manufactured aircraft in the US using the AI-14 series engine. Both systems are the same and Figure 3 very unique in the US. The engines are identical internally to the M14P and have the same crankcase breather opening between #9 and #1 intake tubes and a breather opening on top of the nose case. There is no opening on the side of the sump for an oil return. The oil tank is vented independently of the engine. The crankcase “breather” (B) is really an air intake. It is connected to a tube with a bell end that turns forward through the baff ling facing forward. This receives propwash air that includes rain and dirt and forces it into the engine. The actual exit breather is the offset casting (A) on top of the nose case. The blow-by gases and oil mist exit the engine at this point. Yes, it works well as a vent system and is understandable if you know the history of the engine models. It also leaves an oily engine, which, in a dusty area, results in a very hard to keep clean engine. Recommendations The basic system in the Yaks and Sukhois cannot really be improved. While it is a great deal of work, running the outlet breather line out of the tail of a tailwheel aircraft will clean up the belly of the aircraft. Many tailwheel homebuilt aircraft do this. Be sure to add a “whuss” hole in the line in the engine compartment in case water gets trapped in a low point and freezes. CJs and Wilgas: The easiest alteration is to weld a female pipe thread bung near the top of the oil tank and an AN male fitting to the breather casting between intakes #9 and #1. Connect the two with a hose. Blank off the nose case opening. On the Wilga, run a hose from the oil tank breather vent tube past the oil cooler and secure. See also #3. Positive-G homebuilts, see photo 1. Block off the nose case openings. Buy a Kimball’s fitting for the breather (-12 AN male). Run a -12 hose to a Peterson Fluid Systems air/ oil separator #08-0410. Run an -8 hard line from the separator to the top of your oil tank. While the filter on top works fine as a breather with positive Gs, an option is to weld a plate on top, thread the plate and run the vent line down a fixed gear leg on a tailwheel aircraft or out the tail on other aircraft. The breather line can also run down the firewall www.flyredstar.org 27 and extend out past the belly. The separator has a drain into a ¼” female hole on the bottom. This can be run to the engine case to return the oil. The best place to return the oil is to a plate on the side of the accessory case just forward of the start air distributor. If you want to do this, call us first. Remove the wrong plate and major engine damage is a certainty. Photo 1 May you spend more time f lying and less time cleaning oil off your aircraft! IMPORTANT SAFETY NOTE While nearly all US radial engine aircraft have either a front exhaust or a stainless steel dishpan between the exhaust and the accessory section, the Eastern bloc aircraft do not. This creates an extreme fire hazard if a hose leaks fuel or oil in the engine compartment or an exhaust leak contacts a hose with high temperature gas. Be sure your hoses are safe from the exhaust system and are 28 Red Alert Spring 2015 in good shape. If you have any doubt, this is a critical problem— call me. I will tell you what I have seen and heard, along with how vulnerable you can be. An immediate off-airport landing is nearly never a survivable option. FOR SALE Accepting Offers! Totally Restored 1966 Nanchang CJ6—N26CJ •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• L ead pilots, keep your head on a swivel. When you assume the responsibility of flight leader, you go from flying one airplane to flying four airplanes in a 4-ship. It's particularly critical whenever you signal a wingman or wingmen and put them in motion, as with a cross-under. It's not enough to give a signal, look for acknowledgment, and then look away. You must be sure that the wingmen have interpreted your signal correctly and are moving as directed. We have had several situations where cross-under signals were misinterpreted and both #2 and the #3/#4 element all started moving down and aft to cross. Newly rebuilt Super Housai Engine by M14P, Inc. High compression American ceramic coated pistons & rings Engine total time: 40 hours Burns less than ½ quart of oil per hour Airshow smoke system Automotive wiring harness US radio Intercom Mode C transponder ELT Oil filter system All in excellent condition Fastest Housai-powered CJ in the US! Michael Li-Paz KCMA mmlipaz@gmail.com (805) 857-4262 This is also one of the reasons you must caution your wingman to, when signaled, move slowly and deliberately. You must have time to react and redirect the wingmen if things go haywire. www.flyredstar.org 29 YOLO JET BLAST By Phil Wood with photos by Robert Genat & Michael Mainiero Kevin Roll leads an L-39 three-ship with Bret Cox and Kevin Walker on the wing. A fter a three-month rain delay, the CJAA Yolo Jet Blast finally took off on March 8, 2015. In addition to three L-39 participants, this Jet Blast was to include two T-33s, a Marchetti S.211, a T-6 and the Patriot Jet Team’s 1976 Sabreliner piloted by the team’s head, Randy Howell. Among the early arrivals, the S.211 showcased exceptional approach, landing and taxi handling capabilities. After arrival, Doug Matthews removed a number of service panels to provide unobstructed visual examination of this aircraft’s electrical and starter subsystems, and offered detailed cockpit and instrument tours, before leaving it on static display for the balance of the event. The lone prop participant, Mike Pf leger, having fulfilled his responsibility to explain the S.211’s starter subsystem to the participants, the attending crowd, FBO employees, and anyone else in the neighborhood, returned home leaving this Jet Blast without stick time in the aforementioned S.211. Formal f lying kicked off with L-39s piloted by Kevin Roll, Bret Cox, and Kevin Walker practicing formation skills with Mike Mangold and Mike Peterson as IPs. With their remaining fuel, they rendezvoused with the Bonanza photo ship with Greg Blanck at the controls. Even at the Bonanza’s low 150 knots TAS, the L-39s smartly executed FAST maneuvers for some amazing photos. Meanwhile, in another sector, SAE (Specialty Aircraft Exam- 30 30 Red Alert Alert Spring Spring 2015 2015 Red iner) John Penney was running T-33 pilot Greg Colyer through a 61.58 proficiency f light. A 61.58 check f light is required each year for all turbine powered aircraft pilots who want to carry passengers. Colyer passed easily in spite of an environmental system malfunction that directed more cooling to the rear seat (Penney) than the front. Curious … The afternoon saw more FAST practice and a T-bird checkride for future CJAA member, David “Tef lon” Mitchell. Mitchell is a current Air Force f light instructor and former A-10 driver who wants to expand his resume. Congratulations! Saturday’s Sabreliner arrival brought a new dimension to CJAA Jet Blasts. Howell offered upset training in his Sabre- The smiles on the Yolo Jet Blast attendees attest to the excellent f lying conditions and multiple training f lights f lown. liner; Peterson, Walker and Cox took advantage of the opportunity, and returned telling stories of unusual attitudes in a 20,000 pound jet. No photos—sorry… During lunch, Penney explained pilot certification for experimental aircraft types without a designated examiner, which he referred to as “Strange.” His presentation, previously presented by Mark Peterson during the 2015 CJAA Convention, explained the options available to the candidate and examiner. That afternoon, another photo shoot took place with T-33s, piloted by Colyer and Mitchell f lying in formation with the Sabreliner. Also Cox completed his 61.58 ride and Roll relived a dream f lying a newly built, pristine, RV-8 around the pattern. Sunday morning there was one last 3-ship formation f light with the L-39s, earning Cox FAST currency. And then it was quiet at Yolo. CJAA wants to thank Colyer and Walker for a well-organized and executed Jet Blast. Gary Pelfrey and the crew at Davis Flight Support provided world-class facilities, food, beverages, ground support, and good cheer throughout the event. We had access to a wonderful pilot lounge and large conference room with excellent audio/video systems that were utilized for briefings and several presentations and videos. A big “Thank You” to Gary and his team! Above: Kevin Walker f lies over Lake Berryessa with IP Mike Mangold in his back seat. Below: Dave "Tef lon" Mitchell leads Greg Colyer in a second T-33 and Sabreliner piloted by Randy Howell. www.flyredstar.org www.flyredstar.org 31 31 Fly-By Timing W hen it comes to doing a f ly-by you can either show up sometime during the ceremony, make a few passes, and head for home, or you can arrive overhead for the missing man pass on the last note of "Taps." The former offers the challenge of finding the event and getting a good looking formation across the crowd. But, throw in timing so the f lyby coincides with end of "Taps," and you have a much more difficult but much more touching performance. In 2003 Tracy (my wife and fellow T-34 wingman—we only had one T-34 so guess who was usually GIB?) asked me to put together a f ly-by for a close friend's funeral at a nearby cemetery. We decided from the get-go that we didn't want to just be overhead during the ceremony—we wanted an "End of Taps" f ly-by. Naively (which I am), I contacted the Thunderbirds (I am a retired USAF pilot) but never heard anything back from them. (Sometime later I asked Bill Cherwin, leader of the Lima Lima Formation Team (www.limalima.com), how he does it. He said he f lies a figure eight pattern at a predetermined point and when he gets the call from his ground guy, he knows which way to turn, how much to dump the nose, and what other adjustments he needs to make. His fellow Lima Lima pilots, who hang on his wing while doing over-the-top aerobatics during airshows, have no problems staying with him no matter what he does—and it all works out. In other words, he's done it so many times he can just do it without thinking about it.) I'm a numbers kind of guy. Trigonometry is my friend. I can tell you what your turn radius is going to be at any speed and any bank angle and how long it is going to take you to make a 180° turn. (Don't worry, you don't have to be like me. I have worked it all out. All you have to do is execute.) Trouble is, I can only do that when I am sitting at my computer with my spreadsheets. As Larry Bunce, a CFI at North Island Navy Flying Club (I f lew T-34s there back in the 90s), used to say: "The cockpit is not a place for higher math." I needed to come up with something that could be used in the cockpit to make it happen when the guy on the ground gave me the call, and because I wanted to be able to pass on what I came up with to others, I needed to turn it into a procedure verses a "that looks about right" maneuver. But first I want to digress for a bit—mainly because I like to talk about the good old days and, secondarily, because it sort of relates to what I am talking about. When I f lew the A-7D (1974-1978) we had a computed bombing system that calculated, 25 times per second, where the bomb would hit. All I had to do was line up the "green stuff " in the HUD (Head Up Display) with the target, hold the "consent button,” pull out, and the computer would let the bomb go at the right time. But, after the A-7 I f lew the A-10, before the Warthog 32 Red Alert Spring 2015 By Don Ramm donramm@gmail.com had a computed bomb dropping systems. I had to learn how to drop “manual bombs.” Since the average pilot couldn't calculate the proper release point 25 times per second for any possible dive angle, airspeed, and release altitude, we picked specific dive angles for ordnance delivery. All of the release parameters were worked out by the weapons school guys and were published in a manual called the T.O. A-10A-34, the "Dash 34.” Well, just as back in my manual bomb dropping days, I needed to come up with my own "Dash 34" for doing f ly-bys, such that if I hit all of the parameters I'd get a "shack" (bomb hits the target). This article will attempt to describe how I came up with those parameters, and the coordination that is absolutely vital, to get your f light over the ceremony at just the right time. A note about using a GPS: I never had a very good one. Mine could only figure out how long it would take me to get from where I was to the next point by going directly to that point— it could not take into consideration a 30° banked turn I had to smoothly negotiate so as not to lose my wingmen. So I never used it for "close in" work – from the holding pattern to the ceremony. I would use it to ensure I got to the holding point when I wanted to but that's about it. Overview Contact the family. Tell them what you can do and find out what they want. So I don't lose you while trying to describe multiple passes, let's say they just want the missing man pass. The ground guy gets there an hour early to meet with the honor guard to find out how long Taps is, and finds an event at just the right moment in the ceremony (that's the hard part) to cue the f light. The f light enters holding at a predetermined spot (exactly two nm from ceremony = one minute at 120 knots). When the predetermined event arrives in the ceremony, the ground guy cues the f light. The f light lead—depending on where he is in the holding orbit —executes the appropriate maneuver and heads in to the target. As a final adjustment, the ground guy—knowing how long Taps is, and knowing where the f light will be when Taps should start—cues the bugler to begin. That's all there is to it, you have a perfect f ly-by, there isn't a dry eye in the crowd, and they can't imagine how you did it. Timing A burial service may start at a specific time but no ceremony is going to stick to a schedule such that you can blindly f ly over at exactly 10 minutes after the scheduled start time. In order to arrive overhead at the last note of Taps you must have someone on the ground who gives you a cue and you, no matter where you are in the holding pattern, need to arrive overhead at exactly some number of minutes and seconds later—for me that is three minutes. I'll show you were I get that below. I've got a name for it: Minimum Cue Time. The ground guy knows about Minimum Cue Time. His number one job is to work with the honor guard and find out where they will be in their ceremony three minutes before the end of Taps. Flight Planning I highly recommend the use of Google Earth for f light planning. Use it to: There aren't a lot of real buglers out there. All honor guard ceremonies that I have done since 2003, except for one, have used a recorded version of Taps. The bugler has a real bugle but the electronic device that sounds Taps fits into the front of the bugle. All the bugler has to do it turn it on and make it look like they are blowing Taps. The recorded version takes one minute on the dot, in my experience. If you do have a real bugler they can more than likely tell you how long it will take to play Taps. • If Taps takes a minute, you need to find an event two minutes before that. Sometimes, two minutes before that is before the honor guard starts. If so, work something out with them to stretch out the ceremony or ask them to change things around a bit. If they normally do a rif le salute immediately followed by Taps and then fold the f lag, ask them to fold the f lag first. I have always found the honor guard to oblige to make the f ly-by work out. This is just as big of a thrill for them as it is for the family. The best way to figure out when the cue should be? Find out when the honor guard will be doing a similar ceremony (with or without rif le salute—it depends on the status of the deceased) and watch. Video the ceremony (from a respectable distance, of course) and watch it back at your computer. The ground guy does the best he can to come up with an event that is two minutes before Taps will begin. If anything, wait a little bit beyond that event before you cue the f light. Why? Because you have an ace in the hole to make everything work out. The ground guy's number two job is to hook up with the bugler and get him to wait until a signal from you to begin Taps. That way, if things happen more quickly than planned, instead of starting Taps at the normal point in the ceremony (usually right after the rif le volley if there is on), the bugler will wait. Yes, there will be some dead time. Maybe even 30 seconds if the chosen event wasn't at the perfect moment. Silence is fine. Don't be afraid of having some. This isn't radio. When the ground guy sees the f light at the one minute out point (or maybe a few seconds before since the bugler has to turn the bugle on and raise it to his lips—plus there is nothing wrong with Taps ending and then another 5 -10 seconds until the f light is actually overhead. How does the ground guy know when the f light is one-minute out? Read on. Find the target. Not just the general location of the cemetery. Find the place where the ceremony will take place. At national cemeteries that is at a "committal shelter" somewhere on the grounds and usually easy to see; however, I have done f ly-bys over the plot where the deceased will be buried. Grave-side ceremonies will have some chairs set up, and possibly a tent. • Pick the direction from which you want to run-in to the target. Ideally, you go to the cemetery ahead of time and figure out the best heading to run in from. If you can't determine a good heading, ask the cemetery staff which direction the family will be facing and make the run in from their 12 o'clock. • Find an IP (initial point) on that run-in course that is two nm away. This is where Google Earth is a Godsend. Select the "Ruler" tool, change the units to nautical miles, click on the target, and move the crosshairs out the direction you are going to run in from until the "Ruler" says you are at two nm. Move the crosshairs from side to side, maintaining the two nm distance from the target, until you land upon some recognizable landmark. It doesn't have to be huge. Why two nautical miles? Because I f ly the whole thing at 120 knots, and it takes one minute to cover two nm. (I don't worry about the winds , there is only so much my pea brain can handle.) So when crossing the IP, you call your ground guy, who then cues the bugler. Now you have an IP and an aerial view that you can use to study the run-in. Google Earth allows you to view the world from an angle verses a direct overhead view. It even tells you what your altitude is so you can (with some practice) "f ly" the run-in at the altitude you will use to get a very near real world view. Is the target small? Is the chosen IP small? Use the aerial view to find big things nearby and use them to funnel you into the point you are looking for. Get very familiar with the run-in. How far out do you want to have #3 initiate the pull? 10 seconds before overhead? 10 seconds is 1/6th of the run-in. That's 1/6th of two nm. That's 1/3 nm. So bring up the "Ruler" in Google Earth again and find a point that is 1/3 nm out. Well, that point is going to be directly under you when you get to that point—pretty www.flyredstar.org 33 hard to see. But if you look left and right of the run-in line at that point, you can find something abeam your run-in that you can look for that will tell you when you are 1/3 nm out. Resist the urge (in my opinion) to look at your GPS to check your distance. Better that you look outside for a landmark on the ground. Holding and the "Go" Call Holding is not a gaggle maneuver out away from the crowd. Sure, you may have to kill 15 minutes because you took off early, and the ceremony stated late, and they insisted on saying a few words before the honor guard began their ceremony. But, when it gets close to "Go" time, you need to be neatly established in the holding orbit. Just in case it isn't obvious, this is what my holding pattern looks like: a few minutes of when you expect to hear the "GO!" call so you are established in the holding orbit. All you have to do, no matter where you are in the holding pattern when the ground guy calls you in, is be over the IP exactly two minutes after you get the call. Because I need to keep things as simple as possible, I don't figure out what I should do for every possible point in holding. Instead, I figured out what I would do in only four places and if I get the call when somewhere other than one of those four positions in holding, I would fudge a little bit—just like when dropping bombs. The four places are: • At the IP • One forth of the way around with 270° of turn left • Halfway around the circle with 180° of turn left • Three fourths of the way around with 90° of turn left Since you are f lying a standard rate turn, a two minute 360, each position is 30 seconds away from the next point. Why a standard rate turn? Because it takes two minutes to do a 360°, turn and it is very easy on the wingmen. This gives you the ability to steepen the bank without turning holding into an aerobatic maneuver. At 120 knots, a standard rate turn is 18° of bank, or use that turn and bank indicator to help you find what standard rate looks like through your windscreen and hold that. Time to review: The ground guy is looking for an even three minutes before end of Taps. We set up the run-in so it will take exactly one minute for you to get from the IP to target. It is within 34 Red Alert Spring 2015 • When you are at the IP, it will take you two minutes to go around the circle to get back to the IP. If you get the "GO!" call there, you just keep on doing what you were doing for one more orbit, and then head in to the target. • Backing up to the 90° point: If you get the call when you are here you are only 30 seconds from the IP so you need to soak up an additional 1+30. Well, at 120 knots, if you steepen up the bank just a bit to 24° you will use up 1+30. That is, when you get the call, don't change a thing until you get back to the IP and then steepen the bank up to 24°. When you get back around to the IP you will have used up two minutes. You could steepen up the bank at any point between there and the IP—just do the slightly steeper orbit for a 360°turn, and then head for the IP. • Backing up to the 180° point: If you get the call here you are one minute away from the IP, so you need to do something that uses up one more minute. At 120 knots, a 33° bank turn • takes one minute. Wait until you get back to the IP, or do the 33° bank 180 anywhere along the way for a full 360° turn, and then resume the normal orbit and head for the IP. you are going to do so he can knows what's up. And, you should call when you are one minute out so he can queue the bugler—assuming the missing man is going to coincide with end of Taps. At the 270° point you only have 30 seconds to soak up. As a matter of fact a 53° bank 360 will soak up that 30 seconds and your wingmen can probably hang in there, but in keeping with making maneuvers gentle so the f light can look sharp at all times, I have another suggestion for how to take care of that 30 seconds. When you get to the 270 point, roll out. Hold that for 15 seconds, and then roll back into your 18° bank turn. When you are lined up with the run-in heading you should be 15 seconds away from the IP and you've used up that extra 30 seconds. Google Earth Is Your Friend Just like a simulator can help you be a better instrument pilot, Google Earth can help you practice the "approach" as many times as you want. But instead of looking at your instruments, use Earth to help you find visual cues: For the IP, for a spot in the middle of your holding pattern, for a spot that you will be abeam when you tell #3 to begin pull up (because by that time the ceremony may be under your nose). That's it. Apply fudge factor if you are any place else on the circle. Let's say you are halfway between the 270 and 180 points. To use up extra time at 180 you do a 360 at 33° of bank. To use up extra time at 270 you could have used 53° bank, so you could use just less than a 45° bank 360 and it would work out. Or you could roll out at the 180 and go outbound for 22 seconds, do 180 to intercept extended run-in, and you'd be 22 seconds away from the IP, and back on schedule. As you are going around and around in holding, think about what you would do if you got the call at various points and go over in your mind what you would do. One of the reasons I like this approach is that when you get the call you initially don't do anything—the adjustment you make is always up ahead. So you don't have to make any sudden movements. Wingmen like it when lead doesn't make sudden movements. In all cases, when you are at the IP, let the ground guy know so he can cue the bugler. Ask the ground guy to hold the mic button down so you can hear Taps. It will be too late to make any dramatic changes but it will put you a little closer to the ceremony. Modifications For the purpose of this article I will assume you are making one pass—the missing man pass. In reality we always do two passes: First one in diamond, a racetrack pattern, and the missing man pass. Why two? For what we were charging for a f ly-by (we didn't do them for free), we figured it was the least we could do. The first pass to let them know we were there (the "hello" pass) and the second one for the real reason were there—the missing man pass. You can still use this procedure for making the first pass. For the second pass, do a racetrack pattern: immediate turn to "downwind" after passing overhead on the diamond pass, proceed outbound for 30 seconds, another 180 to line up on final, and you should be 30 seconds out. So how long does the racetrack pattern take? Depends on the bank angle you use, and what you use depends on how quickly you want to get back in. Remember that the 33° bank turn takes one minute. So use that for turn to downwind and then turn to final and the circuit will take you two minutes. Want to be more gentle? Fall back to a 24° bank turn = 1+30 for 360 or 2+30 for the whole circuit. Using a standard rate turn (18° bank) would mean the race track takes three minutes. Take your pick. Make sure the ground guy knows what Source Material Where did all of these numbers come from? Answer: A few equations and a spreadsheet. Unfortunately, I can't paste a spreadsheet that you can tweak into a printed article. What's to tweak? Maybe you don't want to f ly at 120 knots. That changes distance of IP from target and changes all of the bank angles I mention. So, I have put this article and the spreadsheet on the T-34 Association's website. Go to www.t-34.com, click on "Formation and FAST" in the left column, and then click on "Fly-by Timing" on the "Formation and FAST" page. The T-34 Association's website is supposed to be changing in the next few weeks so those directions may not be correct when you read this. Send an email to me (donramm@gmail.com) and I will send a copy to you. I have done this in a T-34 which shows airspeed in knots. Some of you may have an airspeed indicator that is measured in miles/ hour or even kilometer/hour. So figure out what 120 knots is on your airspeed gauge and f ly that. If you want faster or slower, figure out what that speed is in knots and enter it in my spreadsheet and figure out what bank to use to execute a 360° turn in two minutes, 1.5 minutes, and so on. IN CASE YOU WANT TO KNOW THE MAGIC FORMULAS: Turn radius = V2 / 11.3* tangent (bank angle) Turn rate = 1091 * tangent (bank angle) / V Where: V2 = velocity squared Bank angel is in degrees V = airspeed in knots Note: If you use something other than knots (mph or kph), the constants 11.3 and 1091 will be different. Please see page 43 for an abbreviated timing table for various angles of bank at 120 knots. www.flyredstar.org 35 How well do you know your airplane? By Michael “Viper” Maloco mmaloco@aol.com Y ou know what’s so great about being an arm chair quarterback? You always know the right thing to do, there’s no pucker factor, there’s no rush, and you can sit back and think about the situation—take as long as you like, peel back the layers like an onion, and totally dissect the situation. How many times have we looked at another’s performance and thought to ourselves, “Why did he or she do that, when you could have done this?” Today I was at the airport seeing some of my friends head off for a local f light. Although I was asked to back seat instruct, I chose not to go as I was just getting over a head cold. I watched them depart the area and went back into the hangar to get a refill of coffee when I heard the distinct sound of a T-28 taxiing by. I headed outside to watch it take off. God I miss my T-28, what a wonderful airplane, anyone who has owned one, or f lown them in military, knows it has such a sweet sound all to itself, just like a P-51. Take off was normal, the plane climbed out and headed to the northeast. Then a call came in to the tower that he needed to return to the airport. Tower asked if he needed assistance. “I have a chip light warning.” I’m happy to say that this incident had a safe ending with the plane landing and no further complications. Now let’s take this example and bring it back to the planes we f ly. If you’re reading this article, it’s because you belong to one of the three organizations to which I am a member: NATA, the T-34 Association, or the RedStar Pilots Association. Many of us who f ly warbirds climb into our cockpits, after donning our parachutes. You do have a parachute, don’t you? With the parachute we now have two options should something happen to that engine up front. 1. We get to ride the plane down. 2. We get to go over the side. Options, these are wonderful things, and it’s nice to have more than one. So let’s look at what happens right after takeoff, now our chip light comes on, or our engine starts to run rough. All of a sudden that wonderful clear bright sunny day isn’t looking so sunny. Retro Air Designs AVIATION AND WWII COLLECTIBLES www.retroairdesigns.com 619-249-3916 36 Red Alert Spring 2015 What the heck do I do now? Skip Holms wrote an article that helped save my bacon on one of my f lights. I had just departed KCMA, headed out for a fun f light in my T-28. After takeoff, I selected gear up and all the lights, bells and whistles went dark. In Skip’s article he stated, “If everything goes to heck after you f lip a switch or push a button, put it back the way it was before.” That’s exactly what I did, I put the gear back down and everything came back on line. A safe landing followed. For those of you unfamiliar with Skip, he was a USAF fighter pilot who after serving his country, went on to f ly for Lockheed aircraft as one of their test pilots. By the way Skip, if you get to read or hear of this, THANK YOU! Okay so we’ve just taken off, we’re in the climb, reducing our power to climb power, and now the chip light comes on, or the engine is starting to run rough. We’re still producing power and the plane is still climbing. What now? Stay calm, f ly the plane, and think. In this scenario, altitude is life—oh, did I mention you’re over a populated area, and under Class B airspace? Continue the climb, stay in the pattern, or head back to the airport—check your instruments but touch nothing. It’s important that we need to get to a position relative to the airport that if the engine goes full stop, we’ll have the altitude to make a safe dead-stick landing. Most Important: FLY THE PLANE. Do whatever you need to do to get you back on Mother Earth safely. You can always explain your reasons for doing whatever you needed to do, later. Recently on the T-34 chat site we had a very lengthy discussion on whether or not to use "Mayday," "Pan, Pan, Pan," or just saying: "I need to come back to the airport immediately." It was VERY interesting to see the differences in opinion, as well as the differences in what type of training you received as a student pilot. Here’s the main thing—no one can make that call for you, and you need to do what’s correct in your mind for your situation at that time. The armchair pilots can have fun with your decisions later. Many reading this have probably had the privilege of f lying some pretty exotic aircraft—I mentioned that I had a T-28B. I also have a T-34A. I can tell you that the glide ratio between these two airplanes is dramatically different. The T-34 would give you many options, whereas the T-28, which is a wonderful aircraft to f ly, has the glide ratio of a brick. Remember it’s easy to lose altitude; it’s not so easy to get it back. If you have not had the privilege of watching Bob Hoover’s airshow demonstrations, pull it up on YouTube and learn. This gentleman is a master of energy management, but he has had many years of practicing his routine. When was the last time you practiced engine out landings? Have you ever climbed up to a safe altitude, pulled the power, set up your optimum glide speed, or tried a 180° turn to see how much altitude you’ll lose? Many of us, and I include myself, don’t practice these maneuvers enough. Yes, we go out and do all the formation maneuvers, but that’s not going to help if the engine quits. The warbird community has done a real good job as far as safety goes, and we are helping the FAA come out with new, better guidelines to further enhance the safety of our organizations. Each and every one of you has, in one way or another, made a contribution to this effort. You may not be sitting at the table with the FAA, or helping to write the guidelines of the RPA manuals, (which are excellent)—the fact that we conduct ourselves and our f lights in a safe manner helps greatly. If you have not downloaded the latest version of the RPA Formation Manual, I encourage you to do so. I will tell you there are a few mistakes in this DRAFT version that the writers are apprised of, and the manual will be corrected. WHIRLWINDPROPELLERS CORPORATION W530 High Performance Composite Blades V530 Blade Reconditioning Spinners: 20” Composite for V530/W530 Propellers 619 562 3725 http://whirlwindpropellers.com www.flyredstar.org 37 Flying While Fatigued It's Not Just An Airline Issue F atigue is a common subject matter among professional pilots, especially those who work long hours or cross many time zones. It is a subject that has been intimately studied by researchers. The FAA and the military set strict work rules for aircrew duty day and rest requirements. Unfortunately, as warbird pilots we don’t usually follow the same make-sense guidelines as the airlines and military. Let’s look at the causes of fatigue and see what we can do to mitigate its effects. Many things can cause us to feel fatigued. It is said you are what you eat. Remember the old saying that a fighter pilot lunch is a candy bar and a coke? Too many times true, and a definite no-no. Your blood sugar spikes, your pancreas releases insulin, and then your blood sugar crashes, making you feel very fatigued. Also, who isn’t heavier now than they were when they were younger? Heck, I’m carrying 40 pounds more than I did 30 years ago! Being overweight brings so many health issues including the fatigue of carrying that extra weight around! We also should not over-consume caffeine. Most people can tolerate about three cups of coffee per day. An overdose of caffeine can cause a rapid or irregular heartbeat, headaches, and nervous jitters. None of these are conducive to a feeling of well-being. Here is the obvious one: sleep. Did you get enough last night? Most people need six-eight hours of restful sleep each night. Sleep loss is cumulative. You can go a few days getting less than you need, but your body will stock back up when you finally allow it. I’ve personally slept 10-12 hours after a few days of sleep deprivation. For those of us who f ly internationally, changing time zones can play heck with your circadian rhythm. The average person adjusts by one time zone per 24 hour period. So if you just got back from that wonderful European vacation and have been itching to f ly your warbird, you may be very tired when your eyes are open and your body is still somewhere over the Atlantic! Those of you who exercise regularly know the positive effects from that activity: more energy, more endurance, less weight, stronger libido, and fewer health issues. However, it is important to exercise at the right time. Try to avoid doing so right before bedtime, as the physical stimulus may keep you from falling sleep. I use exercise at strategic times during those international layovers to regulate my appetite and to help me sleep, even if it’s at odd hours on my body clock. Being able to take naps is a wonderful aid in combating fatigue caused by time zones changes and f lying at night or “back side of the clock” as we call it. Naps, coupled with exercise and proper diet, can make a huge difference in being alert when you really 38 Red Alert Spring 2015 By Rich "Mongoose" Hess hess737@aol.com need to be. The normal human cycles from shallow, to deep, to shallow sleep every 45 minutes. I am EXACTLY average. A short 15-30 minute “combat nap” is sometimes needed after an adrenaline rush but I can set my watch by my ability to nap in 45 minute increments! Speaking of adrenaline, we all know it is released into your blood stream in a fight-or-f light scenario. It constricts your blood vessels and opens your airways so you can deal with the perceived threat. Note the word perceived. It doesn’t have to be real. Regardless, being strapped in a cockpit doesn’t allow us to fight or run away so the effects of that f lood of adrenaline can be difficult to manage. Good training, procedures, and habits can help. However, the after-effects of adrenaline can be devastating: shortness of breath, high blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, dizziness, headache, sweating, confusion, nausea, weakness, and muscle tremors. Anemia is another common cause of fatigue. A low red blood cell count can occur because of a number of reasons: recent blood donation, a heavy menstrual period, or a blood imbalance. Vitamin supplements or foods rich in iron, such as red meats, and dark, leafy vegetables, can help. A lack of other key nutrients can also cause fatigue. Low on potassium? Eat some bananas! Low T? Exercise and see your doctor. I have my blood work analyzed with every Class One physical because body chemistry changes with age! A number of other medical conditions can also affect your energy level. Diabetes and an over- or under-functioning thyroid can cause fatigue. Do you have blurred vision, have to urinate often, or have eyes like Marty Feldman? See your doctor and get a simple blood test. Here’s a question: Do you snore loudly? It could be evidence of an obstruction in your airway. Many people wake after a long night’s sleep feeling worse than when they went to bed! See your doctor or register with a sleep clinic. There may be a good reason why your sleep does not refresh you. Lastly, are you in good shape? Are you overweight? Do you have bad eating habits? Do you drink or smoke to excess? Do you have a family history of heart disease? A bad or over-worked heart, or clogged arteries will definitely make you feel fatigued. Again, there is no substitute for consulting your doctor. So what can we do as warbird pilots? We can start by being honest with ourselves. We all live very busy lives with many things going on, some good, and some bad. The airlines emphasize calling in sick if you’re not ready to f ly: physically or mentally. The military had us fill out a personal rating sheet before every sortie. It asked the following questions and assigned a numerical score. • Are you having any family problems: divorce, children, or illness? • Did you sleep well last night? • Are you having any financial problems? • Have you prepared yourself for this mission? Are you current? • Do you have any health problems? Are you on any medications? You get the idea. If you rated a particularly high or low score, depending on the scale, you were either directed to talk to your commander or removed from the mission that day. No penalty. No repercussion. It is safer to stay on the ground than to place yourself or someone else at risk in an airplane. We’ve had warbird accidents where fatigue was cited as a possible contributing factor. Don Mayer’s PARACHUTE SHOP Saving Lives since 1973 Parachute Sales, Inspections and Packing, and Repairs For those of us who f lew as civilian or military instructors, remember being 20-something and f lying three or four times a day? Try that now at age 50 or 60 at a formation clinic! Remember Friday nights at the O-club? Heck, at 25 or 30 years old you have plenty of spare liver and brain cells, right? Not so at 50 or 60! Instructors, evaluators, and f light leaders have a responsibility to monitor their wards and decide who should or should NOT be in a f light the next day. Watch for the “red f lags” that say, “This guy’s not in any condition to f ly.” Droopy eyes, tardiness, yawning, stretching, not paying attention during the brief, confusion, and comments like, “I’m getting too old for this s__t!” might be the signs of someone who is not ready to f ly. Sit them down and modify the profile. Like complacency, fatigue does not readily announce its presence in our minds and bodies. We have to examine ourselves. We have to constantly evaluate our thought processes and physical sensations, even after takeoff and during the f light as it progresses. Just as we constantly watch for fields to put the plane into if the engine goes AWOL, we should be frequently asking ourselves, “Am I awake, aware and clear-minded enough to continue what I’m doing?” If the answer is not an absolute “Yes” it’s time to knock it off. This is especially important if we are f lying high energy, high stress, demanding profiles such as multiple aerobatic and formation sorties, as we do at clinics and f ly-ins. As many of you have heard me say before, this community of warbird pilots and airplanes is my passion. I have shed tears over the loss of numerous friends and acquaintances. Take the time to be honest with yourselves, do the things that preserve your health and alertness, and do not take unnecessary risks. Each of you has many good reasons to live, if only so I can have the joy of f lying with you one more time! Fly safe and always check six!!! Squadron 306 $1,700 Pepperell Airport, 165 Nashua Road, Pepperell, MA 01463 (978)433-8550 donmayer@parachuteshop.com www.parachuteshop.com www.flyredstar.org 39 Jet Museum Buys a CJ-6 from the US Post Office ? By Zach McNeill z@warbirdseast.com W orld Heritage Air Museum is a non-profit, f lying jet warbird museum out of Detroit, Michigan. It rescues Cold War era jets, brings them to f light status, and uses them to inspire the youth of America while supporting the Armed Forces at airshows and training centers all across the United States. The World Heritage Museum currently has two locations. The primary maintenance and restoration facility is at Detroit City International Airport (KDET), right in the middle of the economically challenged portion of Detroit. The most recent addition to the museum is our show hangar. The show hangar along with the museums headquarters is located at Oakland County International Airport, located in Pontiac, Michigan (KPTK). The museum was created by a small group of aviation enthusiasts. They started to work and f ly together, and one had an idea. This individual identified that because of the cost of operations and increases in regulation involving the operation of jet warbirds, there may need to be an organization that works closely with the community and regulatory bodies to ensure that these aircraft can continue to f ly in perpetuity. These gentlemen, under the leadership of Marty “Juice” Tibbitts, decided to form a 501C3 organization with three primary goals. 1. The first is to educate the general public on the history of these aircraft through hands on experience. 2. Demonstrate the capabilities and limitations of these historically significant aircraft at public events. 3. Acquire a complete historical aviation collection that clearly shows the evolution of jet warbirds f light characteristics. Ensuring the availability of unique f lying characteristics are available to our national test pilot organizations. With these goals in mind, the museum expanded it’s collection rapidly. This effort, over the past five years, has resulted in the acquisition of the following aircraft: • Two L-29 Delfin’s • One L-39 Albatross • Two Dehavilland Vampires • One Dehavilland Venom • Two Mig 15 UTI’s • One Mig 17A • One Super Fouga Majister CM-170 • Three Casa Jets • One Super Pinto TT-1 The museum's leadership has worked hard to increase the cross section of aircraft the museum owns. The current collection spans nearly the entire straight-wing jet trainers' performance envelopes. Several of these jets have extremely unique f lying characteristics that nest perfectly into the third mission area of the museum. The rapid acquisition in aircraft led to a period of time that the museum had considerably more hangar queens than f lying machines. The museum had a to take a pause and look at the staff and volunteer structure and make some fundamental changes in order to increase the up aircraft rate without compromising quality maintenance practices. Under the leadership of Mr. Tibbitts and newly joined director Tom “Mongo” Proctor the museum hired a new maintenance team and slowed their acquisition rate. The maintenance team has gelled and the leadership was given the opportunity to move their focus to pilot membership. In all volunteer f lying organizations the primary source of revenue is generally provided by pilots and supporting foundations. The World Heritage Air Museum is no different. As the board discussed the type of pilot we were searching for we found a glaring safety issue. The museum lacked a transition aircraft. The learning curve affiliated with shifting from a Cessna 172 with only one thousand f lying hours and an instrument check to a 40 Red Alert Spring 2015 high performance jet is massive. In most instances potential members declined the opportunity. Attempting to handle a fast moving aircraft coupled with not being able to taxi because of the differential air brakes was just too much to bite off at one time. The board decided that the museum needed a tricycle, propeller driven, castering nose wheel, tandem-seat aircraft with handle brakes. This was designed to mitigate the training risks associated with a transfer from a Cessna to a warbird jet. There are many more safety controls in place but this article is specifically written to describe the logic behind a jet warbird museum purchasing a propeller driven aircraft. • Intake drain For the uninitiated, the preponderance of the jet warbirds operated in the US utilize a difficult to learn braking system that requires the pilot to control which main mount is receiving brake pressure by pedal position and then the amount of braking is controlled by a lever on the stick. This is a very difficult skill to learn. By utilizing an aircraft like the Yak-52 or the CJ-6 the board could mitigate this risk by placing that training in a lower performance aircraft. • Engine chip light • Electric fuel boost pump (eliminates wobble pump) • Dynon 10” Sky View EFIS with engine monitoring coupled to SL-30 in front cockpit • Dynon 7” Sky View EFIS in rear cockpit • COMM/NAV 1: Garmin SL-30 • COMM 2: ICOM A-210 The board overwhelmingly voted to purchase a CJ-6 or Yak52. All it had to do was wait for the right opportunity. Several months of searching Controller, E-Bay, looking for donors, Juice found an aircraft that was up for auction by the United States Postal Service (another article is needed for that story). We entered the bidding process and ended up with one of the most pristine examples of a Super CJ-6 in the world. • Garmin GTX327 Transponder • SL-15 Audio Panel • TruTrak solid state stand by ADI with GPS heading and VSI • 2 ¼” stand by airspeed and altimeter • SIRS lighted mag compass • Dynon AP coupled to EFIS • Custom rear instrument panel with refurbished original gauges • Infinity stick grips in both cockpits wired to radios, smoke, etc. • 74 gallon, extended range, all metal fuel tanks with capacitance senders wired to EFIS • Electric fuel boost / prime system • Fuel f low meter • Fuel totalizer • OHD oil cooler • All new hoses • Electric fuel shutoff with reinforced oil reservoir • Oil cooler FOD screen / winterization kit • Entire airframe rewired to show quality standards Here is a summary of the aircraft: • Five point Hooker harness in both cockpits • Fire-sleeved hoses FWF • Air bottles pressure tested • All new pneumatic hard lines • All new hoses • All new bearings • All pneumatic valves overhauled • Battery backup on EFIS and stand by ADI • Non-skid coating on wing walk • CO reduction kit • New f light control cables • New pitot static lines www.flyredstar.org 41 Without stating the obvious, this aircraft is nearly perfect. Actually in the year or so since the museum acquired the aircraft the team has not found any safety issues with the aircraft. It is simply a stunning restoration. I do not know the team that completed the restoration but Worlwide Warbirds Inc. has their sticker on the back of the airplane so the author tips his hat to them! • Relays relocated to battery compartment • Full custom schematics and diagrams for entire aircraft • Custom circuit breaker panels and switches • Infinity stick grips • Three axis electric trim • AVG “Flying Tigers” paint scheme as seen on the cover of Aircraft Spruce catalog, Trade a Plane, and others • Detailed landing gear with all Cad plated hardware • Polished stainless brake handles • Rudder pedals completely overhauled, painted and reassembled with chrome pedals and Cad hardware • Worldwide Warbirds rudder pedal extensions • Polished stainless hardware throughout • All US wiring • Electronic engine monitoring • Floor carpet with stainless heal pans • Diamond stitch interior padding made from fire resistant material • Completely rebuilt using AN hardware and bulkhead fittings whenever possible Marty “Juice” Tibbits (mtibbitts@citadelsystems.com) • All tubes painted dark gray, secured with walnut blocks and neatly bent Zach “Z” McNeill (Z@warbirdseast.com) • All check valves overhauled Inadvertently we found another huge benefit to the museum. The CJ-6 is an incredible formation training platform. The aircraft provides incredible cost savings while reducing the overall time to train for each individual. WHAM’s formation training requires the student to train in the CJ-6 then advance to a jet platform. This greatly reduces the time to train in the jet warbirds saving the student literally tens of thousands of dollars and saves valuable time on the older jets. Now that the museum has this new edition, all it needs is new pilots. Whether you are an old fighter pilot or one who has always dreamed about f lying a jet warbird, WHAM is here to work with you. The team at the World Heritage Air Museum wants to talk to you. Send an e-mail ahead of your visit and one of the board members will be there to greet you! Tom “Mongo” Proctor (Tom@wlc-ltd.com) Mort’s Aero Conveniently located at THE FLYING W, N14 LUMBERTON, NJ CJ6 and Yak Experts MortsAero@comcast.net (856) 495-3159 Morten Stoverud CFII, MEI, ATP, FE, A&P, IA 42 Red Alert Spring 2015 Mort’s Aero Fly-By Timing Continued from page 35 Abbreviated timing table for various angles of bank at 120 knots. Airspeed Bank Angle (degrees) Radius (feet) Radius (nm) Diameter (nm) Turn Rate (°/sec) Time to Execute 360° Turn (sec) Time to Execute 360° Turn (min) 120 10 7227 1.19 2.38 1.6 225 3:44 120 15 4756 0.78 1.56 2.4 148 2:27 120 18 3922 0.65 1.29 3.0 122 2:01 120 20 3501 0.58 1.15 3.3 109 1:48 120 24 2862 0.47 0.94 4.0 89 1:28 120 25 2733 0.45 0.90 4.2 85 1:24 120 30 2207 0.36 0.73 5.2 69 1:08 120 33 1962 0.32 0.65 5.9 61 1:00 120 35 1820 0.30 0.60 6.4 57 0:56 120 40 1519 0.25 0.50 7.6 47 0:47 120 41 1466 0.24 0.48 7.9 46 0:45 120 45 1274 0.21 0.42 9.1 40 0:39 120 50 1069 0.18 0.35 10.8 33 0:33 120 53 960 0.16 0.32 12.1 30 0:29 Comment 2 minute 360° turn @ 120 knots 1.5 minute 360° turn @120 knots 45 second 360° turn @ 120 knots 30 second 360° turn @120 knots www.flyredstar.org 43 Formation Pilots: "We Few, We Happy Few, We Band of Brothers" Formation Training at Spruce Creek, Florida W hen Shakespeare penned those famous words more than 400 years ago, he could have been writing about the residents and formation pilots of Spruce Creek, Florida. The f ly-in community of Spruce Creek, 7FL6, is second to none. Genuinely warm and welcoming residents, a 4000 foot lighted runway, GPS approach, 1200 homes, a country club, tennis courts, and a fantastic restaurant named “The Downwind” make Spruce Creek a place for a few, a happy few, a band of brothers (and sisters). From January 9th, 2015, to January 16th, 2015, Dwane Ferguson, Rusty MacSwords, Joe Oram, Ed LeBlanc, and I were honored to be guests of the community for a Formation and Safety Team (F.A.S.T.) clinic. As one might expect, some incredibly accomplished pilots call Spruce Creek home. There is Steve Wood, holder of 101 FAI world records dealing with aviation. Stu Morse, an accomplished aviation racer (and one hell of a lead pilot). Mike Taylor, one of the most calm and level men I have ever met. Jeff Edwards, a larger-than-life storyteller, active airline pilot, and lead pilot for Lakes Flight. Dick Axelrod, a prominent retired attorney who was involved in the human rights movement of the sixties and seventies. Tony Crawford, a wise and skilled Reno air racer, and F.A.S.T. Check Pilot. And, of course, our very own "Cherokees to Oshkosh" extended family—Connie and Marcia Shad, Bernie and Lolly Shaw, and Dan and Bobbi Garley. The list goes on and on. Something wonderful occurred during our intensive training, and it had more to do with ourselves than our f lying. Our group gained clarity on why we find such happiness in formation f lying. When you ref lect upon each and every formation f light, a universal truth comes to light. Each formation f light involves: • Trust • Support • Mistakes • Accountability By Chip "Foggles" Gentry chip@callgentry.com • Learning • Love When you analyze any relationship you have, and the ones that bring honest happiness to your life, it is the relationships that have the components listed above that are the most important. Those of us that are blessed to be surrounded by happiness enjoy richer, fuller lives, and learn that the most valuable relationships have trust, support, mistakes, accountability, learning, and love. Trust. Every f light begins with a thorough briefing. Formation f lying involves operational standards. There is required proficiency. There is a proper attitude. A proper focus. All pilots participating in a f light must have sincere trust in each other. Trust is the foundation that allows happiness to grow and thrive. Support. The Flight Leader supports his Wingmen. The Wingmen support each other, and their Flight Leader. Each pilot provides advice and help before, during, and after each f light. They help each other understand the f light parameters, sight cues, various maneuvers, tricks that help one maintain position, and other helpful information. Mistakes. If any pilot of a formation f light did not make a mistake or witness a mistake, they were not paying attention. Every f light involves mistakes. Many may be quite small. However, the goal of formation f lying is perfection. While we all understand perfection is impossible, it is a worthwhile goal for which we all strive. Accountability. The most important part of any formation f light is the debriefing. When a formation pilot makes a mistake during f light, he owns up to it. In addition, other members of the f light are expected to point out mistakes. This process is done respectfully and out of a sense of understanding. It isn’t to ridicule or embarrass. Holding each other accountable to constantly search for perfection builds trust and strengthens the bond between the pilots. Learning. Each and every formation f light also provides the unique opportunity for each pilot to learn something new every time. Every f light. They learn about their skills. Their machine. Themselves. And their fellow brotherhood of formation pilots. The consistent challenge and learning process keeps f lying fresh and exciting. Love. There are many forms of love. Formation pilots experience love at a high level. Because of the epic trust, support, accountability, learning, and excitement that is formation f lying, formation pilots grow quite fond of each other. They have each other’s back. They are there to help with personal struggles at a moment’s notice. The nearly constant fraternal ribbing is one 44 Red Alert Spring 2015 of many examples of how formation pilots express their love for each other. Our training satisfied a number of our group’s goals. First, it gave us the opportunity to befriend new people who enriched our lives. Second, it improved our formation skills, which will measurably improve our focus on safety. Third, it allowed us the joy of satisfying our passion for f lying. Fourth, while incredibly challenging, it was a ton of FUN! Most importantly, we gained clarity. We more fully understand the driving force behind formation f lying. The reason we are so happy f lying in formation is that it provides us a perfect opportunity to build and maintain incredible relationships that enrich our lives. As Leonardo da Vinci said, “For once you have tasted f light you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skywards, for there you have been and there you will long to return.” How right he was. For those few of us who have challenged ourselves to enjoy the privilege of f light, there are few opportunities to enjoy such intense friendships and that bring the same amount of joy, thrill and happiness. I can’t wait to continue to safely enjoy our passion for f light with my formation f lying family! Call Tom ‘TJ’ Johnson @ 866 475-9199 TJ@airpowerinsurance.com www.flyredstar.org 45 RPA Financial Statements In accordance with the RedStar Pilots Association Bylaws, Section IV, Paragraph 3, the 2014 financial statements are hereby presented to the membership. Red Star Pilot Association Red Star Pilot Association Profit and Loss BALANCE SHEET As of December 31, 2014 ASSETS Current Assets Bank Accounts 10100 MAINB of A 9818 10110 EVENT B of A 7272 10120 MERCHANT B of A 2497 Total Bank Accounts Other current assets 11200 Inventory Asset January - December 2014 TOTAL TOTAL Income 40100 Membership Income 27,520.73 40200 Store Merchandise Income 6,481.66 5,923.18 13,723.66 $26,128.50 12,786.38 4,989.04 40300 Event Income 19,051.03 40500 Sponsorship Income 6,415.50 40650 Air Show to Reimburse Incom 1,200.00 40700 Advertising Income Total Income 4,200.00 $ 63,376.30 Cost of Goods Sold 50100 Membership Card Expense 981.00 Total Other current assets $12,786.38 50200 COGS-Store -1,796.49 Total Current Assets $38,914.88 70900 Postage 2,230.98 Other Assets 80100 Projectors 80200 Computer Equiptment Total Other Assets TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES AND EQUITY Liabilities Total Liabilities Equity 30000 Opening Bal Equity 39000 Retained Earnings Net Income 72000 Inventory Item Purchase Expense 2,078.90 681.21 $2,760.11 $41,674.99 Total 50200 COGS-Store 4,703.83 $ Total Cost of Goods Sold $ 6,119.32 Gross Profit $ 57,256.98 Expenses 70100 Advertising by RPA 1.60 70125 Newsletter Total 70100 Advertising by RPA 7,270.34 21,630.57 12,774.08 Total Equity $41,674.99 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY $41,674.99 16,442.81 $ 16,444.41 70350 E-Com 642.98 70400 General Office 159.66 70410 Office Supplies 344.93 70420 Office Software Total 70400 General Office 429.95 $ 934.54 70450 Accountant 2,515.00 70600 CC transactions 70610 Merchant Fees Total 70600 CC transactions Saturday, Jan 10, 2015 10:51:32 AM PST GMT8 Cash Basis 5,138.32 287.24 $ 287.24 70700 Website 1,486.40 70800 AIR SHOW Events 70801 Expense Advance 300.00 70805 Airshow to Reimburse 1,199.00 70810 Fuel 495.29 70820 Lodging 2,987.82 70830 Meals 8,736.43 70840 Rental Car/Transport 216.03 70870 Event Merchandise 2,276.73 70875 Awards 620.24 70880 Misc.Event Expenses 3,366.39 70890 Equipment Rental 414.40 70899 Event Insurance Total 70800 AIR SHOW Events 1,500.00 $ 22,112.33 71600 Bank Charges 60.00 void 0.00 Total Expenses $ 44,482.90 Net Operating Income $ 12,774.08 Net Income $ 12,774.08 Saturday, Jan 10, 2015 11:14:15 AM PST GMT-8 - Cash Basis 46 Red Alert Spring 2015 AIRCRAFT SERVICES COAST II COAST CUSTOM AIRCRAFT PAINTING Locations: (928) 757-2727 - Kingman, AZ (801) 399-1699 - Ogden UT (808) 682-2903 - Honolulu HI & Mobile Crew jim@airstraube.com www.airstraube.com Get your Paint Scheduled Now ! * Custom Paint Schemes & Logos * Corporate/Commercial * Government/Military * Mobile Crews Worldwide * General Aviation * Helicopters * OEM/MRO Staffing * GSA Contract www.airstraube.com Contract Holder GSA Contract # GS-06F-0078P www.flyredstar.org 47 Forward all non-deliverable mail to: RedStar Pilots Association C/O Byron Fox 80 Milland Drive Mill Valley, CA 4941 The RedStar Pilots Association is a notfor-profit organization dedicated to the safe operation of all aircraft. For further information or to become a member, please visit: www.flyredstar.org To advertise in this publication, please contact the RPA administrator at: admin@flyredstar.org