The Flying Wire - EAA Chapter 124
Transcription
The Flying Wire - EAA Chapter 124
The Flying Wire Chapter 124 Experimental Aircraft Association Volume 54 Number 11 November 4, 2015 Board Meeting - 5:30 pm Dinner – 6:15 pm ($7 donation) General Meeting – 7:00 pm Table of Contents November Program Events Calendar Lancair There Golden Boldies Let it Go Timing is Present Fly Mart News/Notes from the Editor Trivia Board Minutes General Minutes Contact Information ...................1 ...................1 ….................1 ….................3 ….................3 ….................5 ...................5 ...................6 ….................7 ...................7 ...................8 ...................9 www.EAA124.org www.CafeFoundation.org www.EAA.org EAA Chapter 124 5550 Windsor Road Windsor, CA 95492 --- Mail --PO Box 6192 Santa Rosa, CA 95406 November 4, 2015 Program USS Ronald Reagan with Marlon Young Marlon will describe the Navy's distinguished visitor program, and the 24 hours he spent on the USS Ronald Reagan while it was conducting operations at sea. A rare, first-hand look at carrier operations! Many thanks to Will Whiteside for taking the time to get me comfortable with the G3X under instrument flying conditions and for doing an IPC just in time to go to Arlington. It’s nice to have everything working. In line with that, I also did some night flying for the first time in years and found that the Legacy landing lights were totally inadequate for night landings at small airports with regular runway lights. That was fixed after Oshkosh with an AeroSun LED landing light – much better. It fits on the left main gear leg, but just barely (there’s not even enough room for a regular 4509 PAR 36 lamp). This was tested out one evening with Carol Lawson (Citabria owner) as safety pilot, flying to Vacaville, Willows and Santa Rosa for some night practice. Events Calendar Please send info about upcoming events! Please send us information if it comes your way! Bob Gutteridge: bob_gutteridge@pacbell.net Stuart Deal: eaa124newsletter@sonic.net January 1: Morning Flyout – Get the New Year Started Right Here and There – Lancair Travels in 2015 (by Andy Werback) It seems like it has been a busy year for flying – especially the last few weeks. We had the Hayfork flyout which was very enjoyable (there sure are a lot of hills between here and there), in June, quickly followed by Arlington Fly-In and AirVenture in July. A couple of quiet months, then we had Wings Over Wine Country, the California Capitol Fly-In and Airshow, a day at the KEDU (UC Davis) Airport Day, and then a week-long trip to New Mexico and Arizona. Much of this was based on getting a couple of things done on the Legacy in time to do some training. Last December we removed the leading edge-fuselage fairings (delaminated, dry carbon layup) and replaced them with foam and carbon fiber. About the same time, I installed the G3X EFIS and started the learning curve on that system. My painter finally had time to repaint the fuselage in April-May, so it wasn’t until almost June that everything was up and running. Titan at Tucson The event at Davis was just for static displays. Dr. Stephen Robinson invited us over to be part of their Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering display, and Jill Brigham was also there, so it was nice to see them again. I guess I’ve heard about the California Capitol Airshow, but I never knew what or where it was. Well, for the last 10 years or so, since Mather (KMHR) was turned over to the County of Sacramento, they have been having a pretty big static display and airshow there. We had the Thunderbirds and Snowbirds, plus displays of a C-5, C-54, B-17, B-25, P-51’s and many more. The event was well attended, but the potential interest for new homebuilders seemed to be pretty slight. 1 - Top - The last trip was to Las Cruces, NM to visit my college roommate Tim and his wife Nikki, whom I hadn’t seen since graduation. He went into the Navy, became a fleet Oceanographer and Weather Officer, and retired a few years ago to a nice location with a good view of the Organ Mountains to the east. Dinner the first evening was at La Posta, in Mesilla. It dates from 1840 and started as a stage coach station. Excellent margaritas! We spent a day touring White Sands Missile Range and the Museum, sampled the green Chile hamburger special in Alamogordo, discovered that there are a lot of almond and pistachio orchards in that area and in general, had a really good time. Turns out you can sled down the white sands, so we did! Quick note – On the way to Las Cruces, we stopped for fuel at the Ak Chin (A39) airport near Phoenix. Main attraction was that 100LL was 3.59/gal. I have not seen a price like that in, I think, a fairly long time. From there, we went to Tucson, AZ, to visit my cousin Tom and his wife Debbie. He is working on his 4th or 5th career, this time to be an MD, and he’s making great progress (he has some prior experience, which is helpful). The main item of interest was the Titan Missile Museum, located just a few miles south of Tucson. This is the only Cold War missile installation open to the public. It’s in very good condition, and the tour and the docents are excellent. We had visited the Pima Air Museum before, so the next stop was to the old mining town of Bisbee. I had not been to that part of southern Arizona before, and was very impressed by how green and nice it was – ideal for ranching. We visited the Copper Queen Mine (another good tour!) and the town of Bisbee – lots of Old West stuff, Main Street, art, the Copper Queen Hotel, antiques – as you would expect. Bisbee was also interesting to us as we read a lot of mystery books based in the Bisbee area by J. A. Jance – and there is a J. A. Jance room at the Copper Queen Hotel. Another quick note – Lots of thunderstorm activity around Tucson, and the Arizona Guard F-16’s were rocketing around runway 11L Friday evening, so we were vectored to 11R for an easy landing and taxi to the FBO. Atlantic Aviation was very efficient, fuel was reasonable, but they do charge a $10 security fee and $20 per night. The rest of the trip back was also interesting – the tropical weather was still pretty active in the Arizona and Southern CA. area, with lots of build-ups in the deserts. We were traveling on a Sunday, though, and LA Center was able to give us a direct clearance through the Edwards restricted area. We finished up the 2 - Top - trip with a visit to a fellow homebuilt judge at the Rosamond airport, then back to sunshine and Wine Country and a couple hours of cleaning the airplane! 526 in Auburn by 1 point! Though individual awards are not given for this Competition, it was interesting to note that the highest scoring entrant was Dennis Willerton from Chapter 52 in Sacramento. At 80 years of age, Dennis entered a beautiful, high scoring Van's RV 12 and being the oldest participating pilot, received a 10 point bonus. Congratulations and great job Dennis! In a similar vein I'd like to acknowledge Rick Stockton (also from Sacramento 52) for winning the Spot Landing Contest in his Europa. Last but not least, special kudos to Isaac Sepian from 512 in Placerville who at 18 is the youngest pilot to have ever participated at the G.W. Competition. As if the 10 bonus points were not enough for being the youngest entrant, Issac and his 18 year old companion/bombardier took 1st and 3rd in the Flour Bombing Competition flying a Cessna 150.........other Chapters, how old is your youngest member? Great job 512.! I hope you enjoy some photos from this year's gathering.....happy flying! - jb Flying Suitcase (by Tom Weeks) One of the V-2 missiles actually imported from Germany Golden West Fly-in and Contest (by Jim Booth email to Chapters) EAA ChaptersLast Saturday Marysville Airport hosted the Golden West Fly-In and among the activities was the 4th annual EAA Chapter vs. Chapter Competition. This year's event was greeted by several passing showers that failed to "dampen" the enthusiasm of those in attendance. In all 5 Chapters participated while several others were unable to make the journey due to unsettled weather closer to home. Chapter 1175 from Grass Valley/Nevada City took top honors this year ($350 check in hand upon departure), having previously won in 2013. Last year's Champion 1541 from Lincoln took 2nd Place followed by 3rd Place 52 from Sacramento, who edged out "MR. WEEKS, WHAT CAN YOU SHARE WITH ME ABOUT MY DAD'S TELLING ME THAT HE HAD TO THROW HIS SUITCASE OUT OF YOUR AIRPLANE WHILE CLIMBING OVER THE MOUNTAINS APPROACHING EL PASO LATE ONE NIGHT ? " At an Air Force Base near Phoenix, your Dad and I received orders to report for pilot training class openings. We decided to share the cost of traveling back to our home state. In kind of “great circle route” to visit our Wisconsin folks before reporting to San Antonio for Air Force pilot training's initial phase. 3 - Top - I had a two-place Cessna 140 instead of a car. One of our Cadet friends dropped us off at a crop duster's strip. Where my airplane had been carefully tied down. It was a moonless night with no horizon. Filled with more than our share of “get-home-i-tis” we decided not to hang around 'til pre-dawn. We filled up the small aircraft's seats, luggage area and fuel tanks with what became too much human flesh, gasoline and baggage and over-grossed the Cessna's weight limit. The crop duster's dirt strip had no electric boundary lights. On the other hand, it did have beat-up kerosene marker pots. As I taxied the Cessna down the line of kerosene pots, your Dad would leap out to light each lamp wick with his Zippo lighter. Unfortunately, by the time we'd taxied back to runway's take-off end unfriendly wind gusts would blow them all out. We spent 20 or so minutes of taxiing back and forth attempting this. But this time, we turned around for take-off. And whoopee-do 3 football fields down the Arizona dirt runway There was a SINGLE kerosene wick still burning. And the gusts hadn't ' wiffed it out as yet ! With the Cessna's throttle up against detent my 20 year old's brain had intuitively decided to accept a reasonable additional level of random risk. And as we headed for the single flame random gusts were attempting to snuff out. Halfway there we'd accelerated pasts 4550 mph when it snuffed! But even absolute darkness the snuffed wick's exact location was fixed in my mind. And as the seat of my pants lifted us off the dirt my side vision glanced over at your Dad. In the instrument's lights his eyes were dancing. And he was wearing that lop-sided and infectious grin we both smilingly re-member. I'd correctly assumed the single pot was on the runway's right edge, although the dirt on its BOTH sides were ' runway flat.' Missed. We staggered up into a blackness only to be experienced over a desert with no folks living within many miles. I reasoned that we would initially head for Tucson. Because fortunately, I had adequate foolhardiness to fly straight to Wisconsin like a vulnerable egg close above wide, uninhabited, waterless high desert mountains far away from any red-beaconed airways. Instead I elected to fly a hundred miles “side ways” down toward Mexico before pointing our eager faces toward home. Mistakenly, I thought it would be prudent to top off the gas at Tucson to allow more flight time to mess around the edges of any complicated ugly weather choosing to block our long cross-country. In general that's a safety first thought. But in the specific it can “wipe you out.” With our overload of baggage plus completely-filled gas tanks we were flying at the airplane's maxed out gross weight. Particularly, after squeezing in a couple of husky fighter pilot hopefuls in front of substantial luggage. At o'dark thirty, we landed and topped off the Cessna's fuel tanks at an FBO in Tucson Arizona. Without the advantage of stars or moonlight, we then staggered for altitude toward El Paso now in the general direction of our families. Every 30 miles or so there was a red airway beacon identifying the center of the “road”. And the final red beacon, would be on the peak of those 9,000 foot mountains just west of the city. And the ill-considered decision in topping off the fuel tanks at Tucson now became a humongous threat. An hour later, still climbing at only 15-20 feet per minute, we approached our final red beacon on that ultra high mountain just West of El Paso. After grinding along for over an hour and a half we were slowly erasing 6.2 lb. of gas per hour in a still heavy Cessna gaining altitude much too slowly in thinner and thinner air. It was a straight ahead climb hanging on the Cessna's propeller. And we were NOT going to clear the 9,000 foot high red beacon structure directly ahead not without making one or two climbing turns. But there was not any kind of turn we could safely make without a genuine fear of “falling out” of the turn into the dark on dark desert's moonless void. The Cessna's instrument panel : had [ 1 ] no turn and bank indicator [ 2 ] nor did the 2 place airplane have an artificial horizon gyro. In opaque darkness there was absolutely no sign of the actual horizon. 4 - Top - A 360 degree climbing turn could not be attempted without chancing vertigo and falling into deadman's spiral turn then augur into mountain absolute harshness close below our then cringing “ rear ends.” I said: "Bal, we are going to be pressing close against this airway's red beacon. I need you to throw your large suitcase out the door, just to make sure we don't SLAM into that red beacon coming up fast. DO IT NOW!" I remember Bal's suitcase was large and heavy. But with one smooth motion, your Dad clicked open his door rotated the clumsy suitcase. And down it went into the “dark on dark.” To explode with its remnants revealed to some astonished prospector digging 'round that lonely high desert mountaintop now close below. “Think of it this way Lonnie it's possible in the corner of his mind your father thought he might be swapping that heavy suitcase for his immediate future zooming around in some of the world's best airplanes. Then someday enjoy raising a son like you!" Tom Weeks What Now? New builders who have not picked a plane are asked: “What kind of flying do you want to do?” The question I never heard, but influenced me is “What kind of building do you want to do?” Those of us who get a kick out of welding may want a tube and fabric job. Fabric also goes with a wood structure and on the lighter side, aluminum. Add to that the geometric fascinations of composites and the more cut and definitely more dry (no catalyst required) all aluminum airplanes and you round out the pack. From plans built to kits to fast builds to “assemble only” ultralights, there is some trade off of performance and build time that feels right to the prospective builder and so the project goes from choosing to building. For most projects, airplanes included, the beginning and the end are the big days. In between the “can do” and “wow I did it!” is “how to?”, “where to?”, “who can I ask?” and possibly an “are you going to?” from time to time. The neat trick is to keep flying while you are building so you can have the best of both worlds. If you manage to do that then you get a prize (you should). But if the weather doesn't cooperate at least you can be working on your airplane. (by Stuart Deal) Fly Mart With the fire season winding down, the CalFire air tankers are spending more time on the ground. Lots of little kids love a good fire engine and they even show up in parades from time to time, so we need not feel guilty about our fascination with airplanes used to put out fires. From here it looks like parading military and emergency equipment is part of the effort of maintaining support among civilians and those who might serve the cause one day. Of course, only flying when you are training or have a mission is pretty much the same for most pilots. The recreational pilot just has the option to decide what mission to perform. Travel, sightseeing, bucket list, airport list, sport, anything to get off the ground or the water. Beyond flying of course, there is building and understanding flight systems. Making sure you stay in the air without mechanical concerns is a key item. Some pilots take this by the horns and know all about their planes and some leave it to other folks. If you want maximum control over your plane you can follow the road to discovery and build one. For Sale: (10-15) Stainless Steel firewall material. 26 gauge 4ft X 7ft. $90 for all or $50 for half. Jim Duvander 707-953-0129 jim@duvander.com For Sale: (8-15) disassembled continental A65 – needs crank and camshaft. New engine gauges, ammeter, airspeed indicator, new aluminum prop extension and new brake actuator. Paid $400 - Byron Barnes 707-980-4818 barnesbyron75@gmail.com For Sale: (7-15) Seat Parachute - needs a fresh repack but otherwise in very good condition. Will sell it cheap to a member if interested $350. Steve Pizzo, 707-829-7038 For Sale: (7-15) RV-6A Tricycle, Less than 80 TT, 180 HP $79,900. See Flickr link below. Ogden Utah. Call Angelo at 801-391-3873 https://www.flickr.com/photos/angelosrv6a 5 - Top - For Sale: (7-15) Two Bendix magnetos for 4-cylinder Lycoming (O or IO 320); converted Falco to dual electronic ignition. 1 left, 1 right rotation; both with impulse couplings. Harness, impulse coupling adapters, long mounting studs included. Time in service: 344 hours. Also available: 4 new Tempest massive electrode spark plugs, 4 well-used Champion fine-wire spark plugs, 1 brand-new TSO’d magneto noise filter. $250 each, $450 for both. Peter Lert, peter.s.lert@gmail.com, 707-508-7500. For Sale: (7-15) Garmin D2 pilot watch with GPS, worldwide airport database. Bought for Atlantic ferry flight that was canceled; worn 1 day to prove it works great, so basically new. Original box and all accessories included. New $450, will sell for $375. Peter Lert, peter.s.lert@gmail.com, 707-508-7500. For Sale: (5-15) 1947 8E Luscombe, 85 hp Cont. Engine and airframe TT 1907, 836 SMOH. Annual 2/2015. 800 x 6 tires. Apollo SL60 GPS Receiver and VHF Comm Transceiver. Worn paint. New battery. Ellen Jori (707) 823-7150 ellnsearby@aol.com For Sale: (8-13) RV8 – 1/3 Share. Superior IO 360/9.5 pistons, Hartzell Blended Airfoil C/S Prop, IFR Equipped all Glass Panel, Auto Pilot, Smoke System, Approx. 300 hours total time, Contact: Carl von Doymi, cvondoymi@gmail.com, (415) 8456448 For Sale: (3-13) AirTech Fuel Cap Tool. This high tech tool helps pilots open many types of aircraft fuel caps, doors and latches. Contact Ryan Beck, ryan.beck1@yahoo.com for information. News/Notes From the Editor... Great News! Thanks a ton to our contributors for the articles. great to have help. It sure is Builders! Building notes and tips with pictures are great to include here, so please send your stuff to eaa124newsletter@sonic.net For Sale: (3-15) Looking for a partner in a PA24 Comanche. Please contact Don: Donm@mackenziesystems.com Interesting Aviation Links (thanks Larry Rengstorf and David Heal) For Sale: (11-14) Aero Tug E-200 with New Batteries - $800 – contact Bill at (707) 938-1465 Halloween Flying – Click Here Savvy Flying - Click Here Extra Low Flying - Click Here Pistons and Pinot - Click Here For Sale (11-14) Engine Stand for Lycoming and Continental engines - $250 – contact Bill at (707) 938-1465 Share For Sale: (8 - 15) A 1/3 share of an RV-9A is available, hangared at KSTS. TT on 942WG is about 925 hours. Aircraft is worth about $60K total. There is now about 80 hours on a brand new Lycoming O-235-L2C engine, which was installed in March, 2014. 2WG was a "Best of Show Monoplane" award winner at Capital Fly-in (2008). Full Garmin Stack Including a 430 GPS, 2 axis auto pilot, Catto Composite Prop, Electric pitch and flaps, Slider canopy, leather seats, dual controls, nice hangar, and much more. For Details Contact: Mike Shook 707-239-6261. mfshook62@yahoo.com (Reprinted with permission of John L Hart FLP) 6 - Top - EAA Chapter 124 Board Meeting Minutes October 7, 2015 Trivia – What and Who is this? Transavia PL-12 Airtruk Mad Max Version If a kangaroo could do aerial spraying, it would look like this airplane. If I were going to name it, it would be the flying Kiwi. If that sounds mixed up, here is the Wikipedia page. Called to order by Pres. Jim Boyer at 5:32 pm. Attending: Pres. Boyer, Andy Werback, Larry Rengstorf, Ray Shipway, Sher Miersemann, Dave Heal, Steve Smith, Ron Cassero, Ben Barker. Bob Gutteridge joined at 5:40 pm. Pres. Boyer reported: • Good member support of the EAA tent at Wings Over Wine Country (WOWC) with one aircraft displayed on Saturday and four on Sunday. • The Nominating Committee has found candidates willing to stand for each of the offices in the election to be held next month. Nominations from the membership will be accepted until the election. • He plans to call a special planning meeting of the Board in January or February 2016. • Most of the rental arrears have been cleared up. The only exception stems from an aircraft that has been moved to CAFE. Ray Shipway reported that the Lakeport Splash-In enjoyed enthusiastic community support and was attended by a dozen floatplanes. Pilot attendance was down compared to past years, likely affected by the Valley Fire TFR and the simultaneous WOWC airshow. Larry Rengstorf in his Facilities report stated that: • Members overfilled the oil waste barrel again, requiring most of a day for him to clean up the mess. • Sonoma County’s contract building inspector examined the Chapter and CAFE buildings over two days. He noted the leaky roof over the meeting room and found a few other structural problems. his report was not yet available. • He received a letter from the Airport Manager’s office announcing the hiring of First Security Services to provide night security patrol service between the hours of 2230 and 0530. Andy Werback proposed that a team of three Chapter members enter the competition (concours, flour bombing, etc.) at the Golden West Flyin on October 17 at Marysville. He will recruit pilots at the general membership meeting. Ray and Sher reported that they are working with Josh Hochberg to hold a Young Eagles event at Sonoma Jet Center (SJC) on November 17, 2015. 7 - Top - Ron Cassero announced that SJC is moving its maintenance operation, including parts storage, to Nob Hill hangar 22. This is to increase SJC’s ability to offer indoor parking to more and larger aircraft. Ron also reported that in Cloverdale on October 22-24, Red Bull will be using helicopters to suspend “pylons” vertically for wing-suited skydivers to slalom through in a filmed competition. Meeting adjourned at 6:05 pm. Respectfully submitted, Ben Barker, on behalf of Mark Tuma, Secretary EAA Chapter 124 General Meeting Minutes October 7, 2015 President Jim Boyer called the meeting to order at 7PM. Many thanks to the cooks for the Oktoberfest dinner – Wayne Cook, Sam Werback, Arlene Boyer, Andy Werback, Geri Gutteridge, Mike Tovani and Tim Peterson. Visitors – Jon Stout – STS Airport Manager - Russ Kerby – Flying again after 14 years off - Karl Grimm – Looking at RV-12s as a potential project - Stephen Mann – Moving up from EAA 110 (South County) Welcome!! Thank you Stuart Deal for the Newsletter! Minutes of September meeting – Motion to approve by Larry Rengstorf, second by David Heal. Motion passed. Treasurer Report by Jim Boyer – Most back rents have been collected and deposits made. John Whitehouse should return next month. Wings Over Wine Country – Good attendance, good air show, and many thanks to the Members who manned the booth and/or displayed their aircraft. We had 1 display on Saturday, but 4 on Sunday with a lot more crowd appeal. Facilities – Larry Rengstorf requests that Members use care when using the facilities – the overflowing recycle oil barrel was a Major Mess to clean up. Observe the level indicator!! Also, please recycle plastic oil containers and water bottles in the plastic recycle bin, not the trash. Larry also noted that former Sonoma County Supervisor Nick Esposti passed away recently at age 80. He represented District 4 for 4 terms. Chapter 124 welcomed special guest State Senator Mike McGuire, another former County Supervisor for District 4, and Mr. Chris Rogers, District Representative. Sen. McGuire spoke about several current issues, including the state budget/funding, the drought, marijuana issues, drones, and balancing the budget. He also complemented the recently completed Santa Rosa Airport Runway Improvement project. Jim Boyer noted that STS is adding midnight-5AM security, so we will now have 24 hour presence. Bob Gutteridge reported on the results of the nominating committee – we have volunteers for all open positions, but will be happy to add additional names before the elections next month. Ron Cassero noted that the Jet Center maintenance is moving to Nob Hill, and that a new hangar is being built on the old North Coast site. Josh Hochberg noted the private event with the Breitling Jet team this week. CAFÉ Report – Brien Seeley described a very strong motor is in development that can aid short takeoff and landing with high efficiency – see the CAFÉ Blog. Also an article in the recent AOPA pilot about electric powered aircraft. Flyouts – Golden West Oct 17 – Need several dedicated volunteers to represent the Chapter! - Sonoma Valley – This weekend, Oct 10 - Anguin – Also this weekend, Oct 11 - Note – TFR’s in effect over the Bay Area for Fleet Week and VIP Project Reports – Steve Barnes displayed some vintage exploding blind rivets used in WII. Jim Boyer reports his Pietenpol wings are nearly covered…might be ready for paint… soon. Thanks to Jim DuVander for displaying his PA-14 to PA-12 project – looks like fun! Presentation – Many thanks to C J Stephens, Larry Rengstorf and Dana Hunt for their Reno Air Race presentation and videos. Thank you Dana for screening your “Hot” videos of local pilots and aircraft! Meeting adjourned at 9:20 8 - Top - Chapter 124 Contact Information Flight Advisers: CJ Stephens home: (707) 836-1458 cell: (707) 799-2878 David Heal home: (707) 838-0261 cell: (707) 953-5021 President: Jim Boyer (15/16) (707) 571-8001 Vice President: Andy Werback (15) (707) 823-5616 Secretary: Mark Tuma (14/15) (707) 953-2403 Young Eagles: Sher & Ray Shipway (415) 999-0949 Treasurer: John Whitehouse (15/16) (707) 539-5549 Librarian: Walt Ferris (415) 482-8331 Board: Ray Shipway (15/16) (415) 584-9682 Ben Barker (15) (707) 838-0238 David Heal (14/15) (707) 953-5021 EAA Chapter 124 5550 Windsor Road Windsor, CA 95492 Steve Smith (14/15) (707) 538-4522 Sher Shipway (15/16) (415) 584-9682 Ron Cassero (15/16) (707) 291-8958 Facilities Chairman: Larry Rengstorf (14/15) (707) 575-0331 Facilities Committee: Dwayne Green, Dale Wittman, Jim Long Webmaster: John Palmerlee jbpalm@sonic.net Newsletter Editor: Stuart Deal (707) 566-8560 (707) 328-4206 eaa124newsletter@sonic.net Technical Counselors: Bob Gutteridge (707) 539-5188 David Heal (707) 953-5021 Jerry Rice (707) 431-0206 Kevin Quirk (707) 539-8589 Doug Dugger (530) 526-4997 Rolf Unternaehrer (707) 763-7729 Chapter meetings are held on the first Wednesday of each month at 7:00 pm. FOOD ($7) AND SOCIALIZING (free) from 6:15 to 7:00 pm. EVERYONE IS WELCOME! Directions: The site is located on the west side of Sonoma County Airport. Take the Shiloh Road exit from Highway 101 in northern Santa Rosa. Turn left at the stop light (west) and continue to a “T” intersection. Turn left again and follow the road to the EAA sign on the left. Members are invited to submit articles of interest. You will be notified whether or not an article will appear in the current issue. Please email articles to: eaa124newsletter@sonic.net or mail to: Stuart Deal 430 Secretariat Ct Santa Rosa, CA 95401 Deadline for newsletter submissions is the 20th of each month. Articles submitted after that date will be included in the newsletter at the discretion of the editor. All articles are copyrighted. To reproduce any article, please contact the editor. EAA CHAPTER 124 is not responsible for any modification or maintenance items appearing in the newsletter or in any other correspondence. It is the responsibility of the reader to get approval for such items from the appropriate A&P, FAA or other government official. 9 - Top -