Lowflynjack
En-Route
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2014
- Messages
- 4,309
- Display Name
Display name:
Jack Fleetwood
Had a fun photo shoot on a beautiful Sunday afternoon!
You should have seen the look on his face during the briefing when I told him we would do a breakaway shot! He wasn't so sure it was clean!That's a clean belly!
Nice as usual, Jack.
Thank you Stan!Excellent, Jack! As always.
Missle attachment.Anyone know why the underside strakes are necessary? Seems like a lot of "stuff" hanging down causing drag (albeit probably immaterial on an Archer).
Where are you based?Rockets, actually.
Another Army helicopter pilot here, Jack, if you ever want to shoot my 310! And yes, my belly is clean
The bottom of the cabin of the Cherokee and its progeny (PA-28/32/34/44) is an exo-skeleton. The cabin floor does double-duty as the exterior skin.Anyone know why the underside strakes are necessary? Seems like a lot of "stuff" hanging down causing drag (albeit probably immaterial on an Archer).
You should have seen the look on his face during the briefing when I told him we would do a breakaway shot! He wasn't so sure it was clean!
Anyone know why the underside strakes are necessary? Seems like a lot of "stuff" hanging down causing drag (albeit probably immaterial on an Archer).
cool, I always wondered why those were there!The bottom of the cabin of the Cherokee and its progeny (PA-28/32/34/44) is an exo-skelton. The cabin floor does double-duty as the exterior skin.
Great photos!!!Had a fun photo shoot on a beautiful Sunday afternoon!
That bridge shot, perfecto!
It's not unusual for an older airplane to be repainted in the scheme of a newer model. But here is a newer (1981) Archer II wearing the paint scheme of the 1968 Cherokee 180D (below). Looks good - classic!
View attachment 94534
If you look closely you would see thousands of tiny holes in those ribs. This is where the chem trail nozzles are hidden.
That’s not how ***** Galore did it in her fleet of Pipers. She used externally mounted gas cylinders.
Had a fun photo shoot on a beautiful Sunday afternoon!