Arnold
Cleared for Takeoff
I also knew a guy who flew film for Walgreens. Believe they were using a Piper T-1040.
Piper T-1040. Nice ship, don't hear about it too often.
I also knew a guy who flew film for Walgreens. Believe they were using a Piper T-1040.
Yeah, not sure how many they made but it wasn’t many.Piper T-1040. Nice ship, don't hear about it too often.
Lots of smaller cargo airplane companies closed up shop too.
I talked to one of these guys years ago when they were getting ready to depart into a pending tropical storm in Florida. No autopilot and no GPS in the panel. Poor kid had a Garmin 296 sitting on a beanbag. Some beat to hell 210's and Barons. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_Express,_Inc.
Piper T-1040. Nice ship, don't hear about it too often.
Someone is still flying a nightly route.
He/she passes over my house (every?) night at about 2:30 - 3:00 A.M.
Twin engines, slightly out of synch, at about 4,500 if I had to guess, going east.
Unless your Tom Cruise....I don't know for a fact, but I'd imagine the film industry doesn't use pilots to get all those areal shots for movies much any more, between CGI and drones......
https://cinejet.com/I don't know for a fact, but I'd imagine the film industry doesn't use pilots to get all those areal shots for movies much any more, between CGI and drones......
maybe it's 3 o'clock charlie....of MASH fame....
I flew for a company in Alaska that had 8 Piper T-1040s when I started. When I left a few years later they only had 3. They did not sell any.
It was a slippery plane and looked like a turbine Navajo. Basically it was a unpressurized Cheyenne.
This is what happened to one of the planes.
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/28110
Which one?I flew a King Air for a dept store chain that no longer exists.
Which one?
I'm trying to think of something appropriate to say about this, but words fail me.
I don’t think Orville ever issued an SIC type rating.Pic?
Pic?
Of course, according to what many of us have likely read, Orville turned down a pilot license from NAA as he didn't think he needed one to prove he could fly. Then he ends up signing a bunch of them.
I wonder what it took back then to get the license. What was the ACS or its equivalent like?
Takeoff. Turn left. Turn right. Land. Didn't die? Pass!
Explain please, especially that specific date.In 9 years and 11 months, the beginning of the end for first officers on domestic flights
Explain please, especially that specific date.
Iowa State Patrol is a holdout that still does it. One of their planes is hangared near mine, and it’s just about the most active piston-engine plane on the field.
I knew an old-timer state patrolman pilot who started out in a Super Cub, maybe in the 60s. He used a mechanical stopwatch to time cars as they drove over highway markings. The State Patrol planes gradually got bigger and nicer over the years. The one hangared near me is a nice glass-panel 182 with FLIR. I’m guessing this trend of bigger nicer planes can’t continue much longer, though, before drones and such take over.
The "Bon Marche." They had 41 stores in the 11 western states. They were ultimately bought out by Macy's. Many have closed.
The company had a rash of gear up landings so the FAA required 2 pilots on each revenue flight. Even in the 207 for a short time. Later the FAA allowed a gear not down radar altimeter in place of the second pilot. Of course someone learned that pulling the circuit breaker to disable it would stop that annoying noise when lifting the gear after take off, and of course someone landed gear up again...
Iowa State Patrol is a holdout that still does it. One of their planes is hangared near mine, and it’s just about the most active piston-engine plane on the field.
I knew an old-timer state patrolman pilot who started out in a Super Cub, maybe in the 60s. He used a mechanical stopwatch to time cars as they drove over highway markings. The State Patrol planes gradually got bigger and nicer over the years. The one hangared near me is a nice glass-panel 182 with FLIR. I’m guessing this trend of bigger nicer planes can’t continue much longer, though, before drones and such take over.
I have seen probably the Same Aztecs setup for this at Boise. But has been a few years since I have seen one, wonder if they are using a different process now (ground based?)?Years ago, at Salt Lake airport, SLC, when conditions got below ILS minimums (usually winter with ice-fog), they had Aztecs set up for cloud seeding. The pilot would fly the ILS through missed approach, the dry ice would cause enough precipitation to open up the approach for 2 or 3 airliners to land, then repeat the process. They used to issue a NOTAM, something like "ILS 35R cloud seeding ops in progress." As far as I know, they don't do that anymore, there may have been other airports that used that system, too, but I don't know.
Years ago, at Salt Lake airport, SLC, when conditions got below ILS minimums (usually winter with ice-fog), they had Aztecs set up for cloud seeding. The pilot would fly the ILS through missed approach, the dry ice would cause enough precipitation to open up the approach for 2 or 3 airliners to land, then repeat the process. They used to issue a NOTAM, something like "ILS 35R cloud seeding ops in progress." As far as I know, they don't do that anymore, there may have been other airports that used that system, too, but I don't know.
The Washington State Patrol still uses aircraft, as well. Just listen for a call sign starting with "Smokey"
I remember the Bon.
My first big break in 1986 was flying for Tampa Airways. They later sold out to Flight Express. My first run was CRG-ORL-TPA-CRG. I flew a 210 with blood and body parts to a lab in TPA then checks back to CRG. Some of the 210s were pretty rough but we also had some brand new 210Rs. To this day I still love the 210. When I left for Eastern Express I had gained a lot of interesting stories and experiences! My last run before I left was CRG-PNS-DTS-PFN-TLH-ORL-SGJ-CRG-GNV-CRG. All with no radar and occasionally an auto pilot. We carried checks, lab tests, and intra Florida same day freight. I was young and I actually had a blast! I just retired as a 767 Captain and I believe I learned more about pure flying from the bank check job than all my subsequent positions.I used to work line service in FXE, and Flight Express flew a few 210's between there and Tampa every night. It would be solid thunderstorms over the everglades, and these guys would blast off with no weather radar or anything. Balls of steel.