MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
The reg only requires logging PIC, not acting as PIC.If the instructor was in the airplane, he's the one responsible for the flight and you are not the PIC.
The reg only requires logging PIC, not acting as PIC.If the instructor was in the airplane, he's the one responsible for the flight and you are not the PIC.
no doubt the 0-200 has more than the c85 but what rpm are you limited to? As I believe it’s still prob not making 100hp in a 120/140.
my favorite use of the flaps is for take off on rough stuff or while on skis, once your rolling good but before normal liftoff ya pop those babies full on and whhhom your a foot or two in the air! Then climb just a skosh and ease em off by feel for no “flap dump drop” and be on your way. It’s kinda fun
and yes if we do those shirts I’ll let ya know
If the instructor was in the airplane, he's the one responsible for the flight and you are not the PIC.
Not sure what you’re asking. The redline is 2700. It turns 2550 or so on takeoff and climbout.
if you’re a member of the 120-140 organization you might know Randy Thompson. He is a C85/O-200 guru. He owns the O-200/140 STC and is a great guy. It would be interesting to get his take on the power difference between the two.
OK. In Canada the PIC has to be solo. Totally responsible for the airplane.The reg only requires logging PIC, not acting as PIC.
2750, according to the TCDS. One of the reasons the 150 is so slow for some folks is that they POH calls for higher cruise RPMs that they might be used to in the 172 they learned to fly in. Read the book.
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So if there’s two pilots in the airplane nobody is PIC?OK. In Canada the PIC has to be solo. Totally responsible for the airplane.
For training and certification purposes, not two-pilot ops.So if there’s two pilots in the airplane nobody is PIC?
Enough maintenance and flight experience with the smaller engines, but not nearly as much as some others. I was also an instructor, which means that one has to know the POHs of the airplanes you're instructing in. If a student complained of poor cruise (a 150's cruise is already pretty poor) I'd ask him to check that cruise chart again and see what he did wrong. Most were afraid to run the engine so close to redline. This is another area where car-driving habits and preconceptions have to be broken. Anytime I installed a rebuilt Lycoming engine in one of our airplanes, I did the break-in test flight as per Lycoming's instructions. 2.5 hours of it, with the last half-hour at redline RPM at a low enough altitude to get the power way up. A 172 sure scoots along at that setting. Throttle is wide open.Even w the c85, I barely back off take off power for cruise. From all I’ve read it’s far better to run these lil continentals hard that lug em along. You are quite the engine guy if I recall right, would you concur?
Enough maintenance and flight experience with the smaller engines, but not nearly as much as some others. I was also an instructor, which means that one has to know the POHs of the airplanes you're instructing in. If a student complained of poor cruise (a 150's cruise is already pretty poor) I'd ask him to check that cruise chart again and see what he did wrong. Most were afraid to run the engine so close to redline. This is another area where car-driving habits and preconceptions have to be broken. Anytime I installed a rebuilt Lycoming engine in one of our airplanes, I did the break-in test flight as per Lycoming's instructions. 2.5 hours of it, with the last half-hour at redline RPM at a low enough altitude to get the power way up. A 172 sure scoots along at that setting. Throttle is wide open.
With my A-65-8, which redlined at 2300, I typically cruised it at 2300. Prop was a little too fine in pitch. Ideal pitch gives redline at full throttle in level flight. Some models of the A-65 had a 2350 redline, one (the -14) had a 2675 RPM redline.
This guy here knows the little Continentals:
http://bowersflybaby.com/tech/fenton.html
that’s hilarious
I love mine! You will be smitten soon if you aren’t already. I’ve yet to meet anyone who had a 120/140 in the past that doesn’t say they miss it. Speaks well of them. I’ve taken mine all over from MI to Idaho twice into Johnson Creek, to Florida and all over my state. I get back in the club 172 I’m still a part of and it feels like driving an old truck w no power steering still a great bird- just not as fun as ol Shirley. Congrats on going for it! Keep us posted!
there’s pretty good reason for the argument that it’s still no homesick angel as you are t really getting all 100hp out of the O-200 in a 120/140 as it’s airframe limited on rpm so you can’t wind it up as high as you can say in a 150/2 so ya are leaving hp on the table.
the low power will teach you a lot too! I know my 140 taught me things in the first 6 months that 180hp 172 never did in 10 years of flying it. When we went out west in high DA I handled it better than some of my friends all who had 100hp over me, sure she was very anemic but I’d learned to fly not relying just on “pulling back and zooming up” so more accentuated- sure, but nothing new.
enjoy enjoy enjoy!
Slip and kick.Not comfortable carrying a slip down too close to the runway!
I was an aircraft mechanic. Those Marvel carbs were the worst piece of fuel system technology. They are known in the industry as the "Marvelous Dribbler" carbs. They have poor homogenization of the fuel atomization. The Stromberg on my own airplane, on the other hand, ran flawlessly, It has an "accelerator well" in it that stores a small amount of fuel ready for sudden consumption when the throttle is opened, and works nearly as well as an accelerator pump. The only drawback is that the mixture control is a back-suction type that reduces the bowl vent pressure to restrict fuel flow. It works very well in flight but it can't cut the flow off to kill the engine. You shut the fuel valve off to leave the engine with no fuel in the cylinders.That brings to mind another O-200 difference. You get to lose the Stromberg. The Marvel has an accelerator pump. I too am a hands on guy. I grew up in my Dad and Uncles car repair business so I can’t help it.
2nd tailwheel lesson yesterday evening. Again, light winds and practice at the grass strip. Seemed like it went a bit better - no 'life or death' saves by the instructor necessary this time. Introduced to picking up the tail on a takeoff run (which takes more attention to the rudder), and slips to landing. Not comfortable carrying a slip down too close to the runway! Takeoffs felt less 'white knuckle' ish. Was directed to do a touch-and-go, but had to abandon that when there wasn't enough runway left. Becoming a fun challenge!
Edit: also tried power on & off stalls: very benign in this airplane. No stall horn or light needed, gives a nice buffet in the yoke before anything major happens.
Hang on to it. The quality of those things varies enormously from one carb to another.Well then, it sounds like I’m the luckiest O-200 owner ever, because my Marvel has been marvelous for ten years. I occurred to me that I bought it ten years ago this month.
Once you get the hang of wheel landings, you can ride the slip right down into ground effect, then straighten it out and grease the mains on.Not comfortable carrying a slip down too close to the runway!
A friend has a luscombe. Always heard they were difficult to land. Not so compared to a short biplane.
Pretty much everything is easy compared to a Pitts. Was it Bud D who said it was like landing a forklift driven off a loading dock at 90mph?Ha, everybody says the same thing about a Pacer. I flew one and thought it landed and rolled out easy as J-3 Cub compared to the little acro bipes.
I trained my students to let the nose come up as they came out of the slip. The nose has to go down on entering the slip or the airspeed will suffer, and raising the nose will prevent the acceleration.Just keep in mind the aircraft is going to pick up speed when you relax the forward slip.
Better to just not think about. You're on final, if you're drifting, put a wing down. If your axis isn't aligned with the runway, use the rudder. Maybe some pilots can predict how much rudder and aileron they're going to need, but not me. Just do the needful, and keep everything moving. You're not going just put the controls in a spot and hold them there.I won't waste time on my learning successes thus far, but I will point out my major challenge... "Landing planning" (wheel or 3 point & what is the wind doing?) while in the pattern and executing that plan. I know I know you veterans "don't think" about rudder and aileron inputs because you have been doing it a long time. However, as a new tailwheel guy, I learned that there is zero room for ADD while landing. I am finding that I am like a prize fighter before the big match where I have to get my feet moving, my brain focused on where the wind is coming from and how much of an an aileron input and to what degree am I going to move the stick and rudder... it is a process and I am looking forward to the day when it all "clicks" on windy days. I am "good" on no wind or right down the runway or slightly quartering landings... it's the windy/breezy days that are the challenge.
And that my flying brother is the issue... everyone says "it will click"... waiting for that day...Better to just not think about.
Stop waiting for it to come to you because it won't. You're the pilot; fly the plane.And that my flying brother is the issue... everyone says "it will click"... waiting for that day...
I won't waste time on my learning successes thus far, but I will point out my major challenge... "Landing planning" (wheel or 3 point & what is the wind doing?) while in the pattern and executing that plan. I know I know you veterans "don't think" about rudder and aileron inputs because you have been doing it a long time. However, as a new tailwheel guy, I learned that there is zero room for ADD while landing. I am finding that I am like a prize fighter before the big match where I have to get my feet moving, my brain focused on where the wind is coming from and how much of an an aileron input and to what degree am I going to move the stick and rudder... it is a process and I am looking forward to the day when it all "clicks" on windy days. I am "good" on no wind or right down the runway or slightly quartering landings... it's the windy/breezy days that are the challenge.
Better to just not think about. You're on final, if you're drifting, put a wing down. If your axis isn't aligned with the runway, use the rudder. Maybe some pilots can predict how much rudder and aileron they're going to need, but not me. Just do the needful, and keep everything moving. You're not going just put the controls in a spot and hold them there.
Any pilot can fly a taildragger. It's taking off and landing that's difficult. I have little experience, and it all went fine, but haven't been in a wrong wheeler for decades.There's a thrill in mastering something that few people master, and there's a thrill in finding out how flying used to be many years ago.
One in 500 people (0.2%) hold a pilot license or permit of any sort, in Canada or the US. That makes pilots pretty rare. Of those, I'd figure that no more than one in ten can fly a taildragger, making those people one in 5000.