Sorry she broke!
If you see the Beech 18 in the shop there, tell her "Hello."
Good folks at Mexia.
Very good folks at Mexia. Rebuilt the mag on a Saturday afternoon and got me on my way. Saw the 18 in the shop, saw the Javelin P210 parts after someone tried to play lumberjack, saw the amphib bi-plane, saw a couple King Airs, saw more airplane parts than in all of Wichita (just about). The owner himself came out and fixed my plane. I did fetch everybody lunch but that hardly counts under these circumstances.
As for the mag, it was right at 500 hours. The coil was the only really bad part - it looked like it got hot around the middle. The brush spring was partially collapsed and may have contributed. Points and bearing looked new. Anyway, new coil and brush (along with new seal and cleaned & re-packed bearing) and away I went. Yesterday was a little bumpy north of Dallas but nothing special.
The Houston story: went to EFD and was quite happy with hospitality. I think the EFD tower crew needs more caffeine. The controller seemed rather slow to respond when picking up my clearance and then totally missed that I skipped the altitude on the readback. Overall, not much happening at the field. Some military equipment setting around. The "Fighter Pilot for a Day" crew was at the FBO Saturday morning.
Getting into EFD IFR was a bit of a pain since the STAR goes to Hobby. Still, I'd rather fly around southwest Houston than drive. I was stuck in a broken layer that was just a tad bouncy when IMC. Seemed like the typical Gulf Coast stuff I've experienced but there was no way out of this since the bases were below 2,000' and MVA was 2,200.
Getting out of EFD was better. They sent me northeast of IAH which seemed quicker than the southwest Houston tour on the way in. The bouncy broken layer was worse but I just cinched the seatbelt tighter and controlled airspeed best I could.
Everything was fine and dandy until the mag said that it had had enough about an hour into the flight. I was diagnosing and figuring the divert when center handed me to Waco approach. Waco was the nearest class D so I told them where I was going and why. Another controller came on and asked what was wrong then obviously declared for me and asked the SOB & fuel questions. The mag hadn't totally failed yet so all I knew was that I had a problem with one mag. About 30 miles out of Waco and setting up for the ILS the mag quit, turbo temps went bonkers and I got serious about nearest airport. I thought I'd be out of luck going into a little strip without even an AWOS but I really hit the jackpot in terms of a maintenance facility.