denverpilot
Tied Down
Does the whole interior count as a minor thing?
Mmm. 70s Goldenrod baby!
Mmm. 70s Goldenrod baby!
Does the whole interior count as a minor thing?
Mmm. 70s Goldenrod baby!
I don't like my engine gauge suite either and I'm eventually going to change those out for one of these and get rid of the tach cable.
One man's goldenrod is another man's "old man brown." Buddy of mine had an Arrow painted old man brown with brownish/orange carpet and interior. It even smelled old.
A lot of my Mooniac brethren go on and on about engine analyzers. I don't get it. I'm running a plane jane Lycosaur 0360, and there's been one like it running in my airplane since 1962. What could possibly be so bad?
LOL. Our interior is old. For sure. The airplane was repainted in the 90s but the interior is straight outta the disco era.
Maybe the “little thing” I keep meaning to fix and don’t is that the sheepskin covering the left seat has been “shedding” for a few years.
Another new sheepskin and we can ignore all that lovely gold carpet for another 2000+ hours!
I get that sticky landing gear every once in a while and it usually reminds me when I turn off the runway onto the taxiway, it settles. What do you mean your toe brakes are worthless? Do you have brakes on the passenger side or do you just use the hand brake? Small step? You mean the beefy one attached to the airframe below the flap? I don't like my engine gauge suite either and I'm eventually going to change those out for one of these and get rid of the tach cable.
Uh...sheepskin. The previous owner had those covers on the seats and was the first thing I took out. Had years and years of sweat smell stuck to them. After they were taken out I looked at the backside. They looked like a civil war bandage. <shudders at the memory>
Since then my seats and side panels have been reupholstered in leather.
Again, the thing has been doing its thing for over 4K hours since 1962. How bad can it be?You'd be surprised at what you don't know. Think of the engine analyzer like ADS-B. There's a whole bunch of stuff out there you didn't know about.
Again, the thing has been doing its thing for over 4K hours since 1962. How bad can it be?
I agree with you steingar but I can't find reliable replacement gauges for my faded and scratched up pressure/temperature gauges. If I'm replacing them along with my tachometer, then an analyzer is what I'll get.
My fuel gauges were crap. My ammeter always read 0, I didn't have a load meter, and by the time I priced out individual replacement gauges, I ended up with an MVP-50
In all seriousness we just had our annual and basically took care of all our squawks. That said, there are a few things that still bug me (but aren't really easily fixed). One is sticky landing gear. The struts tend to stick despite the linkages being lubed, nitrogen and oil levels correct, etc. I'm not a fan of the needle gauges for oil temp, fuel pressure, etc. They work fine, but they just seem dinky. I have the toe brakes on the pilot side, which are completely worthless. I'd like to have them removed, but I think it is quite a bit of work. There was a small leak, supposedly our A&P replaced the seals to fix that. Still don't work with a darn. The little machine screw that holds the door catch to the door seal (not sure if I am explaining that well) recently stripped out. Oh...and the small step cracked. This ironically happened during the annual (our A&P is a larger guy...we suspect he actually caused the damage *sigh*)
That's about it.
I assume we are talking about a cap that looks like this:
and is not quite lined up with the air flow. In this case, the long tab works like an airflow generating a force to the right or left. Now, at 15 degrees it is probably stalled, but when close to, but not quite, lined up with the airflow it will generate lift to one side or the other and the center of the lift will be somewheres around 25ish percent of the distance from the front which will tend to open or closed depending on which way the tabs are off. Now, the actual magnitude of the force is too small to do anything, but it will be non-zero.
LOL. Our interior is old. For sure. The airplane was repainted in the 90s but the interior is straight outta the disco era.
The other is that our AI is... Interesting. It seems to be OK if you leave both the autopilot and flight director off. However, after a long leg with FD or AP/FD on, it'll start leaning over to the side. Takes at least an hour to start, and sometimes you'll fly a 5-hour leg where it's fine. And once it happens, I usually cut off the autopilot and turn on the standby vac for good measure, and it'll re-erect within 10 minutes. Seems to fall off quicker the second time, though...
Mirror ball hanging where the magnetic compass is supposed to be?
I assume you’ve checked the plumbing to it? We had some weirdness that didn’t show up on the vacuum gauge that was related to old plumbing, a plugged filter, and later again on another checkup a deformed and leaking air water catch bubble in the static line. Instruments were fine, the plumbing had some need of TLC. Took two rounds and a couple of events to clear that all up.
I like that. Cut the cost of flying. Swing the wing all the way, load it on a trailer, store it at home, eliminate hangar fees.
Do they make one that runs on mogas?
I like that. Cut the cost of flying. Swing the wing all the way, load it on a trailer, store it at home, eliminate hangar fees.
Do they make one that runs on mogas?
A lot of my Mooniac brethren go on and on about engine analyzers. I don't get it. I'm running a plane jane Lycosaur 0360, and there's been one like it running in my airplane since 1962. What could possibly be so bad?
I’d love a JPI in the Cherokee
I thought your plane was perfect?
I'd go with MVP50 over the JPI
Sure keeps the sun outta my eyes when flying into the sun......
Placard it INOP or ground that puppy!The AC recirculation button on my plane is sticky/really hard to press.
View attachment 64945
...other than that the twin turbofans and pressurization (that were never installed but that I really want) are INOP.