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#1
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Gas Prices Coming Down
As expected, gas prices are dropping like a stone around here. As of this
afternoon they are down to $2.89 per gallon, after peaking at $3.28 a gallon just after Katrina. (This for the cheapest grade, of course.) That's "only" 60 cents per gallon more than pre-Katrina prices, so I guess there is hope that these ridiculous prices will soon be a bad memory...? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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As expected, gas prices are dropping like a stone around here.
BTW: I'm talking about mogas here. Dunno what avgas is doing, as I try to avoid using that nasty stuff in my plane. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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Signature at Morristown Airport, NJ, appears to be gouging as usual for
their gas. The club I'm in just raised the rate for the 180hp 172 I've been flying the last month _$12_ / hr... from $79 to $91 / hr. -- Guy |
#4
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I just priced a semi load of #2 off road diesel fuel, non taxed. It's
dropped 12 cents in two days from $2.25 to $2.13, that's a drop of $1020 on a load. I told the guys to scrounge up every gallon they could find to help us make it through until next week and hopefully it will go down a little more. Our aerial applicators have enough Jet-A to finish the season so they announced no more fuel surcharges for the rest of the year. (sounds good don't it? the year ends next week ) Jim |
#5
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Jay Honeck wrote:
BTW: I'm talking about mogas here. Dunno what avgas is doing, as I try to avoid using that nasty stuff in my plane. My FBO ran a special in their newsletter last month immediately before the gas crunch hit: PA-28R rental at $101/hr for the entire month of September (down from $120/hr). I have no idea what avgas is costing them but I took advantage of the deal to get checked out this morning in their old Arrow B. Had a very pleasant checkout with an ATP instructor who challenged me quite a bit. The aircraft really had no foibles as far as I could see: the paint was acceptable, the interior was in excellent repair, and it had a nice panel with a Garmin 430, KX-155, autopilot and frankly I don't remember what else. It cranked up instantly when I applied my old tried and true "injected engine start procedure" (see recent thread on started the new C-172s). The engine was strong and acceleration was brisk. Tracked right down the runway and popped off in a lively fashion... positive rate...gear up... raised the flaps, then reduced to climb power. She (the ATP) got on my ass a little because I started to turn out of the pattern before I got to 400'. Old habits are hard to break. Anyway, we climbed into the hazy but smooth air and leveled off at 2500' followed by two clearing turns followed by two steep turns; one in each direction. We followed that up with slow flight (clean and dirty) and then stalls (dirty and then clean). I swear I saw the edge of the atmosphere just as the clean stall broke! Although I can't say the same, that airplane just had no bad habits. It didn't try to drop a wing or do anything other than fall straight forward as the stalls broke. Emergency landing simulation was uneventful. Pulling the prop back all the way makes the airplane feel like it just "relaxed". Of course, like most Cherokees, it doesn't glide worth a damn. We went back to try some landings: normal, short field, and soft field. All were greasers. (Of course!) I had problems with the short field landing... she wanted me to cross the numbers at 50' and then touch down 1000' down the runway. I crossed the numbers at 50' all right but I sure didn't make it 1000' beyond. I'm used to touching down on the numbers or within 100 feet or so which scares the hell out of some instructors but used to make my old chief pilot happy. "Make every landing a short field landing and you don't have to do anything different when you really have to make one." I suppose I could have floated down the runway if I'd have added some power but that offends me. Finally there was the soft field landing. The ATP reminded me that you are supposed to keep the nose up as long as possible after touchdown. I showed her there was no travel left in the yoke: We arrived at a full stall half an inch off the runway and greased it on. What can I say? I guess if I had to whine about anything it would fall into three areas: no stall horn. I like stall horns. The pitch becomes more insistent the closer to the stall you get... it really gives you another way to rachet up the drama waiting for the stall to break. Anyway, this airplane had a stall light. That would have been OK but it was mounted on the far left hand side of the panel. If you want to catch my eye, you need to be FRONT and CENTER. The fuel selector didn't have any particular detent that I felt when I changed tanks. I mentioned this to the ATP along with the comment: "This might get exciting in a moment". Fortunately, it didn't. Finally, I'd forgotten how tight the cabin was from side to side. I had to stuff my big hands into the space between the seats to adjust the trim or to play with the autogear override. It was a bit tighter than I'd prefer. All in all, a very pleasant morning with a fine flight instructor and a honest old bird. And I'm glad I didn't have to pay a fuel premium. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
#6
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Yeah!
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#7
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I guess if I had to whine about anything it would fall into three areas:
no stall horn. I like stall horns. The pitch becomes more insistent the closer to the stall you get... it really gives you another way to rachet up the drama waiting for the stall to break. Anyway, this airplane had a stall light. That would have been OK but it was mounted on the far left hand side of the panel. If you want to catch my eye, you need to be FRONT and CENTER. Great write up! Personally, I've never understood the need for stall horns. I've never needed one to know when a stall was imminent, and it's just another distraction, as far as I'm concerned. Stall lights are even dumber, but at least they have the advantage of subtlety. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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We are still over $3 a gallon in Phoenix and I bet it doesn't come down
soon. "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:kX0Ue.318205$_o.226510@attbi_s71... As expected, gas prices are dropping like a stone around here. As of this afternoon they are down to $2.89 per gallon, after peaking at $3.28 a gallon just after Katrina. (This for the cheapest grade, of course.) That's "only" 60 cents per gallon more than pre-Katrina prices, so I guess there is hope that these ridiculous prices will soon be a bad memory...? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#9
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We are still over $3 a gallon in Phoenix and I bet it doesn't come down
soon. Well, they dropped another penny just since I wrote the original post earlier this evening. When it gets to $2.85/gallon, I'm gonna fill "The Mighty Grape" -- our home-made fuel truck -- again. (I haven't filled it since Katrina.) I used the last of our $2.28/gallon gas today. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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Glad to hear you liked the Arrow checkout. Sounds like a '71 model,
same as ours (Arrow 200-B). Yep, stall lights are lame. The gear warning horn though, that will wake you up! A good thing though. Gliding? Cherokees do that? I thought it was more falling out of the sky like a streamlined manhole cover :-) Does make it easy to get back on the glideslope when you're white over white on the VASI :-) Rental rates for an Arrow around here (Sacramento, CA) run $140+/hr. wet. Sounds like the $101 was a good deal. That's pretty close to the going rate for a Skyhawk around here. Have fun with the Arrow. We sure like ours. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Arrow N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
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