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#31
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Depression after Washing
gatt writes:
Thanks for clearing that up for all the pilots and aircraft owners, Anthony. I'm sure without your experience it would never occur to them. It certainly would never occur to some of them, given the exceptions of which I've become aware. |
#32
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Depression after Washing
Mxsmanic wrote in
: gatt writes: Thanks for clearing that up for all the pilots and aircraft owners, Anthony. I'm sure without your experience it would never occur to them. It certainly would never occur to some of them, given the exceptions of which I've become aware. You're not aware of anything outside your own colon. Bertie |
#33
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Depression after Washing
Strip the paint off and fly with polished aluminum.
You will gain about 100 pounds of useful load and be able to tell at a glance the condition of the aircraft. Keep it polished and you will be amazed at how much better it performs without all the surface imperfection drag. |
#34
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Depression after Washing
On Thu, 26 Jun 2008 16:22:52 -0700 (PDT), Charles Talleyrand
wrote: My kid and I just washed the plane. Even after washing it, there are still chips of paint missing, a bit of rust, a drip-stain of fuel, and so on. The panel looks like it has been modified every once in a while since 1966. My plane is relatively nice compared to the other ones on the field, but it's still in worse cosmetic condition than my car. None of these problems is a safety issue, and none of them could be fixed without spending significant time and/or money. One of the reasons we own airplanes is pride of ownership. This makes me sad. Makes me want to sell and rent. I've looked at this post for a few nights now and I still have the feeling that you're such a goose. you have an absolute gem in your hands and cant see it. you own what is probably the nicest little sporting aircraft ever commercially built. they were such a superb handling aircraft that they were used as trainers all over the world. in fact *nothing* has been built since that has quite filled the training niche they carved out for themselves. If Cessna put the aerobat back into production tomorrow they would sell every aircraft made without problem as the worlds training fleets were updated. but they are plonkers and worry too much about liability so it is passing from the worlds' stage. You have a superb vintage aircraft and yours should be treated as such. if you want true pride of ownership then set about restoring the old girl to concourse condition. what this means in reality is easy. get the aircraft professionally repainted, this involves removing all the old finish, alodining the surface to passivate it,then repainting the aircraft with proper aircraft paints. the interior panels are from heat formable "Royalite" and can be repaired, and I'm sure replaced. seats recovered in lambswool look and feel a million bucks. new aircraft carpet (non flamable) isnt hard to put in. My mate Fred has an old Cessna 150A. it used to look absolute crap in one of the most corroded bare aluminium finishes imaginable. he had it professionally painted white. he thought that looked a bit plain and costed a stripe. $500 bucks for a single thin red stripe is a bit much so we kid people that it has a two tone white stripe :-) like you he thought the aircraft was a bit underwhelming until I pointed out a few things to him. I pointed out that his was the only straight airframe I'd ever encountered. it had no trim tabs and had no need for them. he keeps telling me that he has not encountered another Cessna locally that doesnt need trim tabs. I did the prop rpm vs speed calcs and found that his aircraft had to have something wrong. the aircraft is supposed to have a 52" pitch prop, the calcs came out at 46". It turns out that the previous owner was compensating for an increasingly anaemic end of life engine by repitching the prop down. with that corrected the aircraft is a sprightly cruiser. Freddo now loves his aircraft and sees it as a rare vintage beauty. I do too. I still love flying it on the odd occasion that we get together. Go out one nice day and park your aircraft on the grass. lie under the aircraft on the grass. lie there just looking over(under) the aircraft. lie there for about an hour. (dont go to sleep) in each 15 minute period the things you notice will be different from the previous 15 minutes. in an hour you will have pretty well every thing identified that isnt quite right. then set about over the next few years and fix them one by one. you'll end up with a classic restored aeroplane that you can be damn proud of. ...or maybe you'll sell it and the next owner will have all the pleasure. what ever you do dont sit there complaining. aviation is only really enjoyed by enthusiasts and a really good Cessna 150 *is* something to be enthused over. The Continental O-200 engine in it is one of the sweetest aircraft engines ever made. you have an absolute gem there in your hands and you cant see it!!!! mate you're looking like a goose. :-) hell if you're that much of a whinger I'll give you $3000 for it and ship it back to australia to fly it myself. Stealth (wouldnt mind a cessna 150 to restore) Pilot |
#35
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Depression after Washing
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 06:06:58 -0700 (PDT), Gene Seibel
wrote: On Jun 26, 5:22*pm, Charles Talleyrand wrote: My kid and I just washed the plane. *Even after washing it, there are still chips of paint missing, a bit of rust, a drip-stain of fuel, and so on. *The panel looks like it has been modified every once in a while since 1966. *My plane is relatively nice compared to the other ones on the field, but it's still in worse cosmetic condition than my car. None of these problems is a safety issue, and none of them could be fixed without spending significant time and/or money. One of the reasons we own airplanes is pride of ownership. This makes me sad. *Makes me want to sell and rent. Our '66 is cosmetically challenged. Sometimes it depresses me for a moment or two, but the second we start that takeoff run, nothing but flying is on my mind. My money is going into hours in the air. That's why I bought it. I notice that most of the people who have commented about the condition, age, or speed of my airplanes don't even have one and fly far less than I do or not at all. an old pilot's aphorism: The air has no eyes! the bloody stuff also has no respect :-) Stealth Pilot |
#36
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Depression after Washing
Charles Talleyrand wrote:
At least this one has very few non-cosmetic squawks (dang nose wheel shimmy). Add shims, make sure the fork/hinge doesn't have cracks, make sure the tire doesn't have excessive wear or a bump on it, is the strut leaking oil too? If so replace the seals, usually the damper shock isn't the fault, but it could be weak too... |
#37
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Depression after Washing
Strip the paint off and fly with polished aluminum.
You will gain about 100 pounds of useful load and be able to tell at a glance the condition of the aircraft. Keep it polished and you will be amazed at how much better it performs without all the surface imperfection drag. Of course, you will have absolutely *zero* time to fly....but, dang, it'll sure look cool! We almost bought a bare aluminum Ercoupe. I'm really, REALLY glad we didn't. I waste too much time already polishing Atlas' prop and spinner. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 Ercoupe N94856 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#38
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Depression after Washing
In article 6RV9k.231534$yE1.53416@attbi_s21,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: Strip the paint off and fly with polished aluminum. You will gain about 100 pounds of useful load and be able to tell at a glance the condition of the aircraft. Keep it polished and you will be amazed at how much better it performs without all the surface imperfection drag. Of course, you will have absolutely *zero* time to fly....but, dang, it'll sure look cool! We almost bought a bare aluminum Ercoupe. I'm really, REALLY glad we didn't. I waste too much time already polishing Atlas' prop and spinner. It really isn't as bad as you make it out to be. You polish on rainy spring days, before the real flying season begins and let it go the rest of the year. Maybe touch it up in August on days when it is too hot to fly. |
#39
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Depression after Washing
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Larry Dighera writes: Why? They might total the airplane that you share. They might not maintain it properly. They might damage it without telling anyone. There are many possibilities. Totaling the aircraft is a non-issue. That's what insurance is for. Damage is a non-issue. That's what the pre-flight is for. It requires that they be responsible adults, preferably business people who can afford to own 1/3 of an aircraft. Many adults aren't that responsible. Pilots get themselves killed often enough; why would they be any more cautious for someone else's sake? I've been in a couple of shared ownership situations and have had no problems. The biggest concern is actually a deadbeat partner that doesn't cover their share of the recurring fixed costs. That's why a good up-front agreement with collection abilities is a must. My first partnership had 7 other owners. I was putting almost half the yearly hours on the plane. Basically I was doing the flying and others were paying the bills. It was a beautiful arrangement. |
#40
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Depression after Washing
Mike writes:
Totaling the aircraft is a non-issue. That's what insurance is for. Damage is a non-issue. That's what the pre-flight is for. The greater the number of aircraft totaled, the higher the insurance premiums, so it's not quite a non-issue. And you can miss things during a pre-flight inspection. My first partnership had 7 other owners. I was putting almost half the yearly hours on the plane. Basically I was doing the flying and others were paying the bills. It was a beautiful arrangement. Sounds nice. Why didn't the other owners use the plane much? |
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