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In another post, someone mentioned that their dream is to fly a real Mustang. Well that's my dream as well.
Other warbirds would be fun, of course, but the absolute goal is a P-51 solo. Such things don't come easily, but you know about the first step in the thousand mile journey......
In answer to that post I listed my Master Plan, which is:
Get PPL (Done)
Get Tail Dragger endorsement (Done)
Get Complex Airplane Endorsement (Almost done - couple more lessons)
After this comes:
Aerobatics! (what fun that will be - provided I don't barf)
High Powered Endorsement
Multi-engine (I've heard this helps in handling high powered warbirds even though they are singles)
AT-6 instruction
P-51 instruction.....
Coincident with all of this is getting my IFR ticket and lots and lots of hours.....
The PPL was fairly straightforward...did it in a Cessna 152. From there I upgraded immediately to a Piper Warrior. Getting the Complex in a Piper Arrow.
The Tail Dragger, though, was a different universe and I found it fascinating and pleasant to be thrown back into an earlier era of flying..........
Part I:
I drove to Hampton New Hampshire, where you can get a
tailwheel endorsement. There, I was introduced to my CFI and the J-3 Piper Cub.
I really couldn't stop smiling. I was in a different universe from the Beverly Ma. airport I normally do my flying in what with a tower, biz jets on the line, and a flight sim for IFR training etc.
Here, at Hampton Airport there was a 2000 foot dirt strip, a shack, with the paint peeling off, holding the training office and a cafe, and an interesting collection of aircraft.
To get to my Cub I walked across the runway ....that's what I was told to do - I asked if that was really ok.
Sure.
I was shown how to preflight the thing. different but not different - I mean never before had I had to thump flying wires for sound.
I'm shown the procedure for hand propping, and I get in and the CFI props the plane. Also a trifle different from turning the key.
The other thing you notice is the instrumentation: Whereas with the Warrior you have this vast wall of instruments on the panel - complete with dual radios and dual nav comms, with the J-3 you get.....
4
Airspeed, alt, tach, compass. Oh, well, you also have oil pressure and temp.
One solos from the rear seat. My particular plane was built for the Army in early WWII so the backseat had a great birdcage and the visibility was fantastic.
Mags? upper left ceiling
Carb heat? To the right of the front seater.
Want to turn on the carb heat?
Pull on the string tied to it.
Want to shut it off? loosen your shoulder harness and lean WAAAAAAAY forward... (I think I'm going to bring a backscratcher with me next time so I can keep my harness tight).
Elevator trim? To the left of the front seater..lean forward to adjust and DON'T let your shoulder hit the throttle when you crank it (like I did twice).
Taxiing: ahhh yes we're getting into P-51ness here....gentle S turns as you all know. But don't push too hard on the rudder or you pop the tailwheel out of detente and the pedals no longer turn the tailwheel. Took a few tries to figure that out.
Get to the end of the runway, runup, line up.
Hey! I can't see nuthin'!
"Ok take off," says the CFI.
Now this is the way god meant us to fly- stick in the right hand and throttle in the left. I gun it and off we go. It's no Merlin but I can feel it in the future.... Nothing to a takeoff but then - we had maybe 3 kts wind.
Some familiarization..turns first. Do a steep turn.
For a split second I hesitate. Huh? There's no AI? How am I to know when I get to 45 degrees? I shrug and guess.
Not a bad guess but this is no Warrior or C152.....RUDDER! this thing
has REAL adverse yaw. Couple turns later I have that down. Some stalls - you can really feel the controls mush out on you.
And now the CFI directs me to this private strip where he takes newbies to get a lot of taxi practice. I land - not totally awful but not great.
Back and forth I taxi. The field has an upgrade and on the high end there is a 30-40 foot, very steep hill. Great sledding hill. Two old guys standing on top of the hill watching me and smiling. After I get the taxi thing down the CFI takes it and guns her up the hill. I wondered why........ The two old men smile and wave.
He spins it around and says, "Ok take off."
WHAT?
Down the hill?
Yeah.
But the wind sock puts the wind on our tail! Yeah but that's better than trying to take off on an upgrade with the hill in front of you. I thought about suggesting we start at the bottom of the hill but, instead.....
I gun it and tip the thing over the cliff, down the hill and up into the air. Seems we made it ok.
Now I thought I was centered on the runway during the t/o roll but the CFI told me to keep it centered - meaning I wasn't. So I'll have to look more closely on either side.
We head back to Hampton, get into the pattern, I pull the throttle back, pull on the carby heat string, start cranking that darned elev trim - hitting the throttle with my shoulder - bring it in to a real
bouncer. But we make it in one piece.
I'll be working on those landings I guess ;^)
Anyhow that's what it's like. My landings sucked but then this is why I'm doing this. I'm now 1.3 hours closer to that P-51....
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