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Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore

Homebuilders Workshop: Brave New World

By Ed Wischmeyer

Oh, brave new world… with all the glass cockpits available for homebuilts, these days you can spend hours working on your airplane with only a laptop and high speed Internet, no screwdriver or wrench required. And with the cost of database updates, you can have the $100 hamburger without even having to drive to the airport. Keeping the database cards in a pill bottle makes them harder to lose, at least until that pill bottle plays hide and seek under the car seat.

Yes, I’ve been doing a lot of software update thrashing, hampered by instructions filled with mostly accurate statements and software that can often run correctly. That is, it can run correctly. And yes, I screwed up a bit too by not reading the screens carefully enough. My error, but as often happens with pilot error, I had help with inconsistent screen layouts.

One potential problem is that if you use an SD card that’s too big, it can cause problems, so I went and bought a pair of eight GB cards. At least I’m not working with early glass that can’t recognize an SD card bigger than two GB.

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Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore

Homebuilder's Workshop: The $100+ Hamburger

By Ed Wischmeyer

It turns out that in this electronic age, it’s really easy to do things differently from the old days of steam gauges. With the cost of avionics data updates these days, you can spend $100 for your hamburger without leaving the ground, and you can work on your plane for hours without any tools.

One project that I’ve been working on (a bunch) is getting the checklist for the RV-9A just as I’d like it. I’ve got buddies who also fly my RV-9A, and they were not satisfied with the “idiot-syncrasies” of my personal checklist. And that’s reasonable, as my checklist has memory crutches dating back 30 years to when I used to fly and instruct in planes that included three different kinds of turbochargers, all with different characteristics, some planes with retractable gear, some not. I needed memory crutches that would work with a wide variety of airplanes, and I still use them. Unencumbered with such history, they wanted an RV-9A checklist. Solution? Two checklists, one for me, one for them… Meets both needs.

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Editorial: Something Has Changed

By Ed Downs

Another birthday, another reason to reflect. This writer and his twin brother have made it through another year with an evening spent with family, giving “the twins” a chance to reflect on careers in aviation that span 60 years. Yes, twins often have much in common and our choice of careers certainly points that out. While considerably beyond a traditional retirement age, this writer and his brother, Earl, continue to fly as active CFIs, work in the aviation industry, and deal heavily in subjects relating to flight safety, training, the promotion of recreational flying, and the future of general aviation through a direct interface with the FAA and government. As the evening’s musings of past adventures turned to reflecting upon “the good old days,” we realized that both of us were concluding that, “something has changed.” 

Recreational flying is certainly not what it was 50 or 60 years ago. Expense has gone up dramatically, and the technological sophistication of GA airplanes, even old planes that have been retrofitted with modern avionics, is absolutely amazing. Having started flight training in the mid 1950s, we concluded that much has improved since we first flew in an Aeronca Champ with a wind driven generator and a two channel, low frequency radio.  Mind you, that was considered to be a well-equipped trainer, being flown from busy Van Nuys Airport in Southern California. The training was rigorous, with maneuvers like 720 steep turns, spins, accelerated (and aggravated) stalls, and steep spiral descents all included in the CAA approved curriculum. No training flight was conducted without a simulated engine failure, frequently followed with a landing to a full stop. Of course, almost all private training done in this timeframe used planes like Champs, Cubs, T-crafts and other tail draggers, so both full stall and wheel landings were the order of the day.

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Goodies and Gadgets: July 2014

Zenair Rivets Now Available at Aircraft Spruce
 
Zenith Aircraft Company is making available their unique blind rivets through Aircraft Spruce and Specialty. Blind (or pulled) rivets are a common type of fastener used in metal kit aircraft construction. They are available in 1/8-inch and 5/32-inch diameters.    

What makes the Zenair rivet distinctive is that as the rivet is pulled, the rivet head is drawn into a dome-shaped top which gives the finished rivet a low profile rounded top, enhancing the strength of the rivet while improving airflow over it. The ease with which these rivets can be pulled, or “popped,” saves considerable time and simplifies the entire kit building process. Aeronautical engineer Chris Heintz, designer of the popular Zenith line of kit planes, first started using structural blind rivets for light aircraft construction in the 1970s when he sought an easier alternative to bucked solid rivets, which require additional tooling and skills.    

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Goodies and Gadgets - July 2012

Savvy Launches Free-of-Charge Web-Based Next-Generation Engine Monitor Data Analysis Platform: SavvyAnalysis.com

Designed by professional analysts to be fast, powerful, easy to use, and packed with features for serious analysis. Available to the public free of charge beginning July 1st, 2012.

SavvyAnalysis.com, a new web-based next-generation digital engine monitor data analysis platform, will become available July 1st, 2012, totally free of charge.

Mike Busch“We were frustrated with the existing tools available to graph and analyze piston engine monitor data, so we decided to develop our own platform from the ground up, and equip it with all sorts of advanced capabilities from our growing wish-we-had-this list” stated Mike Busch A&P/IA, CEO of Savvy Aircraft Maintenance Management, Inc. Busch is a recognized authority on piston aircraft engines, and was honored by the FAA in 2008 as National Aviation Maintenance Technician of the Year.

“As the world’s largest manager of owner-flown piston-powered airplanes, we have long found that engine monitor data analysis is the most powerful tool available for troubleshooting engine problems,” Busch added. “I suspect we’ve probably done more of this kind of analysis than all other organizations combined, so we know what it takes to do it right.”

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Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore Homebuilder's Workshop Annamarie Buonocore

Homebuilder's Workshop - February 2011

Post Chorny

By Ed Wischmeyer

The passing of Chorny, my sweet old black Lab, in some ways marks the end of one era of my life and hopefully the start of another era, building upon – and even better than – its forbears.

Chorny made her last flight with me, her first in the RV-8A, to the old family summering grounds in Michigan. It was surprising to me to be so content blasting along at altitude at 170 knots, a mile up, and to be so oblivious to the scenery below, scenery that was the domain of the AirCam and the Cessna, scenery marveled at and researched after lower flights in slower aircraft.

The RV-8A didn’t care about the scenery on the ground. It flew in the sky.

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Sport Flying With In Flight USA - August 2010

LSA’s Sprout Technology

By Ed Downs

Most readers of this column know by now that the S-LSA category of airplane evolved from the low tech world of ultra light designs. Some 6 years after the birth of LSA, one has to look hard to see the simplicity of its origin. Airframes have become increasingly sophisticated, and avionics packages are beginning to challenge big buck machines. A first timer renting or buying the typical S-LSA will be surprised upon entering a cockpit that looks more like an F-22 than single engine sport plane. Now, that sounds pretty exciting, but let’s take a look at who that “first timer” might actually be.

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The 36th Annual Sun 'N Fun International Fly-In & Expo

Sun ‘n Fun 2009 (Richard VanderMeulen)Tuesday, April 13 is Opening Day

The skies over Lakeland, Florida, will begin to receive thousands of aircraft that will convert Lakeland Linder Regional Airport into the busiest airport in North America this month.

Tuesday, April 13, is “Opening Day” of Sun ‘n Fun’s 36th annual gathering of the world of general aviation for its spring break for pilots and friends. The 2010 Sun ‘n Fun International Fly-In & Expo will attract an estimated 150,000 to 170,000 visitors from North America and more than 80 other countries, distinguishing it as the largest convention in the state of Florida and the first major international aviation event of the year in the Americas.

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News Annamarie Buonocore News Annamarie Buonocore

The 36th Annual Sun 'N Fun International Fly-In & Expo

Sun ‘n Fun 2009 (Richard VanderMeulen)Tuesday, April 13 is Opening Day

The skies over Lakeland, Florida, will begin to receive thousands of aircraft that will convert Lakeland Linder Regional Airport into the busiest airport in North America this month.

Tuesday, April 13, is “Opening Day” of Sun ‘n Fun’s 36th annual gathering of the world of general aviation for its spring break for pilots and friends. The 2010 Sun ‘n Fun International Fly-In & Expo will attract an estimated 150,000 to 170,000 visitors from North America and more than 80 other countries, distinguishing it as the largest convention in the state of Florida and the first major international aviation event of the year in the Americas.

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News Annamarie Buonocore News Annamarie Buonocore

Sun 'N Fun Opens New Exhibit Hanger

The Popular “Parts Exchange” Moves Nearby

The campus of the Sun ‘n Fun International Fly-In & Expo will have a slightly different look for this year’s 36th annual event, which will be held April 13 – 18 at Lakeland Linder Regional Airport in Lakeland, Fla.
Sun ‘n Fun officials announced this past fall they would be opening a new Exhibit Hangar for this year’s International Fly-In & Expo and this month announced that the popular “Parts Exchange” aviation consignment operation would be relocated adjacent to the newly commissioned exhibit facility.

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