All posts by DWMack

Sept 15: If you like airplanes:

If you like airplanes:

Aircraft enthusiasts from around the world flew into the Southwest Michigan Regional Airport this week. Ross Warner, Meyers Aircraft Owners Association president and The Meyers Aircraft Owners Association held its annual fly in today through Sunday, with the most activity Saturday afternoon.

The Meyers Aircraft Co. was a U.S. aircraft maker established by Al Meyers in Tecumseh, Mich., in 1936. Originally, the company produced a biplane trainer, the Meyers OTW, but after World War II developed a range of light utility aircraft, culminating in the Meyers 200. In 1965, the company and the rights to two of its aircraft, the 145 and 200, were purchased by Rockwell-Standard.

The OTW (Out To Win) was a conventional biplane with tandem seating for two in open cockpits and a fixed tailwheel landing gear. The aircraft was produced in two main variants; the OTW-145 powered by a 145 HP Warner Super Scarab, and the OTW-160 powered by a 160 HP Kinner R-5 engine.

Typical characteristics: Maximum speed: 120 mph, Cruise speed: 105 mph and Landing speed: 40 mph.

As a trainer in the Civilian Pilot Training Program during World War Two, it earned itself a reputation for reliability and safety that was second to none— reportedly a cadet was never killed while learning to fly in the old OTW.   http://www.  airbum . com / pireps/ Pirep OTW.html

Here are just a few pictures from the fly in.

1941 Meyers – OTW-160 from Indiana

OTW’s in formation flight
1942 Meyers – OTW-145 – from South Carolina
1942 Meyers – OTW-145 – from South Carolina
1941 Meyers – OTW – from MI
1941 Meyers – OTW – from MI
1941 Meyers OTW From New Mexico
1941 Meyers OTW From New Mexico
Meyers Model 200A, Manufactured: 1959 – fixed wing single engine from Minnesota

This  is called  a  taildragger (ie: has a tail wheel) and is special. Its a Meyers – Model MAC-145 from MI

The Meyers 200 was a single-engine light aircraft produced in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s.
Simple instrumentation – fly by the seat of your pants.

7 cylinder rotary power plant / engine – The radial engine is a reciprocating type internal combustion engine configuration in which the cylinders “radiate” outward from a central crankcase like the spokes of a wheel.

 

5 cylinder radial engine –

Here is the Trivia Diver Question asked at the August Michigan Underwater (MUD) club meeting.

Question: Other than the German Mine-layer, the UC-97, what other submarine has visited Benton Harbor/ Saint Joseph MI as part of a War Bond drive?

If you were at last month’s club meeting  or read the newsletter you know.

Answer:

It was the Japanese mini sub HA-19 used in the Dec 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. It was paraded thru Benton Harbor to help sell War Bond’s on July 23,1943.

Japanese mini sub HA-19 paraded thru down town Benton Harbor, Mi.
HA-19 on traveling trailer

The Japanese Navy’s midget submarines were ~78-feet long, weighted 46-ton submerged, had a crew of two and was armed with two 450-millimeter Type 97 torpedoes with 800 pound warheads. They could sprint up to 26 miles per hour submerged, but could not dive deeper than 300 feet. More importantly, the Type As had no engine and ran purely on batteries. This gave the diminutive vessels a maximum endurance of 12 hours at speeds of 6 miles per hour. The subs often ran out of power much faster in real combat. A larger submarine mothership had to bring the Type As close to the target area. With the battery limitations it was unlikely the midget sub could make it back to safety. Each one had a 300-pound scuttling charge.

Japanese mini sub HA-19. Grounded in the surf on Oahu 1941. Recovered by the U.S.N.

The submarines boat captain was the first Japanese prisoner of war.

 

September 1: Food for Reflection perhaps?

Food for Reflection perhaps?

This video was posted on the General Aviation Junkyard which is about neglected, abandoned and/or derelict aircraft. The site also provides a reflection about the history and its loss of general, commercial, and military aircraft.

This is one a video that I feel has significant and emotional meaning if you really think about it. It applies not to just the thoughts and memories of those in the wars, not just WWII, but can apply to all the following wars and conflicts since.

The mechanics of warfare have changed but the effect on those in them have not. What is the real cost in and to people, both service personnel and families? What of the tremendous cost conflicts impact on the economics of the country whether you are considered the winner or loser?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpGNKO6wz10

The Best Years of Our Lives 1946 airport scene Dana Andrews – Clip from the 1946 film with Dana Andrews walking through a aircraft graveyard. Film synopsis: Three World War II veterans return home to small-town America to discover that they and their families have been irreparably changed.

The Daily News -Truth or Fiction

ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, PBS, The CW, and separate cable news CNN, MSNBC, and FNC, etc

True or False:

“And now it’s time to go over the carefully selected stories that have been chosen to manipulate your emotions and thinking for a specific agenda.”

Do you believe that “reporters” sift through facts, weigh them up, make editorial judgements about their relative strength and importance, and then present them in a way that illuminates the truth of a matter? Or do their ramblings mimic their prejudices and preconceptions, picking the facts that support their (or the stations managers) opinion and ignoring the ones that do not?

Do you believe that if you are provided with just the known “Facts” it leaves you bewildered and you need reporters to have the facts interpreted for you?

Should we not expect reporters of the news to examine the evidence and reach conclusions based on rigorous and professional judgement’s rather than their opinions or their hunches?

We are assailed on all sides by information presented to us by those with hidden agendas, causes to push and products to sell.

To wade into the ocean of digital information these days is to feel manipulated, pressured and overwhelmed by “facts” that have been twisted and misrepresented to suit someone else’s opinion.

What we need are reporters who are trying to cut through the manipulation and the spin and let the facts do the talking.

August 3: Lunch on the Fly – Goshen Municipal Airport

One of my flying and jump buddies has Fridays off this summer and invited me to join him on their “Lunch on the Fly ” where he and other fellow aviators fly to a different airport every Friday for lunch rotating among five different airports.

This is about the same thing as doing the  $100 hamburger trip. Now that  typically involves flying a short distance (less than two hours), eating at an airport restaurant, and flying home.

“$100” originally referred to the approximate cost of renting or operating a light general aviation aircraft, such as a Cessna 172, for the time it took to fly round-trip to a nearby airport. However, increasing fuel prices have since caused an increase in hourly operating costs for most airplanes, and a Cessna 172 now costs $100–$130 per Hobbs hour to rent, including fuel.

A Hobbs meter, by the way,  is a device used in aviation to measure the time that an aircraft is in use. The meters typically display hours and tenths of an hour, but there are several ways in which the meter may be activated:

So my buddy  and another pilot flew their cub’s over to Southwest Michigan Regional Airport which is in Benton Harbor, Mi.  We had some clouds on the way to Goshen and felt bump or two  but it lightened up and brightened up just as we got to the airport and stayed that way the remainder of the fly day.

Here are a few pictures of some of the planes that flew in.  After a great lunch, we left Goshen and I got a little stick time in the Cub going to Michigan City Municipal Airport – Phillips Field (KMGC).

 

After landing and helping to put that bird in his hanger I went over to check out the skydiving plane at “Skydive Windy City Chicago” and took a few pictures.  Then Dave gassed up his Cessna 182  and  let me fly it  that back to Benton Harbor.

It was a great day for flying or jumping made even better when your friends are letting  you fly their planes 🙂

July 31: Global Positioning System (GPS Jamming)

If your flying this could make things interesting

While web surfing the other day I came across an article dated June of 2016 that was interesting because it brought to mind an occurrence that happened to me several years ago when flying a cross country flight from Michigan thru Indian and Illinois.

Now this was quite a few years ago and I was flying Visual Flight Rules (VFR) using compass and landmarks but had my GPS on as a backup. During the flight as I flew thru a Military Operations Area (MOA) my GPS lost all signal reference and was totally out of service.  At that time this was an unexpected occurrence but now days it may not be that unusual for that to happen.

The article I read about stated that “FAA Warns of GPS Outages This Month During Mysterious Tests on the West Coast”.  Very interesting I thought!

 Starting today, it appears the US military will be testing a device or devices that will potentially jam GPS signals for six hours each day.  

 The FAA issued an advisory warning pilots on Saturday that global positioning systems (GPS) could be unreliable during six different days this month, primarily in the Southwestern United States. The testing will be centered on China Lake, California—home to the Navy’s 1.1 million- acre Naval Air Weapons Center in the Mojave Desert.

It stated that the testing would be on June 7, 9, 21, 23, 28, and 30th with the GPS interference testing taking place between 9:30 am and 3:30 pm Pacific time. But it noted that if you’re on the ground, you probably won’t notice interference.

Now last month as I was checking out Notice to Airmen (NOTAMS) & Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR’s) prior to flying I came across the following “NOTC7933 – Flight Advisory GPS Interference Testing, August 02-15, 2018 Camp Grayling, MI.”

Now this month (August) Military Training is a routine part of the flying season in Alaska.  Sporting the largest contiguous complex of special use airspace in the country , military planners announced the dates of four Red Flag exercises over the coming months.  The thing that is a little different is that each of these 10 day exercises this year will include “GPS testing” where military forces on the ground will jam the GPS signal from participating aircraft, to test this real-world threat now faced by our armed forces.  The challenge is, it may also impact civil aircraft, outside the boundaries of the MOA’s and Restricted Areas used by the military aircraft. On the dates within these ranges that GPS testing is planned, NOTAM’s will be issued at least 72 hours in advance, with defined date and time ranges that will limit the testing.

Bottom line is If you are operating IFR, remembering to tune in the VOR and ILS frequencies from our “legacy” equipment.  For those of us that fly VFR, it might be a good idea to make a long flight flight or two this summer just navigating with a good old paper chart and compass, if your addicted to using your GPS, and re-discovering the joys of pilotage.

Definitions:

Military Operations Area (MOA) is airspace designated to separate or segregate military activities from Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) traffic and to identify for Visual Flight Rules (VFR) traffic where these activities are conducted.

During active times,  MOA’s often have different types of aircraft performing maneuvers at different air speeds and have  active and inactive hours, also known as “hot” and “cold” times. Check with a flight service specialist before you fly to find out whether the MOA is active or not.  Note that aircraft in MOA’s are sometimes granted permission to fly “lights out” training missions. Military aircraft do not have airspeed restrictions within MOA limits and the  250-knot limit for commercial aircraft, for example, does not apply to military aircraft in MOAs.

Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) is a notice filed with an aviation authority to alert aircraft pilots of potential hazards along a flight route or at a location that could affect the safety of the flight. NOTAM’s are unclassified notices or advisories concerning the establishment, conditions or change in any aeronautical facility, service, procedure or hazard, the timely knowledge of which is essential to personnel and systems concerned with flight operations.

Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) is a type of Notices to Airmen (NOTAM).  A TFR defines an area restricted to air travel due to a hazardous condition, a special event, or a general warning for the entire FAA airspace. The text of the actual TFR contains the fine points of the restriction.

 

July 29: Posted on Facebook

Fly Day!

Anticipate 1330 hrs from Benton Harbor Airport – trade manual labor for short flight?      First one to respond has the seat – anyone? ? ?

Yep- got a prompt response so Tom got the “Nuclear Plant Tour” route along lake Michigan. It was a Blue Sky day.

Note: Somebody asked what was the manual labor.  It is to simply assist in opening the heavy and sticking sliding hanger doors,  verifying my pre-flight inspection and moving the plane in and out of the hanger.  I have dinged up the  lower back  and really need the assistance.

Palisades Nuclear Plant – a few miles south of South Haven, MI – along Lake Michigan shoreline.interested?

July 20: IF you like airplanes

Airplanes:   IF you like airplanes you might find some of these interesting. And no, these were not taken in Oshkosh. Last picture shows were the action was last Friday.  All the pictures were by Tom Conrad my neighbor.

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All this and more at the Goshen Airport in Indiana – RC Flying

Goshen Airport – RC Flying