Pursuit of a new airplane

It looks like I won’t be able to fly the RV-7 (barring a major change in medical certification requirements).  I can still fly with Sport Pilot privileges, as long as I can self-certify that I’m fit to fly.  Since both my regular doc and the cardiologist agree that there’s no reason I can’t fly, I’m looking forward to getting on the air again.

The problem?  There are no light sport aircraft around here to fly.  No one rents them, and as yet I have not found any clubs or partnerships that offer one.  My attempts to get my own flying club to look into LSA ownership were met with considerable resistance…  odd, given that we have lost or are losing at least three memberships due to lost medical certificates, and there is at least one other member who hasn’t flown in quite some time due to – yeah, you guessed it, no medical.  Still, the average pilot who does NOT have to fly LSA knows virtually nothing about light sport aircraft.

Anyway, it looks like if I want to fly again in the foreseeable future, I’m going to have to either own outright or form a partnership or club.  I’d looked into forming a partnership to purchase an RV-12, but we were only able to get two partners together — wed need at least 4, preferably 5.  After exploring all other options, I have pretty much settled on an Aeronca 7AC Champion, commonly known as a Champ.

Why a Champ?  There are a number of reasons.  Cost is a big one.  Champs are plentiful and relatively inexpensive.  With tandem seating (front & rear seats) they’re roomier than, say, a side-by-side Taylorcraft or Luscombe.  They’re faster than a Cub, and are flown solo from the front seat instead of the rear.  They also generally cost less than a Cub.  If equipped with a (slightly) upgraded engine, say an 85 HP C-85 instead of the original 65 HP A65, I’m told the climb and cruise performance is quite good for the type.

There are plenty of flying Champs out there for sale.  I’m chasing one or two “projects” that will need to be restored.  Why do that, when I can get a flying aircraft for about the same cost?  Simple.  These planes were built in the mid to late 1940s.  If I’m going to fly it, I want to know that every single tube, weld, fastener and part is sound and airworthy.  While rebuilding I can use all new hardware and replace or repair any part that is not 100% up to snuff.  I can also take the opportunity to do some updates to the plane — better brakes, for example; newer fabric, better seat restraints, etc.  How far i take that depends a lot on what kind of deal i can get on an engine, since either of the ones I’m looking at will need the engine replaced.  Of course it’s also a balancing act — literally — to put what you want in it, but keep the empty weight as low as possible.

Of course, this doesn’t mean I wouldn’t consider a flying example if the right airplane comes along at the right price.  I would not complain about a year spent flying instead of building.

 

Elvis With a Tan

We picked up some peanut butter with cocoa from Costco.  TOO good.  So this morning I tried a new variation of Elvis oatmeal — 1/3 C oatmeal, 1/3 C + about 2 TBSP water, 1/3 C almond milk, 1 tsp chia seeds, 1 TBSP cocoa peanut butter, 1/2 TBSP maple syrup and about 1/3 of a ripe banana, thinly sliced.  The extra water is for the chia seeds; they’re optional for those of us in the clogged artery club.  If you put them in, let the chia seeds and water sit for 10-15 minutes before adding the rest of the ingredients.  Nuke for 2 minutes 15 seconds, stirring a couple of times along the way.  Dee-lish.

Elvis Oatmeal

This morning I tried something new for breakfast.

1/3 cup Quaker quick oats
1 Tbsp. organic peanut butter
1 tsp. organic honey
About half a banana, sliced thinly
1/3 cup skim or 1% milk
1/3 cup water

Microwave around 2 minutes, stir once or twice while it cooks and stir thoroughly afterward.  Next time I may try either a bit less peanut butter or a bit more water or milk.  Or maybe not, it’s pretty good.  Not something I will eat every day, but if you’ve got to eat oatmeal you need to change things up every once in a while.

Our first month all-VOIP

It was about a month ago that I switched our land line number, which we have had for many years, to VOIP.  After running my work and Hamgadgets numbers over VOIP for a couple of years, I figured I had things worked out well enough to handle the home line without hassles as well.

The only complication that arose prior to making the switch was due to the Linux distribution I’m running.  I decided on CentOS a couple of years ago because of its long term support; I didn’t want to have to rebuild my server every year or so.  Well, great — but just because the base OS is supported doesn’t mean anything else will be.  The DAHDI kmod (kernel drivers for the analog phone line interface card) packages stopped getting updated about a year or so ago.  So, I could either run an increasingly out of date kernel, build the kernel modules by hand (every time the kernel gets updated), rebuild the entire server, or just dump DAHDI.

I settled on the last option.  After some cursory research I ordered an Obihai OBi200.  This little hockey puck sized device has one POTS line jack, one POTS phone jack, an Ethernet port and a USB port.  There’s a USB wifi dongle for it that I also ordered.  It’s been a perfect solution.  Now our household cordless phones are seamlessly connected to the Asterisk server over wifi.

So far there have been zero complaints from anyone, including myself.  Incoming calls to our house number arrive via VOIP and ring both the household cordless phones, and the Cisco phone on my desk.  I have Asterisk voicemail turned on with a delay long enough that the caller will get the phone’s answering machine if we aren’t home, but if we’re on the phone the Asterisk system will take a message.  The only thing I really want to change: I can’t pick up the house line on my office phone if the call has already been answered on the house cordless phone, and vice versa.  It’s not as easy a fix as you’d think, but it’s also not a big deal.  I can transfer the call if needed.

The real story is told by  two things.  First, our total cost for phone service with Cox was $41.59 per month (assuming no long distance charges at all).  The first month on Flowroute cost us less than $11 (including long distance), not counting the $7.50 charge to port the number.  Second, if I had not told her about the change, I don’t think Lisa would have even known…  except that caller ID no longer shows up on the TV when a call comes in.  I don’t miss it.

So aside from saving $30 a month, what do we gain?  Well, a few nice things.  We have quite a few blacklisted numbers from telemarketers and scam callers.  Before the switch the cordless phone would recognize up to 30 of them and drop the call AFTER it rang a couple of times.  Now the call gets silently refused and we never even know it happened.  I can also re-route calls to our cell phones, either in place of or instead of the house phones.  FAX reception is automatic, with received FAXes emailed to Lisa and I both in PDF format.  The list goes on, but overall — it’s a win.

So, our first month since about 1980 or so without a wired phone line, and no regrets.

 

End of the Straight Talk experiment

I’m letting the Straight Talk Wireless lapse, and will sell or give away the phone.  Overall impression: The service is fine, just not the right direction for me right now.  The phone is not without its faults, but is good as a very basic smart phone.

The only real annoyance I’ve had is Straight Talk texting the phone a few times with upsells, and calling the house number to “remind” me that the service is expiring in a few days.  I suppose I can forgive the reminder calls (though I do wish they could be stopped without calling in to talk to a salesdroid).  The texts were a little annoying, though.

Airplane hunting

Since I am not likely to be able to renew my FAA third class medical, I’m now limited to flying with Sport Pilot privileges – at least for the time being.  This situation could possibly change at some future date, but when or indeed if that ever happens is anyone’s guess.  For my part, I’m not really willing to simply give up and hope for the best.

Unfortunately, the options for flying with Sport Pilot privileges around here are nil.  There are no Light Sport Aircraft (LSA) available for rent anywhere.  My flying club doesn’t have one, and won’t be adding one (I tried, it was shot down – so to speak).  I have not found anyone looking for a partner in one, and my efforts to find a few partners to buy an RV-12 have so far fallen short.  And while an RV-12 wouldn’t cost (much) more than I was planning on eventually spending on the RV-7, it would be a much larger expense up front — and the same cost for a far less capable airplane.

So, I’ve been exploring other options.  here are some that I’ve looked at:

Ultralights.  No thanks.  Zero utility, and I would probably have conditions favorable enough to fly for 2-3 months out of the year.  Next!

Single-seat LSAs (Fly Baby, various other experimentals).  Sorry, needs to have two seats.  And while I’d love to fly a replica WWI biplane, it’s really got to have an enclosed cockpit.

Remos, CTLS, various other S-LSA planes:  Nice rides, but priced well above what I’m willing to spend.  Good deals start around $85K and go up from there.  It took about ten minutes to eliminate an entire class of airplane from consideration.

Ercoupe 415-C.  While I originally didn’t pay a lot of attention to the Ercoupe due to the relatively narrow cabin and the sorry state of a lot of the examples for sale, I started looking more closely at them recently.  They’re not terribly expensive, and range from “really nice” to “kinda cool” to “cute” – and downhill rapidly from there.  Unfortunately, they are pretty porky and don’t have anywhere near enough useful load left.  They do have starters and electrical systems, but would realistically be good only for solo flying.

Cubs.  If you’re not a Cub aficionado, these will seem a little overpriced due to the Cub name.  Slow.  I mean, all LSAs will be slow, but the Cub brings it to a whole new level.  Solo flight from the rear seat.  Most have no electrical system and no starter.  Of course there are dozens of different Cub models and modifications, but the variants that would make good candidates for us are very rare and/or quite expensive.

Taylorcraft: Poor visibility, narrow cockpit and some gymnastics required to get in and out.  Priced fairly reasonably.  Have not looked into STCs for things like electrical system, etc.

Luscombe:  All metal, which is good.  Narrow side-by-side cockpit (like the Chief and T-craft), and a reputation for being substantially more challenging to land and taxi.

Aeroncas:  Prewar models are simply too slow.  The postwar Chief is attractively priced, but the side by side cabin is again quite narrow.  Most have no electrical system/radio/xponder/starter.  Lots of STCs to fix most shortcomings, but none to make it 4″ wider.  The LSA market has driven the prices on Champs up some, but there are still reasonable deals to be had.  Tons of STCs to do pretty much anything to them, if you’ve got the time and a friendly A&P/IA.

Bearhawk LSA: This one looked very promising.  The quick-build kit available relieves me of the welding, which is good.  Unfortunately the list of things NOT included in the kit mean the total cost would most likely be more than I’m willing to spend on a day-VFR, 100-knot cruiser.  If I were willing to build from plans and do all my own welding, I’d be all over this…  but I’m not.

Sigh.  There really seems to be no good option.  I’m continuing to keep an eye out for a “project” Aeronca that I could (re)build to spec.  If I happen to find one outfitted the way I want (C-85-12, starter, alternator, battery) for a decent price I’m all over it, but so far have not seen much.

 

Straight Talk Wireless / Huawei Ascend Y

I’ve been carrying a cheap little Huawei Ascend Y on Straight Talk Wireless for a couple of weeks now.  The short story is, I’ve gone back to my Droid 3.

STW is OK as far as service goes.  Fine, in fact.  I do get an occasional text message from them trying to upsell, which is a little annoying, but not overly so.  Aside from that, it’s regular Verizon coverage, which is to say excellent.  So…  no complaints there.

The Huawei phone…  well…  what a POS, for one thing.  As an Android phone, it’s as close to the bottom of the barrel as you can get.  The web browser is next to useless — it frequently seems to just lose its mind, followed by a crash.  The phone has VERY little internal memory, and a lot of the apps can’t be moved to the SD card.  Some pretty basic features, like a flash for the camera, are missing, and some firmware features are inexplicably missing.  Like…  no quick way to silence the ringer.  The phone cost me less than $18, I think, and it’s about worth what it cost and no more.  So…  POS, but not a ripoff.  Want it?  I don’t need it.

So, will I drop Verizon for Straight Talk?  Not immediately.  With discounts, my phone costs us $43 and change per month.  Our overall bill is ridiculously high, but dropping my phone for STW would actually cost us a little more.  I’ll continue to look for a less expensive way to keep them on Verizon, but I’m not anticipating that will work.  We may just drop Verizon, pay the early termination fee, and move – or maybe we can find two separate plans under VW that will eb cheaper.  Time will tell.

 

Neato vacuum update

My only complaint is that we only have one.

Rosie, our Neato robotic vacuum, has been doing a great job of keeping the floors vacuumed in the rooms where she runs.  I still haven’t done anything to the living room to keep her from getting hung up on the coffee table, but I’ve turned her loose in there once or twice anyway.  Once I used the magnetic strip to keep her out from under it, the other time I flipped it (the table) on its side.

The family room and upstairs, though, are now getting vacuumed a couple times a week.  I am always amazed at the amount of crud that comes out of the carpet even when it seems clean.  I’ve only had to intervene a couple of times when something got left on the floor (like a blanket) and sucked up, or once when the bot got hung up on a lamp base.  Overall — well worth the money.  I empty the dust bin after each run and occasionally vacuum off the paper filter; I just replaced it for the first time.  It came with 4 spares, and it looks like they only cost 3-4 bucks each.  Not bad if it means having your carpet vacuumed regularly.

Got a new phone

I decided I would try out Straight Talk Wireless, so now I have a new phone. It’s a cheap little Chinese Huawei Ascend Android phone, but it’s doing okay for the less than $20 I spent on it.  So right now I’m just trying out the WordPress Android app, & a new voice keyboard plugin. This is being posted from my phone, using voice input.  Maybe now I’ll post more. Maybe not.

Seeking RV-12 Partners

I am currently looking for a few partners to go in together on an RV-12.

The way I can see this working is four partners sharing ownership of an RV-12, either completed or mostly built.

  • Why an RV-12?  It’s an LSA, and currently the best option I can find.  It can be operated as an E-LSA, meaning the flexibility of owner maintenance and inspections.  It’s reasonably fast; reasonably inexpensive; Rotax powered; burns Mogas.   Would I consider something else?  Sure, if it’s reasonably fast, affordable, etc.  Probably not a Champ.
  • Why four partners?  According to the insurance broker I talked to (Shawna at nation Air), this keeps the insurance simple and inexpensive.  With 4 pilots it’s an airplane with 4 pilots.  With 5 pilots it’s considered a club and insured differently.  With four partners, I think scheduling conflicts cold be kept to a minimum.  Would I consider fewer or more partners?  Sure, it depends on how the numbers work out.
  • Why not build?  I have no problem with building.  But, there are nearly-complete RV-12s out there right now for not much more than, or even slightly less than, the cost of the kits.  If we can fly in a few months instead of a year or two, so much the better.  There are also built, flying, low-time RV-12s available for a very small premium over the cost of an unbuilt kit.  Would I consider building instead?  Sure, we’d just have to work out the details.
  • Do you have a particular plane in mind?  I have a few potential candidates.  One is a factory built 12, complete with ALL options available from Van’s, with major assembly work complete.  It includes the engine and prop.  Another is amateur built, and is complete from teh firewall back – we’d buy the engine and prop from Van’s.  Either would cost about wht the kits cost, give or take a couple thousand.  I also see a couple of low-time flying RV-12s for sale in the upper 70s to low 80s.  Of course all of these are subject to prior sale; I don’t want to rush into this deal, but if I can find partners soon it would be good.
  • How would this work?  I can see a couple of different possibilities.  One would be a simple partnership, co-owning the plane.  Another would be a club, with the club owning the lane and four members of the club.  The structure would be something we’d need to discuss and agree on; I don’t have a strong preference.  My only preference would be an arrangement that protects everyone and makes it easy and hassle-free to enjoy flying.
  • Where would the plane be kept?  I would strongly prefer Millard.  I would not rule out Eppley, if that worked out better for a majority of partners.  Blair, Wahoo, etc are simply too far for me.
  • What would it cost?  That’s the big question, isn’t it?  My calculations indicate we could make it work for an initial investment of $20K per person – that’s buying the plane, shipping it to Omaha, and even getting it painted after final assembly and phase 1 flight testing.  Monthly fixed expenses would run around $80-90 per partner for the hangar and insurance.  Flying time would run between $30-$35 per hour wet, if you include a fairly generous engine reserve — enough to have a top-notch major overhaul done by a nationally known shop at TBO.  That’s some pretty cheap flying.
  • When are you looking to do this?  Soon.  Now. Last week.  Next week.  As soon as I can find a couple more pilots interested in joining the partnership.
  • What kind of flying do you plan to do?  Like most recreational flyers, mostly shorter flights from an hour or so to several hours; $100 hamburgers, fly-ins, day trips to visit friends and relatives, that kind of thing.  The longest trip I would anticipate would be 5 days to a week, possibly once a year.