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eastmeg2

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Everything posted by eastmeg2

  1. I think you guys are being a little pessimistic about the weather for the weekend, although it makes sense to if you're flying. Haven't you seen the 4 Day Forecast charts on the BOM website? I think you could not have hoped for better forecast weather . . .
  2. Even though you haven't included Trikes in your list. . . Airborne Edge X 582 Streak-1 Airborne Edge XT-912 Streak-3
  3. Don't sell the cats !!! You will need them and a whole lot of buttered bread to make your anti-gravity device. lol
  4. It could just be an expensive solution to an aft C of G problem.
  5. Hi Troy, I learned with a HGFA instructor so have always been HGFA licensed and our Trikes are HGFA registered. This year I have decided to get my RAA trike license also. Like John says, RAA recognised my HGFA qualifications and from there it just a matter of paying the fees. What made me decide to join RAA is that RAA has better processes for making long x-country flights 100% legal. I'm refering to the simplified ASIC card application process (Which HGFA lacks) and the strong possibility of a controlled airspace endorsement becoming available through RAA in the future so that I could then transit all those coastal CTA's safely and legally. Another consideration is that at some point I expect I'll want to train on 3 axis ultralights, rather than toying with Hang Gliders or Paragliders under the HGFA. But not until I've had my fill of trikes for at least another 5 years. The only drawback is that I must maintain my HGFA license to be able to fly both our trikes which are HGFA registered. HGFA annual license, endorsements & membership fees & mag subscription approx $290. RAA annual license & membership fees & mag subscription approx $110 (correct me if I'm wrong - I haven't reached my first RAA renewal yet, the 1st year including joining fee cost $160). Cheers, Glen
  6. "And as luck would have it, the forecast for Canberra for the weekend is fine and sunny both days...wouldn't you know it. " Sounds like you guys are trying to tell me to go fly my trike around Goulburn instead of driving to Camden Haven for the fly in.
  7. Here's a couple of shots taken just after leaving our property near Goulburn, taken just before dawn showing my old trike on the trailer. I was headed to the Wangaratta Trike Gathering to hand the trike to it's new owner.
  8. Hi John, We did manage to get in a few hours flying in the 912 on the Sunday 10th June. Popped over to a friends place 20Nm east of us, then North past Neriga (On Nowra-Braidwood Rd) to overfly the Endrich Falls. They were in full flood flow and unfortunately the camera batteries couldn't handle the cold or went flat so we didn't get any shots of it. From there we flew west a bit to check for our mate that the Oallen Ford was not flooded and then followed the High Tension powerlines 25Nm SW back to base. There was some mild bumps on the way back which I guess would have been more unsettling with the older Streak wing but which I've become comfortable with after a few Megafauna's. Like walking on the deck of a yacht I suppose. I'm going through my ASIC application at the moment. Previously when I was only flying 582 trikes I didn't have any real need for an ASIC, but now, having the 912 I can see that I'm going to want to fly this trike much farther a-field and that there will be RPT airports along the way I'll want or need to land at. In the past with the 582/Streak-1 I've flown to Moruya a few times. Now I need an ASIC to land there and with the 912 I can go further down the coast or get in some coastal flying to Albion Park/Wollongong before returning inland to complete the triangle. I'm hoping that some day, given enough time off work, alone or with a group, I'll be able to fly the 912 coastal to Barwon Heads or to Hervey Bay and perhaps further. The 2008 Megafauna to Broken Hill should be a good trip. Maybe I'll have better luck with the weather to be able to fly all the way next year, rather than having to start with a 3 hour tow on the road like I did this year although at least I was able to return in the 912. Maybe next years Wang Trike Gathering will provide some better weather and I'll be able to fly there and back 200Nm each way. See you there either way. Cheers, Glen
  9. That's a lovely dream, I suppose that even 95.10 wouldn't allow it. Imagine putting one of these babies on a Sapphire or Vampire. BUT, where are the spec's & numbers on these? Weight? Fuel burn rate? Hrs TBO? Will it run on old banana skins, "they will run on any type of fuel" - Just kiding
  10. Hi John, From your other post in the "Just Landed" section I'd say we met at the Wang trike gathering at the end of April, I was the one handing over my trike to it's new owner from Tassie. That's a great setup you have with your trike in the caravan. The mention of the jet on the inlet side of the measurement unit was refering to the fuel flow meter on the XT, not the Mizer we have on our Edge X, so I'm not sure if that advice would apply to the fuel mizer or not. It's also nearly 3 hours drive for me to get to our trikes as well, so I have not had the chance to take Mc Guyvers advice yet on the XT. The problem you're having certainly does sound like a problem with your measurement unit though. I sometimes wonder if the units being used are meant for much bigger & thirstier machines, ie, need a greater flow to keep the impellor turning properly. Rgds, Glen
  11. Hi Thomas, I did the same flight from Heck Feild to Caloundra in a 582 powered Airborne trike a few years back. I'm sure you will have no troubles in a Jabiru. With the extra speed and range you will have I also thoroughly recommend doing the Gold Coast flight to the Casino before turning north again. Cheers, Glen
  12. Got mine on Friday 8th after sending a reminder email to RAAus last week. Unfortunately we had the biggest storm in 30 years and it was waterlogged in spite of the thoughtful postman wrapping the plastic wrapped June edition around it. Yes they both arrived on the same day.
  13. Maybe that explains why I got 4 more enquiries about the trike I sold within days of taking a deposit.
  14. The previous time I looked at an ASIC application form from CASA I also tossed it into the "TOO HARD !!!" basket. Just last week I came across the RAAus version of the application form and have to say that it has been greatly simplified and have just finished filling it in, just have to get 2 passport photo's and have an authorised RAAus person (CFI who already has an ASIC) sign it before I submit it.
  15. Hi Numptie, Sounds tempting, though I assume that Moruya still has ASIC requirements in place. I am filling in my ASIC application at the moment, with the expectation of being able to start doing flights to Moruya and other nearby ASIC airports again in the future. Any chance we might still be able to fly in without an ASIC card if we restrict ourselves to certain areas of the airport away from the passenger terminal, or is just having lodged an ASIC application with RAAus sufficient?
  16. I have to disagree about the screw-on type of connectors being a PITA. Yes they do require some extra care to instal, but anyone with a pair of wire cutters, precision screw driver set and a delicate touch can make these perform just as well as the crimp on version, without having to go the the expense of buying the right crimping tool or geeting a professional to do it. I have forgotten to disconnect the coax cable between my wing and trike base a couple of times when de-rigging in the past and the screw-on type is far easier to repair after these little mishaps. What you do need to know is exactly how far you should be trimming back each of the dielectric, outer conductor and outer insulation in order to make the connector work properly. A little bit of knowledge goes a long way - and weighs nothing. Cheers, Glen
  17. Well, I'm glad that somebody cleaed that up about Gazelles versus Skyfox's. Unfortunately my experience of them is limited to the time (Sept 2004) I was on route from Heck Field to Cooloola Cove in my trike and landed at Caloundra to refuel (2-stroke trikes don't go very far on a 44L tank of fuel against 20kt headwinds). Anyway my Skyfox experience was that as soon as I parked next to a taxyway, "SkyFox 757" promptly taxied out and did his engine warm up with prop wash blasting my trike from a mere 10 meters away. It took 3 radio calls to get the SOD to move . . . and both pilot and pasenger to hold the trike down until he did. Sorry for the grumble, but you just don't forget stupidity like that.
  18. I didn't get my RAAus May Mag, though did see it in the newsagent a couple of weeks back, so sent an email to the RAAus admin email box today to ask where it is.
  19. We also have a Fuel-Mizer flow meter on an Edge-X 582 trike and have found that it always indicates about 10% greater fuel flow than reality. This is probably a good thing as the low fuel alarm goes off earlier and gives you more warning. Other than that it's been a great gadget to have on board. We've also recently taken delivery of an XT-912 which has a fuel flow meter built into the glass dash, though it does not appear to be nearly as accurate as the Fuel Mizer. I've read a report from another XT-912 Cruze pilot that a reading of 5.5 L/hr is really 9 L/hr and in my XT-912 with the Streak-III wing I get 6.5 L/hr reading is really 11L/hr. I've already mentioned to the co-owner that I would not go planning any flights to East Timor based on the XT's flow meter readings. Rgds, Glen
  20. I have voted "No - I feel I need more information". In spite of being more thatn 70 pages the descriptive document for Part 103 I read a few months back was too high level and vague to be able to form any firm opinion about it.
  21. Hey Cazza, I think you should start heating up the urn now, 'cause there's gonna be a whole flock of us stopping in at Temora on Friday afternoon and leaving again on Sat Morning, including 4 Jabs, 1 Gazelle, 2 C150's, etc etc etc. Cheers, Glen
  22. I believe the trusty 912 is an approved engine . . . Cheers, Glen
  23. I have heard recently the CTA endorsement will not be made available to trike pilots, that being the case I'll likely let my RAA trike license expire at the end of the year and stay with HGFA. Currently have both, it would have been worth paying both annual license fees to be able to get the RAA CTA endorsement and fly our HGFA regoed trikes (582 & 912), but if trike pilots are to be excluded there's no point. I know there are some noisy aircraft around but most trikes cannot be heard from 1km away when on cruise power, probably due to the lower revs required to keep a trike in the air compared to a faster 3 axis UL. We are talking about CTA zones here. Are people who hear RPT's every day going to complain about noise from smaller (quieter ???) private aircraft?
  24. Here's another one - from the Sydney Morning Herald this afternoon. --------------------------------------------------------------------- A light aircraft has crash landed in a field at Hat Head in northern NSW, the Ambulance Service of NSW says. Ambulance crews and a rescue helicopter were heading to the area this afternoon. "The light aircraft is reported to have crash landed in a muddy field, activating its distress beacon," an ambulance spokesman said The female pilot - the only person on board - was uninjured but she and the aircraft had yet to be located, he said. It was the third light aircraft incident in two weeks in NSW, he said.
  25. Got the radio endorsement, but that's not legally sufficient in itself to fly in CTA. I've got no intention or desire to land at any controlled airport, just to transit the area safely & legally. Those two words just don't coincide at the moment. Something like airspace up to 500ft over water (within glide of the beach) being changed from C-Class to a G-Class Restricted zone requiring ATC radio clearance during tower hours, but without the transponder and GA PPL requirement.
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