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Old Koreelah

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Posts posted by Old Koreelah

  1. Anderson plugs are great design and they even come in different sizes. I have one hidden under my cooling cowl flap and another attached to my old jump starter pack (which now has a four LiFePO4 cells in it).

    When my battery has let me down, I’ve sat the starter pack on the ground and attached the Anderson plug. After starting, it’s just within reach to disconnect and drop the cable onto the ground as I taxi away.

     

    A recent incident has diminished my trust of LiFePO4 batteries; they won’t explode or burn, but can overheat and swell enough to be a hazard. I’m relocating mine, similar what I’ve done with my camper trailer battery, which is now mounted under the back in an automatic ejector; if it overheats, three poly straps quickly melt, allowing gravity to swing its cradle down, where a pair of slides let it drop onto the road, away from the camper.

     

    If I do something similar for my aircraft, it won’t land on someone’s head- will still be attached by a thin steel cable, but well below my plane.

     

     

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  2. Looking good Marty.
    Bluddy cowl is the most finicky part of a build and a bit like putting skin tight jeans on a supermodel (not that I’ve had that pleasure).

    I leaned the hard way to allow a bit of clearance for future additions.

    • Like 1
  3. 5 hours ago, RFguy said:

    ahh there's no transistors in a Jab system- they are impulse...  just that you dont get much impulse at slow RPM (voltage somewhat proportional to rotation) . (assumes no cold start kit). Not sure what is in the cold start kit. 

    It should be possible to modify a Jab to allow hand starting- if it has a cold start kit.

    I fitted a standard Jab CS kit to my baby. While the starter solenoid is energised, spark timing is retarded and (if I recall correctly) the spark is available at much lower revs.

     

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  4. 14 hours ago, kgwilson said:

    Last time I was at Warwick it was pretty cruisy…

    Yes, I’ve had good experiences at Warwick (I was born there).

    I once flew there for a family reunion after phoning around for hangarage.

    Some nice strangers went away that same weekend and let me park in their empty hangar.

     

    I’ll try for a spot a bit closer to Toowoomba.

  5. 4 hours ago, turboplanner said:

    A lot of people in Broken Hill died, and it only takes one bird infected with avian influenza to kill the older weaker member of a family…

    Our borders are regularly breached by migrating birds, which could bring in all sorts of baddies.

    My drinking water tank has a diverter, so it only gets rain after the roof’s been rinsed. Despite these precautions, plenty of crap gets in.  A few years ago I drained that tank, climbed in and cleaned it thoroughly. Couldn’t believe the amount of sludge on the bottom; presumably mostly dust and ash from our chimney. After that cleanup, the water never tasted as good. 
     

    Interesting to find that those of us raised on rainwater had lots of dental cavities and I know blokes who grew up drinking ground water didn’t.

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  6. In the spirit of inquiry I endured half of Onetrack’s video, then gave up before my head exploded. 
    With mistrust by US citizens of their government and national institutions at an incredible low, there must be something in the water. Or their food. Or air.

     

    There is; so many municipal water supplies are polluted, food standards are crappy and many grew up when lead polluted the air.  They also have a long history of governments misleading the people; this has been a central theme of their TV and movies for so long, no wonder ill-educated Americans fall for conmen.

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  7. 16 hours ago, Garfly said:

    I remember Old Koreelah telling us here once, that his aero club at Quirindi (on the plains north-west of Scone) offered basic accommodation to encourage visiting pilots bound for the Hunter to stay and wait it out if cumulo granitus was festooning the Liverpool Range.

    Thanks for remembering, Garfly.
    Our club’s building is a bolthole to wait for the weather to improve. This might help south-bound pilots, but is not much help for anyone south of the range.
     

    I hope one day to install weather cams to make it easier for flyers to look far ahead to see the clouds, but have too many projects at present.

    Maybe this is a good opportunity for anyone with more experience to tell us how to set up weather cams; the more of them, the better.

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  8. 1 hour ago, turboplanner said:

    Rent is a relatively low return on investment in new apartments. Capital Gain is much more productive and an unused apartment brings a better price  Chinese who have done well in business are flowing with capital.

    Another reason to reform the tax system, which has become totally corrupted in favour of the rich.

    If this inequity continues, we may end up with blood on the wattle.

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  9. 8 hours ago, sfGnome said:

    …we had a low wing plane, and both my parents were too weak to be able to climb in.

    Low wings can easier for infirm people. In NZ I was among a bunch of Jodeleers that flew into a remote strip punctiuated by rabbit burrows. The last to land was guided in by radio and made an impressive arrival: just as he was about to stop in front of the aseembled pilots, his left wheel found a deep bunny hole and his Jodel spun around to be parked with wing almost on the ground. This made it easier for his wife (who was recovering from a stroke) to step off.

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  10. 5 hours ago, skippydiesel said:

    Good luck with "Smashing out through the acrylic " Assuming you have suffered no physical damage to ourselves,  you are hanging outside down, in a confined space (cockpit), your ability to exert force/blows on anything at all, will be severely compromised. If you are injured .....................???????-

    I actually practiced that when building the beast, but quite a few years later I’m not nearly as good at wriggling through confined spaces.

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