Jump to content

Powerin

Members
  • Posts

    839
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

Posts posted by Powerin

  1. At the risk of putting a damper on an otherwise good idea...shouldn't the actual petition say something better than "Remove ASIC cards entirely." I know if I was a politician I wouldn't place much importance on a statement like that. A bit like saying "Remove speed limits entirely". Surely you need to make a case on the grounds of saving taxpayers money, public perceptions of safety, restrictions on rights etc etc.

     

    It would be better to do a bit of research and to speak politicians language in terms of money, risk and public (or media) perceptions...such as:

     

    • Country X has a lot higher risk of terrorism but they don't have an ID card
       
       
    • 60 tonne B-Double semis pose a far greater threat to airport safety in terms of what a terrorist could do than a 600kg aircraft. Truck drivers don't need ASICS.
       
       
    • The costs outweigh the benefits
       
       
    • Studies show that......
       
       
    • It's unconstitutional because it restrict trade between the states ( 020_yes.gif.58d361886eb042a872e78a875908e414.gif )
       
       
    • etc etc
       
       

     

     

    In any case, in this day and age of interconnected information, I can't work out why a "background check" is needed any more. Surely if Joe Bloggs commits a suspicious act any law enforcement agency could look up a file and see that "Ah ha, Joe Bloggs has a heavy vehicle drivers license, he has a permit to use certain fertilizers, he has a firearms license, and horror of horrors, he has an RAAus CERTIFICATE!!....bring him in for questioning!!"

     

     

    • Agree 2
  2. Back before the days of GPS you used to stand in the paddock and mark where the spray plane needed to go.

     

    There is nothing in the world like watching a plane barrel towards you at 100kts and 5ft AGL seeing first hand the skill of side slipping around a tree and tucking the wing under the branches. Worth every bit of the chemical spray I inhaled.

     

    Mmmm...2-4D Ester

     

     

  3. It's getting autocracy to step out.........that is quite often the problem........

    Very true. But as I have said before, democracy is still alive and well in RAAus. If the need arises the next election is available to make your wishes clear if the President or any of the Board does not meet your expectations. Furthermore, any RAAus member can become a candidate in the elections.

    Remember that RAAus is no longer a "club" (rightly or wrongly) but is bound to uphold the aviation laws and enjoys several exemptions from those laws. CASA holds the cards in the end. Let's not stack the deck in their favour.

     

     

    • Like 2
    • Agree 2
  4. Some things we can be sure of and some we are speculating about . . .While Ed took full responsibility for what he knows is a very bold decision, don't think for a moment that Middo's finger prints aren't all over it as well. This decision had the support of the Board Executive. It is unbudgetted expenditure and outside the Executive's authority but they approved this move.

     

    The urgency that saw this desperate move rushed through had nothing to do with not having time to discuss with and seek the views of the Board. That could have been achieved in a couple of days. As we know the Board has been considering this proposal for months if not years. The urgency was that this Board was never going to support appointment of a STCC any time in the foreseeable future. Ed's decision then is that CASA would be placated and lives may be saved if this position is created - NOW and that the only way the STCC appointment was ever going to happen was if he did it now in spite of the opposition from the Board. Seeing that Myles was available, and that you might as well be hung for a sheep as for a lamb, Ed went for the full Monto 025_blush.gif.9304aaf8465a2b6ab5171f41c5565775.gif .

    I think you have it in a nutshell.

    Very occasionally democracy fails and autocracy needs to step in (some may call it benevolent dictatorship).

     

     

    • Agree 1
  5. Is it really too much to ask that The President, the Executive and the Board abide by the Law and the Constitution? I get the impression that half the Board have never read the Constitution and the ones who have happily ignore it.

    Keith, would you support a new Constitution that says the President can rule by decree and that he does not have to consult the Board on any matter and is not subject to any restrictions that would otherwise be imposed by the Constitution, The Deed of Agreement with CASA or the Associations Incorporation Act?

    The constitution does NOT require a vote from all Board members for decisions that need to be made between Board Meetings. The Executive (President, Secretary and Treasurer) is given power to act, especially in an emergency. The constitution is silent on how this achieved...eg a vote by exec members. Ironically the Treasurer himself could and should not have had any influence on this decision due to conflict of interest. So that leaves the President and Secretary. In a tied vote the President of any organisation is often given a deciding vote. I think if the President did make this decision unilaterally he is skating close to the edge rather than being blatantly in breach of the constitution.

    The President has made it clear the decision, the position and the new employee will be reviewed at the next full Board meeting, as it has to be.

     

    I believe the RAAus has been in breech of the "Deed of Agreement" with CASA for some time with regard to aircraft registrations and safety and that some funding from CASA was either being or about to be withheld.

     

    We have been complaining for some time about the tainted culture and mismanagement in the RAAus and calling for action. If the President is indeed trying to bypass the entrenched culture and carry out decisive actions to raise the association from the ashes then I'm willing to wait and see what happens. At this stage anything is better than drifting along from crisis to crisis as we have been. If it all goes bad then we have the power, as always, to vote Board members out at the next election.

     

     

    • Agree 2
    • Winner 2
  6. Powerin, Structurally it is a representative body and answerable to its members who vote for a change if they are not happy. . What you propose is an entirely different creature. . How would it reflect the wishes (collectively) of the members? I must confess I don't know the thrust of your question and what you are proposing? We have no say in what CASA does . Do we want a mini version of that? Nev

    Sigh....I knew I should have qualified my questions. It must be the way I ask questions that people think I have an agenda.

    I was proposing nothing and there was no thrust. I was simply seeking answers that I genuinely didn't know and hoped that people wiser than me (such as you Nev) might enlighten me, and perhaps cause others to think about the answers. I'm like you Nev, a fact hunter. I often hunt by asking questions. outback.gif.91986d60389f6b0a565fa0f2980da0a8.gif 001_smile.gif.2cb759f06c4678ed4757932a99c02fa0.gif

     

    Thanks Col for your insights. I guess in a nutshell I'm asking what wishes of the membership can RAAus fulfil, or actually do anything about, given the legal and regulatory role they have? By extension I'm also asking if the whole idea of "membership" is an anachronism? Does it serve any purpose in today's RAAus? I'm not advocating any particular model. Just asking if what we have serves us best and do we honestly have any say in what RAAus can do. Your opinions?

     

     

  7. Stopping to think about it, what actual advantage do we get from having proportional representation (or for that matter ANY representation) in RAAus?

     

    In an organisation that is required by CASA to certify pilots and register aircraft in compliance with the law how much input can the general membership of any particular state actually have? Can any state's members gain any advantage (or be put at a disadvantage) in such things as funding through their state members? What do RAAus actually spend money on other than compliance and administration (and legal costs)? 033_scratching_head.gif.b541836ec2811b6655a8e435f4c1b53a.gif

     

     

  8. I guess they are , but most twins are a lot bigger than the avocet , so they would seem a lot closer , I've set it out & you carnt even get out of the door without passing through the prop arch .I've had a look at the c/g and it will work as a pusher , better assametrics as well .

    Pushers work well ,especially with liquid cooling,

    How about this configuration?

     

     

  9. Warning...off-topic content follows....

     

    I find off-topic posts a little bit like Douglas Adams' concept of "Zen Navigation"...."I rarely end up where I was intending to go, but often I end up somewhere that I needed to be."

     

    Sometimes off-topic gets you where you need to be.

     

    As an owner of an International Harvester truck who is greeted by a "EPD Electrophospheric Deposition Protection" sticker every time he opens the door, and having seen International trucks that don't have it, it is great to know the story behind it. Thanks Turbo!

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  10. On the Continental reaction, that's normal. When someone's question starts to cross over into looking for a commitment, it's normally checked by Legal. I've done that many times just to be sure. Someone's just being lazy getting legal to write the letter, or there's an ego in legal. Either way not significant.

    That's probably the case. However the problems are real such as out-of-round components with tolerances way out of specs, like valve guides. But it is a bit perturbing when an owner doing due diligence and innocently asking advice from a manufacturer receives a threatening reply from legal.

     

     

  11. From what I have researched Rotax and Lycoming are the most reliable piston engines. There has been a claim made on another thread that Rotax are good at hiding warranty problems. I'm not sure, a good search around the web is hard pressed to find many complaints about Rotax.

     

    As an aside, a friend flies a fairly new GA aircraft with a Continental engine. Apparently there have been a few problems with the quality of the engines. The friend had a problem with the engine which was repaired under warranty. Wanting to know a bit more about the problem, and if it could be avoided in the future, he sent an email off to Continental asking a few questions. The reply email came from the LEGAL department of the company.....

     

     

  12. Back in the 70s we had a tractor of Czech origin (with all the trimmings of an eastern bloc manufactured tractor). I remember vaguely that it had a very simple cable/gravity operated plastic radiator blind which we, of course, never used in our Aussie climate. The cable simply pulled a roll of plastic up over the radiator.

     

    Here's a pic I found of something similar on an old Lanz Bulldog tractor. Maybe something that could be adapted for an aircraft?

     

     

     

  13. I only attended about the last 20 minutes so I can't say much on what was covered, but I was a bit disappointed that the President hadn't brushed up on how to actually run a meeting and on meeting procedures since the Canberra GM.

     

    For the one or two motions I saw moved, the President did what he often did at Canberra: A member would move a motion from the floor and then the Chair/President would immediately launch into a speech as to why the motion wasn't necessary and try to shut the motion down without testing it with a vote. It would be far fairer to ask for a seconder to the motion and then ask for debate on the motion. Then put it to the vote.

     

    As it turns out, for the motion I heard, the President was entirely correct in what he said (IMO), but it is not a meeting chairman's job to make speeches against a motion from the floor before the membership even has a chance to consider it and debate the pros and cons. It's not a fair and proper way to run a meeting and just puts everyone offside.

     

     

    • Helpful 1
  14. Powerin, there was a thread on the worth/value of Lift Reserve Indicators (similar to Angle of Attack Indicators) here:http://www.recreationalflying.com/threads/lift-reserve-indicator.17196/

     

    NB: Please refer to this before this link is removed by the moderators (I may think it is on-topic -or a closely related topic- but the mods seem to have different ideas and the moderator's word is law).

    Ah yes.....I would have a one of those in a heartbeat (like in your avatar). I think of everything in terms of AoA. But I thought a stick position indicator might be a poor man's LRI.

    And yes...the mods are having a sudden awakening 002_wave.gif.62d5c7a07e46b2ae47f4cd2e61a0c301.gif

     

     

  15. I know nothing about flying LP. Isn't the main issue with flying LP aircraft that the cruise and stall speeds are relatively close together? And with high drag you can go from cruise to stall in a short amount of time after loss of power or in manoeuvring?

     

    If that's the case wouldn't a good formula for HP or LP be the time taken to go from cruise to stall after loss of power?

     

     

    • Agree 1
  16. Sure Powerin, I think most of us realize what you are saying but in this video I must say that I saw nothing that would indicate to me that the little girl touching the control stick, I don't even think I saw the stick in the video clip at all..David

    As DP says, the video is fine, it was another post which has since been tidied up 001_smile.gif.2cb759f06c4678ed4757932a99c02fa0.gif

    Perhaps my post could now be removed as it no longer applies...but it is worth keeping in mind.

     

     

  17. Beautiful.

     

    Sorry to put a damper on things though, and as noted in the latest Sport Pilot mag, keep in mind the following regulation...especially when posting evidence of past transgressions in a public forum:

     

    CIVIL AVIATION REGULATIONS 1988 - REG 228

     

    Unauthorised persons not to manipulate controls

     

    (1) A person must not manipulate the controls of an aircraft in flight if the person is not either:

     

    (a) the pilot assigned for duty in the aircraft; or

     

    (b) a student pilot assigned for instruction in the aircraft.

     

    Penalty: 25 penalty units.

     

    (2) An offence against subregulation (1) is an offence of strict liability.

     

    Note For strict liability , see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code .

     

     

  18. For info, they have no way of knowing where I live, but as I don't live in the shire I used the following phrase."As a visiting pilot, I would consider it a great loss to your area should the airfield be forced to close, and I therefore commend you to resist the actions of this group."

    .

    Here's an example of what I mean.....http://www.thepetitionsite.com/970/629/308/say-no-to-jaspers-brush-airfield-proposed-rezoning/

    It is a petition set up by the group against Jaspers Brush. It is a joke. Out of the 68 that have signed the petition NOT ONE is from Australia let alone the Shoalhaven. Beware of losing credibility when mounting an Internet campaign...whichever side you are on.

     

     

    • Agree 2
    • Winner 1
×
×
  • Create New...