Jump to content

bushcaddy105

Members
  • Posts

    340
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Posts posted by bushcaddy105

  1. I have done this by gently squeezing across the crimps with pliers which have curved jaws to slightly open the crimps, enough to insert a very fine blade screwdriver and twist the crimps open. Side cuttters can then cut the band to remove it.

    Cable ties do an equivalent job when re-assembling.

     

    There’s your suggestion!!!

    • Like 1
    • Winner 1
  2. Have used the DIY kits in Pilot brand headsets for years. Very good attenuation.
    2 tips:-  The accessory replacement cables which include the power wires make the setup much less likely to tangle.

    Make up a 9 volt power supply run from the plane’s 12 volts and fit a socket next to the headset sockets. No worries then about battery life.

    • Like 1
    • Helpful 1
    • Informative 2
  3. Having visited the memorial at the site of his flight, and reading the handwritten testimonials late in their lives by then students at the nearby school who witnessed the flight, I am personally convinced that he was the first. (These original testimonials are on display at MOTAT (Museum of Transport and Technology). The only grounds for denial that Americans will quote is that Richard himself got the date wrong when interviewed towards the end of his life in a mental institution.

    • Like 1
    • Informative 1
  4. We live in a valley with 4 Telstra mobile towers within 15kM. No signal from any of them, all "over the hill". We feed our Celfi with a weak Telstra signal from a tower 27kM away. Good 4G most of the time, but some weather conditions drop it to 3G.

    5G? What's that? Never likely to see it here! BUT, we live in a special spot and are happy to accept what we have.

    • Informative 2
  5. Very sad to read that Dave Briffa was one of the deceased. While having never personally met, Dave and I shared a common interest in that we both have rare GRAY cars from the early 1920's and Dave was very generous with information and literature when I restored mine in 2010/11.

    My condolences to both families who I sincerely hope will eventually be advised of the cause of this event.

     

    • Like 2
    • Agree 1
  6. 15 minutes ago, turboplanner said:

    I went looking for the data; probably dropped the project when no SA country people (who'd appealed for assistance) wanted to make it a submission.

    It may have been the July 2003 speed reduction on 1100 km of SA rural roads from 110 to 100.

    10 km doesn't make a huge difference in trip time, but I remember looking at tradies who lived in Mount Gambier and were buiding hsoues in Penola, Robe, Bordertown etc. made a difference twice a day 5-7 days a week.

    Some roads were dropped from 110 to 100Kph. One local one was the Goyder highway from Crystal Brook to Gulnare. Caused a ruckus, until independent MP Geoff Brock made it an election platform to restore the status quo.

    He won, and achieved his promise. Have to remember, though, SA's roads are all 100Kph UNLESS signed otherwise. The otherwise is usually only national routes.

    • Informative 2
  7. 13 hours ago, old man emu said:

    The granting of a patent is a complex business. A patent application must include a specification of the invention, which contains instructions adequate to enable a skilled person in the relevant area of technology to produce or perform the invention. The specification must also indicate the ‘claims’ that define the invention; that is, the scope of protection that the applicant is seeking. Australian patent law recognises two types of patent applications—provisional and complete. Provisional and complete applications may be filed to obtain either a standard patent or an innovation patent. A provisional application need only contain a description of the invention. Often, an inventor files a provisional application before all the details of an invention are known. The applicant then has 12 months to file a complete application.

    Too true! Back in the 1980's I took out a provisional patent on an air suspension system for small trailers after taking out a section prize in the Royal Adelaide Show's Farm Invention Competition.  That's when I learnt that patent protection is only for the big players, and then it is only effective in countries that subscribe to the Geneva Patent Convention. Two examples of countries that don't are Spain and (surprise!) China. Even back in the 80's it would have cost tens of thousands of dollars just for a few countries. I still have all the paperwork to remind me of how naive I was as a young fella!

    • Like 1
    • Informative 1
  8. 3 hours ago, Bosi72 said:

    You've answered the question yourself..

    Not sure of your answer, Bosi72. We live on the eastern side of Spencer Gulf under Class G airspace, as is Port Pirie aerodrome from where I fly - nowhere near the restricted area. My comment was sounding out the possibility of military aircraft  heading for Cultana.

    Please explain ???

  9. Is there a way of finding out what military flights occurred in your area?

    Yesterday morning (Mothers Day) at 0810 local a very fast, pure jet sounding aircraft passed low overhead. We raced outside, but it was out of sight.

    Perhaps significantly, the army's Cultana training area restricted airspace was active at this time.

    My thoughts were:- What if I had chosen that moment to conduct an inspection flight over our neighbourhood? 

    • Like 1
  10. 59 minutes ago, turboplanner said:

    Almost certainly Harold, right location anyway.

    No, certainly NOT Harold Clisby. I knew Harold back in the 70's when his primary business was manufacturing air compressors which to this day have a very good reputation. Harold was by then a very successful businessman who dabbled in many hobby interests as well - his small scale steam locomotives being one notable passion. He built an extensive track network at his Teringie Heights estate. The chap to whom I refer was the opposite - a battler who worked from a small shed at the back of a run-down house, surrounded by scree-slope piles of engine and gearbox pieces. His passion was his speedway cars, not his business! I did attend Rowley Park on several occasions, and coincidentally my son"s wife's father used to race there.

  11. 14 hours ago, turboplanner said:

    Harold Clisby?

    No. I can't remember his name. He ran a small business rebuilding gearboxes and engines for speedway cars both for his own cars and for clients. He was on Churchill Rd. Kilburn, opposite the then SA Railways workshops.

  12. 4 hours ago, Area-51 said:

    In the mid 60's a couple of brothers in Newcastle i think built a Daimler SP250 drag car that ran without any inlet or exhaust valves

    In Adelaide in the 1970's I met a guy who had built rotary valve heads for Holden grey motors. They ran in speedway cars at Rowley Park

  13. On 12/04/2023 at 7:49 PM, bushcaddy105 said:

    It's easy enough to make an acrylic right angle bracket with the suction cup on the base and the SkyEcho on the vertical. It will then ideally meet the recommended mounting position when on top of the panel looking forward. To make sure the suction cup stays stuck I smeared mine with silicone adhesive/sealant before mounting. I don't remove it from the aircraft as its power is supplied from a 2 amp USB outlet behind the panel. 

    I'll take pics on Friday when at the hangar, and post on Friday night.

     

    SkyEcho mount 1.jpg

    SkyEcho mount 2.jpg

    • Like 3
    • Informative 1
×
×
  • Create New...