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I see the exact same thing at my home airport which is uncontrolled. We have a 2 flight schools at our airport and we seem to be a feeder airport for nearby flight schools to send their students to for pattern work. We are the busiest "uncontrolled" airport in Missouri. We are a suburb of Kansas City.
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New spam kid in town - zahratech1
Rick Junkin replied to Rick Junkin's topic in Bug Reports & Suggestions
At the risk of being labeled an anarchist or vigilante - tar and feathers liberally applied by local community members used to combat these kinds of things pretty well. -
pistolparts162 joined the community
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Of course, it’s not a traffic cop and doesn’t know if you are flying under IFR rules where it may be required or under VFR rules where it does not. But Jepessen would stop displaying charts expired for more than 6 months if i recall properly, i think Garmin charts has a limit too. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Dual G5s and a GI275 EIS OAT connexions
haymak3r replied to FredG's topic in Modern Mooney Discussion
Can't do it. I had to buy two.. -
Long Body Gross Weight Increase - Any Updates?
IvanP replied to irishpilot's topic in Mooney Bravo Owners
I could take 118 gal with Monroys. My bladder would not permit such long flight, though. My usual load for XC flights with wife is about 80 gal whcih lets me take a reasonable amount of luggage for the two of us, stay within limits and make 3.5-4 hr legs. -
Will a GNS/GTN even let you fly an approach with an expired database?
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Long Body Gross Weight Increase - Any Updates?
Fritz1 replied to irishpilot's topic in Mooney Bravo Owners
100 gal is a lot of fuel, don't need that most of the time, in order to carry 4 people I take everything out that is not bolted down, tools, survival stuff, canopy cover, cowl plugs, oil, TKS fluid.... then she will carry 4 people on a short hop, and yes I could probably loose 20 lb - Today
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Interior firewall insulation replacement
DXB replied to Matthew P's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
Various older forms of fiberglass it looks like, not asbestos. The folks hoping for my demise can stop salivating now... -
Center (above Gear well) Fresh Air Vent in M20F
Rob K replied to Echo's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
1975. I looked at the diagrams but do not see anything there. -
Long Body Gross Weight Increase - Any Updates?
IvanP replied to irishpilot's topic in Mooney Bravo Owners
Yes, Bravo is a great traveling machine and I love it. In my case with Monroy tanks and my rather chunky body, if I fill the tanks, it becomes a one person and small luggage plane . My guess is that the best way to increase payload would be to decrease my own body weight...easier said than done. -
Interior firewall insulation replacement
DXB replied to Matthew P's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
I was joking about the immediate threat of death, but asbestos does have a unique and potent combination of cancer-causing properties. When it fragments, it generates fibers that have a critical combination of 3 features: (1) very sharp and stiff (2) very fine and light, allowing them to float all the way to the outer lining of the lung (pleura) and impale themselves there. (3) impossible for immune cells (macrophages) to digest or wall off at this location, leading to chronic immune activation and ultimately mesothelioma (cancer of the pleura). Interestingly, fiberglass has features (1) and (3) but lacks feature (2) - the fibers are generally too heavy to float deep into the lung. There is some link between fiberglass dust exposure and mesothelioma, but it is much, much weaker than for asbestos, probably for this reason. You have to have a large, sustained (typically occupational) exposure to asbestos fibers to devlelop clinically evident asbestosis. By contrast, even a few of these fibers in your lung can ultimately cause mesothelioma - hence even modest exposures are best avoided, and people rightly go apesh*t when asbestos needs to be handled in a way that causes it to fragment. -
Center (above Gear well) Fresh Air Vent in M20F
Shadrach replied to Echo's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
What year is your bird? I would start with the interior section of the appropriate Illustrated Parts Catalog. -
It will be interesting to see how the insurance industry deals with this. I think it naive to believe that they will limit themselves to filling no more than the co-pilot seat (in a 4 seat plane) or staying below 10,000 ft. You said "Long story short: I'm all for obtaining more pilots into our community." Let's think about who this will attract: It will attract individuals whose health or vision previously precluded them from passing a Flight Physical. You can be half dead and still get a driver's license in most states. In Texas a driver's license is valid for 8 years (under age 84) - so even if your health declines, the license is still valid for a long time. And you can be pretty blind (with correction) and still pass the vision test for a drivers license. In Texas you can get a drivers license (with limitations) even if your CORRECTED VISION IS ONLY 20/70. The new Sport Pilot regs makes no distinction for a drivers license with limitations - all you need is a "drivers license". It will allow existing older pilots, with declining health such that they are no longer fit enough to pass a Flight Physical or BasicMed, to keep flying. I suspect they will keep flying just as they always did - filling the seats if they wish and flying above 10,000 ft if they wish. It will attract those that just want a quick and easy path to fly. They don't strike me as particularly committed to grow skills. Regarding older pilots of declining health, it shifts the burden to family members to "take the airplane keys way from grandpa" or "don't let the kids/grandkids fly with your Dad"
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Long Body Gross Weight Increase - Any Updates?
Fritz1 replied to irishpilot's topic in Mooney Bravo Owners
have not heard anything lately and have a hunch that this boat has sailed, neither the engineering resources nor the money are there, as a retrofit the gross weight increase would have been prohibitively expensive, might have made sense for new airplanes of which there are none, simplest way to increase payload is to take rear seats out, that saves about 30 lb, MT prop maybe 15 lb, vacuum system and gyroscopic instruments maybe another 40 lb, think ferry permits can be obtained for up to 300 lb over should the need arise, with full tanks Bravo is a two person airplane, almost a magic carpet, leaving fuel behind the Bravo will carry 4 people on shorter trips -
Based on the G100UL fuel leak thread what's your position?
gabez replied to gabez's topic in General Mooney Talk
GAMI has 3 problems: - a fuel that left a bad taste (no pun intended) - 1M gallons of it now over 1 year old. - VP chasing them https://vpracingfuels.com/blogs/press-releases/vp-navigates-faa-approval-for-unleaded-fuels -
PSA for anyone coming to Tampa area
Grant_Waite replied to Grant_Waite's topic in General Mooney Talk
So for my mobile mechanic, it’s 500-600 a month for the policy. This new hangar use policy is something that’s going to add to the cost thus lead him to increase rates. He’s currently 40 dollars less than competitors because he doesn’t have a shop overhead. I know the shop on field is about 160 plus an hour but their rent is something like 10k plus for a 70x40ft shared space. I’m not sure if they steal some or any of the revenue produced for any mechanic on field but I wouldn’t be surprised if they did. -
PSA for anyone coming to Tampa area
Grant_Waite replied to Grant_Waite's topic in General Mooney Talk
I do appreciate it Mike, anyone with some say would go a long way. It’s can be frustrating enough trying to deal with Mooney for simple requests as I’ve found out. Add on this airport nonsense and it’s a drain. I wasn’t planning on coming although I did transfer my registration from last year. I’m trying to work out when I’m going to fly the plane to the potential buyers since I can’t keep waiting on approvals for a basic bank loan checklist to be done at home. -
Interior firewall insulation replacement
Matthew P replied to Matthew P's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
Posed the question to Frank at Mooney and his response was: "Not sure, but probably looking at Material: MIL-B-5924B Type 1." OR Owens-Corning PF334 -
Center (above Gear well) Fresh Air Vent in M20F
Rob K replied to Echo's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
Thanks guys. I bought my F last year and have been wondering about this hole. Now if you could clear up the 3 items on the right side of the pic. A hollow metal port and 2 holes to plug something in? Too large a hole for comms.... -
Just fine. If a yawn won't clear yours, visit your nearby ENT doctor.
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Interior firewall insulation replacement
cliffy replied to Matthew P's topic in Vintage Mooneys (pre-J models)
In reality asbestos is a problem but not an instantaneous death kneel. Asbestosis killed many who worked in factories for years that used asbestos in manufacture (old brake shoes). It took years of exposure for it to be a real problem Just one exposure or even a series of short exposures probably won't cause much of an impact. Its not instantly "poisonous". Many of us "older" folks were near it occasionally (brake dust) with no impact on health. However those who came in contact on a regular basis had problems - Asbestosis Asbestosis (as-bes-TOE-sis) is a chronic lung disease caused by inhaling asbestos fibers. Prolonged exposure to these fibers can cause lung tissue scarring and shortness of breath. Asbestosis symptoms can range from mild to severe, and usually don't appear until many years after initial exposure. -
I own an M20C that was never equipped with an autopilot. I would appreciate information on installing an old (approved) Brittain autopilot as my first. I would like information as follows: 1) equipment list, ie. servos, control head, etc. 2) additional flight system, ie. gyros, sensors, etc. 3 )obtaining certification by FAA 4) instillation tips and user operation instructions I realize this is an old system, but I know it has already had approval and Tru-Trak and others are either not fully approved or have priced themselves our of my range. I've hand flown my aircraft for over 3 decades and realize the latest "whiz bang" unit would be idea, but after experiencing my 2nd major overhaul, I am woefully short of pocket change to buy the "latest".
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insurance is typically based on revenue, but aviation may be different. With regard to airports taking a cut, ours does as well. 10% vig to do business here.
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Ike joined the community
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It's around a couple grand a year for such a policy (last time I checked, anyway). You have to do a fair amount of work just to pay for it, and for many retired people or people who don't strictly do A&P work, it's not economical to get the insurance. So it does limit access to many A&Ps. A $1M policy has been a requirement for a long time around here to be registered to work on essentially any of the local public airports. Scottsdale even takes a cut of your gross receipts, which seems to be fairly unique.
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Not throwing rocks at all on the Mooney Summit process of how selecting the location(s) works every time. I know there are hundreds of considerations that go in to planning and putting something like that on--we're all grateful for all of that. That said, it would be great to see those decisions focus more toward more GA-friendly airports and locales. At the risk of sounding completely cynical, most airports in larger metro areas have zero interest in supporting anything involving piston and/or GA operations. I know holding the Summit in Tampa is far more glamorous and attractive than say, Ogala, Nebraska, but why do it at an antagonistic place? Thanks for posting your PSA--when policies don't match up to reality, we should move on.