Miles

Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
Dad said he got the POH in the mail yesterday, and was reading it when I called. He told me that it is both challenging and funny to read. He said that in the instructions for crosswind takeoffs the book states to never apply aileron and rudder in the same direction lest the airplane "pivot about the opposite leg wheel". I presume that is "leg wheel", as opposed to "tail wheel". Sound like Russian doesn't (or shouldn't) translate word for word into English very well.Kyle Wolfe wrote:Wow Miles. Can't wait to hear of all the fun you'll have trying to read the POH for that bird![]()
Kyle, I hope your Dad is on the road to recovery and he'll be able to fly with you. My Dad is 73, but thankfully he's as healthy as I am, if not more so. I get back his way once or twice a year, we DO fly, and I relish every minute of it. (Go to http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/cessna170 ... /my_photos and click on Stearman...) When we lived closer, we'd get together once or twice a month and fly the Stearman. It seemed like it took forever, but I finally made peace with it and he turned loose me loose for solo one Father's Day. I'm not sure if it was him or me that was more proud.Kyle Wolfe wrote:I just dug up some old slide pictures of my Dad's champ, 170, Stinson and Sea Bee and had them reproduced. Just took them to him as he was recuperating in the hospital. He did enjoy them.
The lesson in that is you d- - - well better go fly with your Dad while you're both able to. Enjoy!
Yeah, Dad mentioned the same thing... a low-wing 170, only it takes metric toolsN9149A wrote:You know Miles, Ole Pokey has something there. I've been looking at the shape of that rudder and it sure looks like a 170 to me.
This one is a Yak-52TW, which was built at the factory (in Romania) as a tailwheel airplane, and was imported into the US as a brand new airplane in 2002. The 52TW's come standard with the 400hp version of the M-14 engine and the 3-blade prop. The brakes are hydraulic Clevelands, but the flaps and landing gear retraction mechanism are still pneumatic.c170b53 wrote:There's lots of YAK's up here but I've never seen one
with such a mean looking Prop. I know very little about these machines,
it could be that the ones I have seen in B.C. are the older trainers.