High flyers

A place to relax and discuss flying topics.

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ghostflyer
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Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2008 3:06 am

High flyers

Post by ghostflyer »

Yesterday having a bit of fun at 1500ft I had a grasshopper do a self portrait on the windscreen. I do not know why he was so lucky to escape the prop but them splat on to the windscreen . A leg was stuck to windsceen and removed after landing. I just couldnt believe a grasshopper that high up. I had a near miss with a pelican at that height once. Scared the hell out of me and probley gave him a few gray feathers also. But a grasshopper at that height?? So how high can these bugs fly?
bagarre
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Re: High flyers

Post by bagarre »

A grasshopper? I'm wondering what a 170 is doing at 15,000 feet :wink:
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Bruce Fenstermacher
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Re: High flyers

Post by Bruce Fenstermacher »

David that was 1500ft not 15000ft. You are right there should be no reason to have a 170 at 15000ft.
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blueldr
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Joined: Thu May 02, 2002 3:16 am

Re: High flyers

Post by blueldr »

If you want a real surprise, look up the record altitude for a bird strike. Memory puts it up around 34,000 ft. over the Himalayas (Sp).
BL
hilltop170
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Re: High flyers

Post by hilltop170 »

I climbed to 12,000' msl one summer in Alaska to get out of the yellow aphids and finally gave up (or I should say the plane did). They will literally cover your windshield in a bad year.
Richard Pulley
2014-2016 TIC170A Past President
1951 170A, N1715D, s/n 20158, O-300D
2023 Best Original 170A at Sault Ste. Marie
Owned from 1973 to 1984.
Bought again in 2006 after 22 years.
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bagarre
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Re: High flyers

Post by bagarre »

Oops on the 1500 and WOW on the 34,000!!

"An aircraft over the Côte d'Ivoire collided with a Rüppell's Vulture at the astonishing altitude of 11,300 m (37,100 ft), the current record avian height." wikipedia
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cessna170bdriver
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Re: High flyers

Post by cessna170bdriver »

ghostflyer wrote:Yesterday having a bit of fun at 1500ft I had a grasshopper do a self portrait on the windscreen. I do not know why he was so lucky to escape the prop but them splat on to the windscreen . A leg was stuck to windsceen and removed after landing. I just couldnt believe a grasshopper that high up. I had a near miss with a pelican at that height once. Scared the hell out of me and probley gave him a few gray feathers also. But a grasshopper at that height?? So how high can these bugs fly?
Getting through the prop was the easy part. 120mph at 2500 RPM is more than 2 feet forward per blade pass. I've seen a balloon pass through my prop disk unscathed. The amazing part is the grasshopper at 1500 ft. 8O

I'm wondering what the bird at 30K+ was breathing :?:
Miles

“I envy no man that knows more than myself, but pity them that know less.”
— Thomas Browne
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edbooth
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Re: High flyers

Post by edbooth »

I think the vultures wings were frozen open and he was caught in an updraft.
Ed Booth, 170-B and RV-7 Driver
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GAHorn
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Re: High flyers

Post by GAHorn »

ghostflyer wrote:Yesterday having a bit of fun at 1500ft I had a grasshopper do a self portrait on the windscreen. I do not know why he was so lucky to escape the prop but them splat on to the windscreen . A leg was stuck to windsceen and removed after landing. I just couldnt believe a grasshopper that high up. I had a near miss with a pelican at that height once. Scared the hell out of me and probley gave him a few gray feathers also. But a grasshopper at that height?? So how high can these bugs fly?
He held onto that Prop blade as long as he could!
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
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