Altimeter repair
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06-06-2008, 01:27
Post: #31
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Altimeter repair
Whoever needed their altimeter repaired should contact Hisham for more info. BB left mine out.
Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40 Royale Smoke N Mirrors Dahlonega, GA Hisham Amaral
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06-06-2008, 01:31
Post: #32
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Altimeter repair
I think Steve is about right. I spent a month in Telluride two years ago, three weeks with a headache. Beautiful place. Telluride has a corner on top quality VW Micro buses one with a teardrop falling out of a peace sign. It is worth the trip to go back in time. Things move pretty slowly in Telluride. I would like to try it in the bus one day but there are few places to park it up there.
Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40 Royale Smoke N Mirrors Dahlonega, GA Steve Pfiffner
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06-06-2008, 06:11
Post: #33
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Altimeter repair
Pete how did you get a C-152 to 12000.? It must have taken a long time.
I fly a T310R
Walker
cramalot-inn
84fc35
kcmo
Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler Florence" on AOL Food. |
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06-06-2008, 10:54
Post: #34
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Altimeter repair
He had some help, I'll tell you that.
BradBarton00LXiDFW bbartonwx@...
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06-06-2008, 16:11
Post: #35
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Altimeter repair
C-152 has a maximum altitude of 14,000 ft. more or less, but the
climb rate drops down to something like 200-250 feet per minute once you get above 10K feet. (pretty slow.) However, on the occasion that I went to 12,000, there was a very strong southerly wind that interacted with the Tehachapi mountains, forming a 'standing wave' effect. At one point, I was in a full climb to maintain 6500 ft or so (VFR) but then I was later in a humongus updraft that gave me a climb of 500-600 ft per minute. As soon as I realized what was going on, I decided to take advantage of the ride so I could gain speed in a controlled decent north of the mountains. It was actually a nasty day for flying such a small plane. Heavy head wind -- fly high, clear of the valley fog and ground speed was practically zip. Fly low, where the wind wasn't so bad, and the visibility was not-so-great (but still legal). In the end, I opted for low and mostly followed I-5 home to Sacramento -- checking my progress against the highway signs... The flight was taking so long, I had to stop for fuel in Fresno (FAT)... As I made my approach, the tower said "keep your speed up, there's a commuter turbo prop behind you..." so I flew the approach at near-cruising speed, killing the power and shortly after dropping flaps over the end of the runway. I even made the first turn off. (Thanks to that headwind...) Eventually, we got home to Rio Linda (near Sacramento) where I was based. By then, the winds dropped, the fog lifted and we landed in near-cloudless night after a long day of flying. (This was the Sunday after Thanksgiving...) It was an interesting flight for a relatively low-time pilot. Pete Masterson '95 Blue Bird Wanderlodge WBDA 42 aeonix1@... On the road near Buttonwillow, CA (going home at last!) On Jun 6, 2008, at 3:11 PM, dwalks@... wrote: > Pete how did you get a C-152 to 12000.? It must have taken a long > time. > I fly a T310R > Walker > cramalot-inn > 84fc35 > kcmo > > > > > Get trade secrets for amazing burgers. Watch "Cooking with Tyler > Florence" on AOL Food. > |
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