NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
•Honoring PHP •AirVenture Photos •Vin Fiz Part 2
Monosport
Historic Restoration
Straight & Level
Vintage Airplane STAFF
GEOFF ROBISON
VAA PRESIDENT, EAA 268346, VAA 12606
EAA Publisher . . . . . . . . . Jack J. Pelton,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chairman of the Board
Performance – Fine Tuned!
Editor-in-Chief . . . . . . . . J. Mac McClellan
Reflection on a summer’s activities
Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jim Busha
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jbusha@eaa.org
VAA Executive Administrator. Max Platts
920-426-6110. . . . . . . . . . mplatts@eaa.org
Advertising Director. . . . . . Katrina Bradshaw
202-577-9292. . . . . . . . . . kbradshaw@eaa.org
Where has my summer gone? Is it really fall already? Do I really have anything to complain about when it comes to the weather this past summer? Well, we did have a few very warm days in the spring, but that is easily addressed with a nice long Harley ride through the countryside. But other than that we have had some fantastic weather here in the Midwest. In all my years of attending AirVenture Oshkosh I cannot remember a better weather week. It was as close to perfect as one can get.
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Oshkosh 2013 My post Oshkosh debrief this year was as positive as I have ever had the pleasure to submit. There were many highlights to this year’s events in the Vintage area of operations. I have been saying out loud to many of our members, “This was the best event I have had the pleasure of being involved with in my 30-plus years of volunteering at Oshkosh.” The Round Engine Rodeo was an outstanding venue for the VAA. Again, we were blessed with the best possible weather conditions we could ever hope for, and I strongly suspect that this proved to be a large factor in the strong number of aircraft that we had the pleasure of hosting at Oshkosh this year. I am continuously impressed with the owners and operators of these very special vintage aircraft who make the effort and investment to bring their flying machines to Oshkosh. Many of them actually travel to Oshkosh each and every year to attend The World’s Greatest Aviation Celebration we all know as Oshkosh. Another huge part of the success of this year’s event is certainly a tribute to our VAA volunteers. Again, we experienced well more than 500 volunteers that came to Oshkosh to volunteer directly with the VAA organization. You have heard me say many times before, “This thing doesn’t happen without our volunteers.” We would never be able to experience such a safe and successful event without these hundreds of individuals who travel here each year, and oftentimes they spend their entire vacation with us at AirVenture. So, to all of the vintage aircraft owners/operators, the volunteers, the staff at EAA, and the Vintage Aircraft Association board of directors, my humble thanks to each of you for making this event the premier event that we enjoyed this year. We hope to see you at Oshkosh 2014! A Tribute to Those Gone West I was personally overwhelmed and saddened by the news of our foundcontinued on page 63
Advertising Manager . . . . . Sue Anderson
920-426-6127. . . . . . . . . . sanderson@eaa.org
Art Director. . . . . . . . . . . Livy Trabbold VAA, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903 Website: www.VintageAircraft.org Email: VintageAircraft@eaa.org
TM
VINTAGE AIRCRAFT ASSOCIATION Current EAA members may join the Vintage Aircraft Association and receive VINTAGE AIRPLANE magazine for an additional $42 per year. EAA Membership, VINTAGE AIRPLANE magazine and one year membership in the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association is available for $52 per year (SPORT AVIATION magazine not included). (Add $7 for International Postage.)
FOREIGN MEMBERSHIPS Please submit your remittance with a check or draft drawn on a United States bank payable in United States dollars. Add required Foreign Postage amount for each membership. Member Services PO Box 3086 Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086 Monday–Friday, 8:00 AM—6:00 PM CST Join/Renew 800-564-6322 membership@eaa.org EAA AirVenture Oshkosh www.airventure.org 888-322-4636
www.VintageAircraft.org
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Vol. 41, No. 6
2013
CONTENTS
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 8
VAA 2013 Hall of Fame Inductee Susan Dusenbury Jim Busha
16
Paul Howard Poberezny An amazingly accomplished life . . .beautifully lived Charles W. Harris
22
Sole Survivor Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum’s 1929 Monosport Model 2 Budd Davisson
42
54
Coast to Coast With the Vin Fiz Part 2 The 84-day odyssey of Cal Rodgers Mark Carlson
Walking the Line Sparky’s 2013 AirVenture Notebook Sparky Barnes Sargent
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AirVenture 2013 Pictorial
COVERS
FRONT COVER: The 1929 Monosport Model 2 owned by the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum displays itself in front of the VAA Red Barn. Photo by Phil High. BACK COVER: Displaying his wonderful sense of humor, Paul Poberezny hams it up for the camera during a membership drive campaign. PHOTO DAVID K. WITTY
COLUMNS
Don’t worry—your favorites like Vintage Instructor, Good Old Days and the Vintage Mechanic haven’t gone away. We had to make room for the AirVenture coverage! Look for all your favorites to be back in the next issue of Vintage Airplane. 2
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
1
12 How to? Straight and Level Inspect and test aircraft fabric Reflections on a summer’sactivities Robert G. Lock Geoff Robison
4
Air Mail
5
Thank You, Friends of the Red Barn
6
Gone West
15 Ask the AME New medications for atrial fibrillation John Patterson, M.D., AME 61 New Members 64 Classified Ads
@VintageEAA
facebook.com/EAAVintage
ANY COMMENTS?
Send your thoughts to the Vintage Editor at: jbusha@eaa.org For missing or replacement magazines, or any other membership-related questions, please call EAA Member Services at 800-JOIN-EAA (564-6322).
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3
Air Mail Helio Super Courier and Piper Super Cub 1 maintained, and I flew it in 1979 for some 42.5 hours Very nice write-up, Jim. Stephen Ruby Helio Aircraft Owners Network Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Friends of the Red Barn - 2013
Thank you for your generous support! Diamond Plus Level
Charlie Harris Robert “Bob” Lumley Earl Nicholas Wes Schmid Ron Tarrson VAA Chapter 10, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Diamond Level JIM KOEPNICK
Hello Jim, Just read your article on Aaron’s Helio Super Courier N4157D No. 509 which was built in March of that year. The early 395s had a gross weight of 3,000 pounds and were never a favorite of the contraband smuggling crowd due to their slow cruise and less than 1,000 pound payload. The H-395 was the choice of special ops for Air America with persistence from Maj. Heinie Aderholt who convinced the Air Force to purchase them for use in Laos as early as 1960. They flew routinely from “Lima” sites: downhill, uphill, and sometimes off curved paths. The airplane Aaron had was the only Helio with no damage history and the reason he bought it. It is powered with the Lycoming “geared” GO-480-G1D6 (295 hp), and that lasts only four minutes; all other operations are at 280 hp due to the planetary-gear-driven slow-turning three-blade Hartzell of 96 inches. With only 60 gallons of avgas you get an endurance of under four hours at 130 knots on a good day. Aaron has since sold that airplane to a group in Russia, as he needed something with more payload and speed. N4157D was sold last November 25, 2012. For an airplane of this vintage, it was very well4
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
RUSS MUNSON
Jim, Just thought I would drop you a line and a quick story. I was looking through the September/October Vintage Airplane, and I came across this article of S/N No. 1 Super Cub. My dad, Kip Mone, says old man Piper called him (Kip Mone) and understood he ferried airplanes, among other things. My dad said yes. So he and a friend raced to pick up the plane and fly it to Florida so it could do some “tests.” The tests were takeoff distance, service ceiling, and so on. It turns out it was the Piper Super Cub. If I recall, Carole Bailey did some of the flying. She was a friend of my dad’s. They landed in a street, and a girl came out with orange juice. After all it was Florida. . . The highway patrolman closed the highway so they could take off and continue the flight. My dad did a lot of air racing in Cleveland, air shows, and other show flying. Many stories. He is now 90 and living alone in the mountains at the end of a dirt runway. We are restoring the last Garland Lincoln Nieuport 28 (N12237, www.GarlandLincoln.com). Brent Mone
Jonathan and Ronald Apfelbaum Raymond Bottom Jr. Jerry and Linda Brown A.J. Hugo Arthur H. Kudner Jr. Richard and Sue Packer Ben Scott
Gold Level
Ron Apfelbaum John Cronin David Smither
Silver Level
Dave and Wanda Clark Al and Cindy Hallett Tom and Carolyn Hildreth A.J. Hugo International Cessna 195 Club John Kephart Mark and MariAnne Kolesar Lynn Larkin Joseph Leverone Bill and Sarah Marcy Larry Nelson Roger P. Rose Dwayne and Sue Trovillion
Bronze Plus Level
Barry Holtz Dan and Mary Knutson Dwain Pittenger Bob and Pat Wagner
Bronze Level
David Allen Lloyd Austin L. Tom Baker Retired Lt. Col. Hobart Bates Cam Blazer Logan Boles Gary Brossett Thomas Buckles Robert “Rob” Busch Geoffrey Clark Syd Cohen Donald Coleman Doug Combs Dan Dodds Geff Galbari Arthur Green Terry Griffin Red & Marilyn Hamilton E.E. “Buck” Hilbert Peter Jansen Jr. George Jenkins Rich Kempf Marc Krier Barry Leslie Gerald Liang Russ Luigs Thomas H. Lymburn Ken Mercer Gene Morris Roscoe Morton
Steve Moyer Pfizer Foundation Lynn Oswald Steven and Judith Oxman Tim and Liz Popp Bob Porter Jerry Riesz John Rothrock Jr. Jeffrey L. Shafer Bob Siegfried II David Smith Dean Stoker Alan Thiel Carl and Pat Tortorige Thomas Vukonich Donald Weaver Jan Douglas Wolfe Dan Wood
Supporter Level
Jesse Black III Charles R. Burtch Rolly Clark Camille Cyr Bruce Denney Walter Kahn Peter Karalus John Koons James Lockwood Charles Pearcy Keith Plendl C.G. “Dino” Vlahakis Duane Wething Michael Williams Anonymous
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5
Gone West James Schafer Moss 1932-2013
by Craig O’Neill
listment in 1957—after a brief extension to finish his commitment to the base’s winning basketball team. Returning to Indiana, Jim completed his studies in business administration and even briefly put the degree to use working for a pharmaceutical company. But the lure of the sky proved too strong to keep him behind a desk, and he took a succession of charter-flying jobs. One such position—a neat confluence of Jim’s interests—was flying for a company the main client of which was the Indiana football coaching staff. But it was a charter for this outfit, culminating in a hair-raising arrival at Chicago’s O’Hare airport in an ice-laden Bonanza, that convinced Jim to circulate his résumé to the major airlines. Jim spent the rest of his professional career with PHOTOS COURTESY JUDY MOSS Northwest Airlines, working his way up through the DC-6 and -7, transitioning with the company into the jet age in the 707 and DC-8, and finally flying wide-bodied DC-10s and 747s. Jim’s flying activities were never confined to the flight deck, however; a diverse string of airplanes passed through his ownership in the 1960s and ’70s, during which time he discovered a love of and talent for aerobatics. For nearly 20 years, Jim campaigned a Ryan STA and later a Great Lakes on the GeeBee QED Replica West Coast air show circuit until one day receiving a letter from the president of Northwest Airlines, Both the vintage airplane and homebuilding worlds requesting that he make an immediate choice between are mourning the passing of Jim Moss, EAA 477508, being an airline pilot or an air show pilot. Jim made his of Buckley, Washington. As a restorer and re-creator of choice and retired in 1992 as a captain on Northwest’s several rare and amazing aircraft from aviation’s golden international routes. age, Jim was an inspirational figure in both aviation With his retirement came new opportunities to focus communities. He passed away on September 1, 2013, on the type of airplanes and flying Jim enjoyed most. following a long battle with cancer. He was 81 years old. His first restoration was a clipped-wing Taylorcraft, but Born in Elkhart, Indiana, in 1932, Jim focused on this was just a gentle warm-up for the projects to follow. athletics in his early years, following the lead of his foot- In 1997, he unveiled the MG-2, a virtually unknown, ball-coach father to play for Indiana University. With the one-off 1938 homebuilt that he had not simply restored onset of the Korean War, however, Jim enlisted as a na- but creatively re-imagined. The pugnacious red-andval aviation cadet and began flight training at Pensacola white biplane was a favorite of AirVenture attendees in 1953. After earning his wings, Jim was commissioned and judges alike, earning Jim an Antique Custom-Built into the Marine Corps, where he flew the AD-1 SkyChampion trophy. A short (as these projects go) five years later, Jim was raider at bases in Texas and Florida. He also returned to the SNJ as an instructor pilot before completing his en- back with an even more impressive achievement, a faith6
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
ful scratchbuilt replica of the 1931 Laird Super Solution Thompson Trophy pylon racer. Another Champion award was added to Jim’s collection following the Solution’s triumphant appearance at AirVenture 2002. Sadly, Jim’s last and most ambitious creation could not quite be completed before his passing, despite more than 10 years of diligent effort by him and a talented team of friends he rallied around the project. This gives an indication of the scale and scope of Jim’s re-creation of the Gee Bee Q.E.D., a massive two-seat behemoth built in 1934 to be flown by Jacqueline Cochran in the MacRobertson Trophy Race from London to Melbourne, Australia. Those who have seen Jim’s replica, which completed successful taxi tests just weeks prior to his passing, will attest to the fact that this airplane is the ultimate exemplar of his vision, tenacity, and craftsmanship. The many friends of Jim who helped him bring the Q.E.D. so close to completion while he was still alive have now pledged to fly the airplane by the time this obituary reaches print and, if all goes well, to share it with the public during the 2014 air show season, most certainly including AirVenture. All the enthusiastic volunteers on this team were inspired very directly by Jim Moss’ imagination, love of aviation history and flying, and commitment to excellence. But anyone who ever met Jim or saw one of his creations—and most definitely anyone who sees the Q.E.D.—has also or will have benefitted from a bit of that same inspiration. His achievements are unlikely to be matched, and he will be greatly missed. Jim is survived by his wife, Judy; his children, Jamine Moss Owen and James Moss; his grandchildren, Camden, Jordan, Colton, Tess, Ella and Charlotte; and his siblings, William Moss and Susan Nash.
VAA Director Jeannie C. Hill 1952-2013
Jeannie C. Hill (Lehman) passed away on September 1, 2013, after a courageous battle with cancer. She is preceded in death by her beloved husband, Richard (Dick) Hill. Jeannie was a graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. Along with her late husband, she has restored three award-winning vintage aircraft. Jeannie was a well-known writer and lecturer on aviation and co-authored several books and articles on vintage aircraft. Jeannie has worn many chairmen hats during her 40-plus years of volunteering for EAA. Years ago she started the Pioneer Airport video interview during the Oshkosh convention that has been adapted by EAA’s Timeless Voices program. For the past many years during the Oshkosh convention she has served as chairman of the Vintage Aircraft Association Headquarters Information, Press/Media, and the Shawano Fly-Out. Jeannie helped establish EAA Chapter 1414 at Poplar Grove, Illinois, her home airport. During the Sun ’n Fun convention, Jeannie has been the Air Show Performers chairman for more than 35 years. In 1977, Jeannie and Dick helped clear the site for the first Sun ’n Fun convention on the south side of the Lakeland airport. That was the year they flew their Bamboo Bomber into Lakeland, Florida. Jeannie was elected to the Vintage Aircraft Association board of directors in 1990. She was also an adviser to Vintage Wings & Wheels Museum. A celebration of Jeannie’s life will take place within the next few months.
www.VintageAircraft.org
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VAA 2013 Hall of Fame Inductee Susan Dusenbury
Aeronca 7AC “Champ” in restoration. Susan finished and flew this plane built in her garage.
Preparing to fly her one-of-a-kind aerobatic Rogers Gibson Acrocraft.
With her Culver Cadet.
Building the door for the 1940 Culver Cadet N29288.
formed these duties while I was in college,” said Susan. “I was flying all the time and loved every minute of it. I was either studying or instructing, and there wasn’t a lot of time for sleep! I just had a hoot teaching the students. It made me happy to see people enjoying themselves and following their own dreams, and I was glad I could be a part of their dreams and hopes. “I caught a lot of breaks along the way from various mentors who believed in me and helped me out by providing airplanes and instruction so I could achieve my dream. Shortly after earning my multiengine rating, I met a guy at the airport, and we talked airplanes for a few minutes and after that he walked away. I didn’t think too much more about it. The very next day he called me and offered me a job flying part-time as a copilot. He was trying to help me out because he knew I was just a flat-broke college kid. I ended up flying right seat on Twin Beeches and DC-3s. Every day was different—I either had my nose buried in a biology book studying for a test or flight planning my next trip.” With her logbook entries filling page after page, Susan also knew that she wanted to immerse herself further into aviation and tackle the maintenance side of airplanes. After graduating college, Susan enrolled in
a two-year airframe and powerplant (A&P) mechanics course and eventually earned her A&P rating and later added her IA rating as well. “I developed an early interest in turning wrenches and building airplanes when I was 19 years old and began working on a Baby Great Lakes project. I knew I wanted to build airplanes, and I knew as a female pilot I needed to make myself credible, because back then there weren’t a lot of professional women pilots flying around. I wanted everyone to know I was serious, so I tackled building airplanes—but deep down inside I really liked working with my hands and watching an airplane come together. Remember my mother used to say I was ‘crafty,’ and of course it literally has a few different meanings. I enjoyed the hands-on experience and seeing the results take shape before my eyes. “I was given some great advice early on in my journey by a mentor who said I needed to join EAA. I had no idea what EAA was, and he told me what it was all about—a bunch of like-minded people who enjoy airplane fellowship. He said the best part is you get a monthly magazine, and it’s well worth the price of the membership. That was back in 1967, and I have been a member ever since.”
by Jim Busha
Lady Flier
If you had to pick one word to describe the 2013 VAA Hall of Fame inductee, it would be “crafty.” To some it means cunning, and for others it describes someone who is skillful or clever. Susan Dusenbury, EAA 55229, of Walnut Grove, North Carolina, happens to be all those things, and on November 14, 2013, she will become the newest inductee in EAA’s Vintage Aircraft Association Hall of Fame. It was a long and wonderful aviation journey for Susan to earn this wellregarded honor, and it all began when she was 15 years old, much to the disapproval of her mother. “I got involved in aviation when I was in the 10th grade,” said Susan. “My father had a friend who owned a Piper Colt, and he let me fly it so I could learn how to fly. I soloed at 16 years old and earned my private pilot’s license while I was still in high school. I soled pretty quickly at 4.45 hours. My instructor, Harry Weinberg, must have been able to predict the future be-
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cause he said, ‘Susan, you need to keep on flying and get all the ratings you can, so you can become a professional pilot.’ It had never crossed my mind as a 16-year-old to fly professionally. I just knew I liked to fly. It was amazing at what the power of suggestion can do as I started out on my aviation journey. Unfortunately my mother, who said I was ‘crafty,’ had other ideas.” Susan clearly remembers her mother telling her that f lying was a great hobby, but “ladies” don’t fly professionally. The being a lady part was fine in Susan’s mind, but she knew she just wasn’t going to listen to her mother on the flying part. “My mother didn’t realize I was even taking flying lessons,” said Susan. “That was until some of my neighbors congratulated me on my accomplishments. So when I came home after a day’s worth of flying and hanging out at the airport, I walked in the door and found my mother at the kitchen table. Her head was buried in her hands and
she was crying and weeping uncontrollably. My Uncle Fred was there, and he jumped up and gave me a big bear hug, but my mother continued to cry and, in between tears, said, “Ladies don’t fly! When will you ever become a lady? “I looked at my mother and very calmly stated, ‘I am a lady. I just fly airplanes!’ And 50 years of flying later, with over 22,000 hours in my logbook, I am still a lady and still enjoy flying airplanes, especially the antiques and classics.”
Steppingstones—Earning Her Ratings
Growing up, Susan knew she would need to get a college degree if she were going to reach her dream. Susan actually earned two degrees from Francis Marion College—business administration and accounting. While in college Susan also earned her commercial, multiengine, instrument, and flight instructor ratings. “When I was 18 years old, I became a flight instructor and per-
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Susan landing the Speedwing. Susan with her friend Cliff Robertson in Santa Monica, CA.
At home with “Summertime,” Susan’s dog at her private airport, Dusenbury Field.
Susan’s flying career continued to accelerate as her corporate jobs took her from the cockpits of small twins all the way to large freight-hauling jets. At one point in her professional pilot career, Susan was fly-
Susan with the Travel Air.
ing a King Air 200 for the then-governor of Virginia, Chuck Robb, before she ended up working for ABX Air (formally Airborne Freight Corporation) and enjoyed 25 years of flying freight with them.
Restoring the Antiques and Classics —High Honors
When not flying freight, Susan has devoted her time by diving deep into her passion—restoring and flying old airplanes. She has owned and restored a variety of projects in her long career including a 7AC Champ, Luscombe 8A, Inland Sport, KR-21, Culver Cadet, J-2 Cub, and Cessna 180. She is currently restoring a Stinson SR-6 Reliant that she never dreamed of acquiring until some of her mentors convinced her
Susan working on the Stinson SR-6 project installing landing gear.
Susan with famed wing walker and friend Jessie Woods. 10
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Preparing to fly Weedhopper. An exhilarating experience that Susan will never forget.
it was “the airplane she needed.” thought about going the home- cases you can fly the pants off of “ I w a s o u t o f p ro j e c t s a n d built/experimental route. But the them and still get your money back needed something else to keep me sight of an old classic airplane out of them when you go looking busy, so I thought about tackfor another one. I can’t say that ling a Stinson SM-8A. I started about the homebuilts, not to combing the country for one, mention all the social stuff and one day my friend Morthat goes along with these old ton Lester called and said, airplanes. Because of these ‘You know, Susan, you really old treasures, I have also been don’t want that SM-8A.’ I said, blessed to have served for 20 ‘I don’t? I sure thought I did.’ years on the EAA board of diMorton said, ‘No, the airplane rectors and am currently presiyou really want is a Stinson dent of EAA Vintage Chapter 3. SR-6 Reliant, and there’s one “As for the Vintage Hall of for sale in Trade-A-Plane.’ Fame honor, I am completely In a DC-9 cockpit when she flew for Airborne “Of course I had second Freight, now ABX Air, Inc. Susan retired from ABX humbled. When I look around thoughts because I had no idea Air after nearly 25 years of flying night freight. at all these aviation guys I adwhat a SR-6 even was. That mire so much, like Charlie Harwas until some more antique gurus changed everything. ris, Jim Younkin, Jack Cox, Steve weighed in including Dolph Over“I am completely amazed at the Pitcairn, and a bunch of others, I ton and Jack Cox. Both of these craftsmanship and designs, along stand in awe in their shadows and fine Southern gentlemen told me with the uniqueness of some of realize that the only reason I have that the SR-6 is, in fact, the air- these homebuilt airplanes. I love been bestowed with this honor plane I should have. Listening to these airplanes, but when I was a is because a “crafty girl” just outmy mentors, I bought the project student pilot flying out of the Char- worked all these guys! This is one and trailed it back home in a Ryder lotte airport, I spotted an old clas- of the greatest honors I have ever truck. The SR-6 had been over on sic Cessna, and I thought that was had bestowed upon me. I had so its back twice—once when it was one of the most beautiful airplanes many mentors along my journey, six months old in 1935 and then I ever saw. Don’t get me wrong, the and I cannot thank them enough. again in 1940. But it was built like homebuilt airplanes are pretty, but I wouldn’t be here today without a Sherman tank, and it’s in rela- it’s the antiques/classics that can’t their encouragement and support.” tively great shape. It’s a very large compare with looks or the history Congratulations, Susan, on a project to work on, but it’s also a behind these old airplanes. There well-deserved honor for a “Crafty lot of fun as well.” is also a practical side about own- Lady!” We’re sure your mother is At one time in her life Susan ing these airplanes, as well. In most very proud of you. www.VintageAircraft.org
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How to? ROBERT G. LOCK
Inspect and test aircraft fabric Testing of aircraft fabric dates back to the Grade A TSO C-15 and TSO C-14 days, and the standard for these fabrics must be met by even the most modern synthetic fabric processes on the market today. TSO C-15 (Technical Standard Order) is a woven cotton fabric that must pull test 80 pounds per inch when new. TSO C-14 fabric was an intermediate grade of cotton fabric specifically designed for light low-powered aircraft—this cloth must pull test 65 pounds per inch when new. The deterioration point for these fabrics is 70 percent of original strength new; therefore, TSO C-15 can deteriorate to 56 pounds per inch, and TSO C-14 can deteriorate to 46 pounds per inch. Those standards are in play when testing any type of fabric covering. So how is fabric tested? The most accurate test is a pull test done under controlled conditions in a laboratory. The lab report will give the specific pull test strength when the fabric fails. The most widely used is a field test using a Maule fabric tester. If the fabric is still good, the Maule tester will not punch a hole in the fabric. The older tester was called a Seyboth, and it punctured the fabric to give a reading on its colored bands around the tes12
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
Illustration 1
ter. The colors were red, yellow, first, second and third green. The Seyboth tester is most likely not in use anymore as the Maule has replaced it. Aircraft with wing loadings greater than 7 pounds per square foot and VNE speeds (velocity never exceed) greater than 160 mph are mandated to use fabrics that meet the TSO C-15 standard— therefore the deteriorated condition would be 56 pounds per inch. Aircraft with wing loadings less than 7 pounds per square foot and VNE speeds less than 160 mph may use the lighter TSO C-14 fabric as a standard, thus
Illustration 2
the deteriorated strength would be 46 pounds per inch. Therefore, when testing fabric, the VNE and wing loading must be known so the correct deteriorated strength can be determined. Illustration 1 shows an old fabric tensile test from my original Aeronca Champ. The airplane was covered partly with Grade A cotton fabric and partly with Ceconite synthetic fabric. It was painted white with black and red trim, the black and red not good colors for the older fabric processes. In order to have a pull test done, one must cut large holes in the top fabric surfaces so that the pull test sample measures 1 inch by 6 inches in size. Most owners will not stand for a mechanic to cut holes in their fabric, so here is where the Maule fabric tester comes in handy. Note that the tester has a slightly rounded blunt end. That is the part that contacts the fabric surface. As one pushes down against spring pressure, the approximate tensile strength is read on the scale in pounds per inch. When testing any fabric that must meet the TSO C-15 standard, push down until you read 60 pounds, then stop. For an aircraft that must meet the TSOC-14 standard, push down until you read 50 pounds, then stop. Fabric should always be tested on the top surfaces in the darkest color because fabric will deteriorate most when painted a dark color and exposed to UV radiation from the sun. The question that always pops up when discussing fabric testing is when to do it. If I know the airplane, I do not test annually, specifically if the aircraft is covered in a synthetic
process. I do, however, place a strong flashlight inside the fabric to check if any light is transmitted through the finish. If I see light, then I will check fabric tensile strength. If there is no sign of light coming through the finish, I check the finish for cracks, and upon finding none I consider the fabric airworthy. If there are cracks in the finish exposing raw fabric weave, I notify the owner that something must be done to repair those cracks. Sometimes cracks are bad enough that the entire aircraft must be re-covered. Ray Stits did some very interesting experiments; the results can be had by looking in the back of the Poly-Fiber Procedure Manual. If you have never read this data, it’s worth the time to gain knowledge of fabric deterioration. Grade A and Dacron fabric when exposed to ultraviolet light from the sun deteriorates in an alarming rate, thus if cracks expose fabric weave, I consider that as the weakest point of the covering and judge its airworthiness accordingly. The Maule tester is available commercially but is not cheap. However, it is the only method available to field test aircraft fabric covering for airworthiness.
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13
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NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
New medications for atrial fibrillation Most airmen know that chest pain or angina is a disqualifying condition, because it is a sign of poor blood flow to the muscle of the heart and can lead to “sudden incapacitation” and death. But one of the more common heart conditions is atrial fibrillation, and it’s approved by the FAA through the special issuance process. Normally the heartbeat is started in the atrium of the heart. Impulses are then transferred to the ventricle in a coordinated fashion that maximizes blood flow through the heart and then to the rest of the body. Atrial fibrillation is a condition in which the atrium instead of contracting actually flutters or fibrillates. Atrial fibrillation may occur as a consequence of aging with hypertension being a major risk factor. It may occur as a result of ischemic heart disease (MI causing tissue death in the region of the origin of the impulse) or valvular heart disease (scarring of the valves in the heart). It may also occur in situations where there is too much or too little thyroid hormone produced. Therefore thyroid functions, an echocardiogram to look at the valves of the heart, and cardiac stress tests or a cardiac cath may be required in the work-up for special issuance. There are also several other potential problems for the airman. Without the coordinating impulse, the ventricle may race and pump faster (ventricular tachycardia) and can overwork the heart. Often medication is required to control the rate of the heart. The second issue is that the blood flowing through the heart in atrial fibrillation is turbulent and clots can form in the atrium that can travel to the lung (pulmonary embolism) or to the brain (stroke), both of which are potentially life threatening and can cause “sudden incapacitation.” For this reason most patients are placed on an anticoagulant to prevent clots. The most common medication is Coumadin (warfarin). Special issuance with this medication is a hassle to say the least since it requires monthly blood tests, called INR (international normalized ratio), fall between two and three. This blood test measures
how thin the blood is compared to normal blood. So many things can affect and change the INR. Vitamin K is used to reverse the thinning effects of Coumadin. So diet is very important. Green leafy vegetables that are rich in vitamin K can “thicken” the blood. Antibiotics can kill bacteria in the GI tract that produce vitamin K in the body and can therefore “thin” the blood. Many medications can interfere with the breakdown (metabolism) of Coumadin and can cause an excess of the medication, again causing the blood to be too thin. That is why many doctors and patients are excited about some new medications for use in atrial fibrillation. Two medications (Pradaxa and Xarelto) have been approved by the FAA for use with special issuance. The advantage is no INR or blood tests are required. Medications and diet don’t affect the thinning of the blood. Sounds too good to be true, and unfortunately all is not perfect. The problem is serious side effects can occur and relate to uncontrolled bleeding. For example, if the patient needs emergent surgery such as for a motor vehicle accident, then the anticoagulant effects of these agents need to be reversed. The thinning effects of Coumadin can be reversed with vitamin K, but may take a day to be effective. A blood product called fresh frozen plasma will reverse more quickly. The half-life (time it takes for the body to eliminate half of the medication) of Pradaxa is 12-14 hours and make take three to five days for the blood to return to normal coagulation. The only sure way to reverse a patient on Pradaxa is dialysis. Xarelto’s half-life is five hours, and the anticoagulant effect may take one to two days to normalize. There is no reversal agent for Xarelto. As in all of medicine it requires a balance of risk versus benefit as to treatment and therefore which medication is used. No blood tests and not having to worry about diet is a step in the right direction. Hopefully continued refinements will be made to this class of medication and will allow for more rapid and dependable reversal and will make them safer. Stay tuned! www.VintageAircraft.org
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Paul Howard Poberezny September 14, 1921–August 22, 2013
An amazingly accomplished aviation life . . . beautifully lived! by Charles W. Harris
Director Emeritus, Vintage Aircraft Association
In the Beginning
All the countless stars i n t h e va s t h e ave n l y galaxies miraculously aligned themselves perfectly on September 14, 1921. The cosmos thus gave us one for the ages . . . Paul H. Poberezny. The stars shone down o n t h e yo u n g s te r a l l through the economically challenging early years of the 1930s, but he persevered, survived, and even became quite wellacquainted with the fairly newfangled, but very elementary, airplane. The years moved on and all the stars in the h e av e n s m o v e d i n t o perfect alignment once again on May 28, 1944, when teenage sweethear ts Audrey Louise Ruesch and Paul Howard Poberezny became forever joined in a loving marriage and a highly achieving lifelong partnership, that in time would provide enlightened leadership for the entire personal, sport, and general aviation world for 60 years. EAA numbers soared beyond anything they imagined. More than one million people become EAA members over the past 60 years, 177,000 of which are cur-
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rent, active members. Untold millions have traveled to Rockford and Oshkosh for over a halfcentury to watch in absolute wonderment as EAA annually presents the greatest aviation extravaganza in the entire world. Paul was always prepared. At 23, he completed his World War II tenure as a civilian primary flight instructor for the U.S. military in
Arkansas, accepted an Air Force Ser vice Pilot commission, and ferried scores upon scores of military aircraft all over the United States. As the war wound down, he continued his service to the country as a Wisconsin Air National Guard maintenance officer in Milwaukee, where he would spend the balance of his 30-year military career, retiring as full colonel. H i s m i l i t a r y c a re e r included an assignment to the Far East, Japan, and Korea, f lying utility f lights and forever “fixing” airplanes. After the Korean War, Paul returned to Audrey, the family, Milwaukee, his Air Guard career (which consisted of maintenance officer, supply officer, operations officer, and pilot) and his eternal, untiring interest in small, personally owned, even personally built airplanes. The now-famous January 26, 1953, coal bin basement gathering of a few of Paul’s aviation friends would lead to the creation of the Experimental Aircraft Association and the September 1953 “fly-in” on Curtiss-Wright Field, now Timmerman Airport, in Milwaukee. An
tion passion.
l days of avia
is youthfu Paul during h
astonishing 150 airplanes flew in and attended. Until the September 1953 event, the word/phrase “flyin” did not exist in world languages. It has since become as common as any other descriptive phrase. It was the beginning of something big, and as said, “The rest is history!” In those early years, the VW or even small Continental-powered Fly Babys and Pober Pixies of the 1950s and 1960s were just the beginning. The more advanced experimentals, such as the Pitts Special, would become world class and World Aerobatic Champions just a few years later. We were to witness the radical VariEze(s) and LongEZ(s) of the 1970s and 1980s, the BD5-Js of the 1970s and 1980s (and even today), and eventually the 400-hp Thunder Mustang and the fabulous 350 mph turbinepowered Lancairs of today. Today we hear the expression, “If you can dream it, you can do it,” and unlike yesterday, today we do believe it, and unlike yesterday, we do it. The concept of Burt Rutan’s far-out flying machines have become reality. Lindbergh’s eighth wonder of the world in his 1927 New York-to-Paris solo flight of 33 hours pales in comparison to Burt/Dick Rutan’s and Jeana Yeager’s non-stop, nonrefueled, more than 25,000-mile, around-the-world flight (which is still considered “impossible”), ad infinitum. And these are but a few of the creations that have come forth from the gifted minds of highly talented and imaginative aviation people who are free to dream their dreams and create the products of their dreams through the encouragement and creative umbrella of Paul’s EAA. Rockford was a wondrous breakthrough, but EAA soon outgrew it. Oshkosh beckoned, Steve Wittman Three photos showing EAA gatherings at the beginning of the annual fly-in event.
EAA meeting in its
early formation.
de Havilland Tiger Moth
Duane Cole’s Taylorcraft BF-50 www.VintageAircraft.org
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The magazine that gave a jump start for an organization that would influence aviation and pilots for generations.
pleaded, the seas parted, and Oshkosh became far more famous for aviation than for overalls and fire trucks. Oshkosh became the chosen location, and the momentum accelerated. “EAA Oshkosh” was destined to become by far the largest “tourist” attraction in all of Wisconsin, annually accounting for more than $100 million per year in economic impact!
Historical Point of View
With the convention expanding geometrically every year, something far more striking began to happen, something that in almost all cer-
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tainty Paul could have never anticipated, and from an airplane perfection and historical point of view, could never have been foreseen. In the middle to late 1970s, the stars again began to move and align, the thunder became far more audible, and the heavens certainly had their reasons. It all began when, unannounced and very quietly, came Jim Younkin, the resident genius of Springdale, Arkansas, f lying his brand new 1929 Travel Air Mystery Ship; convention attendees gasped. Jim followed in another year or so with his absolute carbon copy of Benny
Howard’s 1935 spectacular, solid white DGA-6, Mr. Mulligan, sporting 1,340 cubic inches, and convention attendees gasped again. These were not the Baby Aces and Pober Pixies of a few years back…these were full-scale, highly powered carbon copies of the historic record-setting racing machines of 1929 and 1935…all the original Mulligan had ever done was win both the 1935 Bendix and Thompson back to back…impossible, but true! But, it was only the beginning…Jim Moss would later stop the show with his exquisite MG-2, then figuratively stop the world with his Matty Laird/Jimmy Doolittle 1931 Bendix-winning, impossible-to-believe-what-wesaw Laird Super Solution. His super custom 1930 Great Lakes with an M-14 340-hp Russian round engine followed, and then in August and September of 2013, just days before his untimely demise, came Jim’s all-time topper, the simply magnificent completion of his 11-year effort of the Granville brothers, Jackie Cochran, and Francisco Sarabia, the 1934 Gee Bee Q.E.D. “Quod Erat Demonstrandum,” aka “Conquistador del Cielo.” But never, ever, to be forgotten for one second was Jim Wright of Cottage Grove, Oregon, arriving in the mid-2000s with his perfect, 40,000-plus man-hours to replicate, world speed record breaking, fully flush riveted Howard Hughes Racer of 1935 and 1937. These airplanes were Oshkoshinspired historical masterpiece creations. They were brought to us as living, breathing, flying examples of what in some cases had not even existed in 81 years. And, these genius-level creations occurred only because of the drive and never-ending inspirational magnetism of “Pope Paul” to move
EAA and all of us forward without any hesitation or delay. Can you imagine for just a moment the huge but quiet pride and warm inner satisfaction Paul had to feel when these levels of airplanes came to Oshkosh? And, they were created, came to exist, and showcased at EAA for only one reason…Paul Poberezny had created and maintained the venue for such aviation miracles to take place…and all we had to do to be a part of such artistry was to be in attendance and enjoy the finery. How fortunate we have been! Can you recall the first time you ever saw a picture of a BD-5J in flight, or the Voyager, or Burt’s “Gorilla”? It was as if you were looking at a mythical dream of some flying machine from another world. And yet, here it was, here they were, and many if not all because there was an organization that encouraged, fostered, featured and showcased these marvelously advanced flying machines. The first time anyone ever saw a 45-60 number batch of Long-EZs all aligned and parked on their noses just north of the Red Barn at Oshkosh, many people probably pinched themselves to make sure they were not dreaming. These magical miracle moments have all become an accepted part of our world because of the vision, foresight, and even more so, the tenacity and uncompromising drive of the remarkable Paul Poberezny. T hose of us who in the late 1940s/early 1950s era were flying our little factory airplanes for fun dismissed virtually any and all “homebuilts” as unacceptable stepchildren. We had our exceptionally fine and reasonably priced factory two- and four-place airplanes. We had our military surplus and bargain basement, near giveawaypriced Stearmans, PT-19s, PT-22s,
BT-13s, AT-6s, even P-40s and P-51s. How or why would we even think in terms of “homebuilts”? But Curtis Pitts’ little Pitts Special made us all sit up and take notice; it was hugely attractive, and Betty Skelton’s beauty turned our heads! Mechanix Illustrated featured articles written by Paul in its May, June, and July 1955 issues about his extremely inexpensive to build ($800) Baby Ace and moved the backyard/garage shop “do it yourself” craftsman to a high fever pitch. For a few dollars and a bit of time, one could be flying the heavens in one’s own (and owned) little airplane. George Bogardus, Steve Wittman, Peter Bowers, et al added to the momentum, and Paul began his organizational efforts in January 1953, followed by that now famous first “fly-in” (a what?) on Curtiss-Wright Field (now Timmerman Airport) in Milwaukee.
A Family Affair
Paul grew the group. It was named the Experimental Aircraft Association because that is exactly what it was then. Later, the group became known as EAA and eventually became more than 1,000 local chapters following the first at Flabob Airport at Riverside, California, created by Ray Stits. The Warbirds of America came aboard, the Antique/Classic Division (now Vintage Aircraft Association) was formed, the International Aerobatic Club came forth as an international aerobatic force . . . we became World Champions in 1972 and 1980. The Ultralights were formed as “light” aviation grew and exploded. It is almost shocking the amazing things that happen when keenly perceptive leaders like Paul become aware of the unusually special talents of the likes of Jack and Golda Cox.
Jack had a rare gift for aviationrelated writing and describing the qualities of our small airplanes and the personalities who nurture them. Paul recognized Jack’s exceptional gift, and somehow persuaded Jack and Golda to move to Oshkosh from their warm Carolina climate and assume the responsibility for EAA’s several publications. The next 30 years under Jack and Golda’s sterling stewardship at the publications’ helm was to bring a new level of excellence in describing EAA’s ever-emerging and ever-greater role in aviation prominence. Paul then brought in the congenial Gene Chase to assist Jack and Golda in these critical team efforts to even further move the EAA publications into becoming more and more the perfect support mechanism for EAA’s win-win success in the aviation world. Paul always had more . . . much more. T he late 1970s saw the 50th anniversary re-creation of Charles Lindbergh’s 1927 U.S. tour of more than 100 cities in the original Spirit of St. Louis. Paul and EAA re-created The Spirit of St. Louis and that momentous 1927 tour; it placed EAA at the highest level of public visibility and awareness it had ever experienced. Paul himself flew some of the legs and flew Anne Morrow Lindbergh over her native Connecticut countryside. She had never before been in the original Spirit or its replica counterpart. That first EAA Lindbergh Spirit of St. Louis aircraft re-creation hangs today in the EAA Aviation Center’s special tribute to Charles A. Lindbergh. Bursting at the seams in the Milwaukee suburbs of Hales Corners, Wisconsin, EAA moved its headquarters to Oshkosh and embarked on creating the magnificent EAA Aviation Center/Museum facility, www.VintageAircraft.org
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Audrey and Paul Poberezny
which today with its priceless aircraft collection is valued at more than $100 million! The world famous EAA B-17G Aluminum Overcast tour airplane in honor of veterans has become one of the great annual hallmarks of EAA service to the aviation and general public, but the aviation highlight of every year and the greatest public aviation spectacle in the world is the annual EAA AirVenture Oshkosh convention and exposition, which attracts more than a half-million people, 10,000 airplanes, nearly 2,500 show airplanes and exhibitors, and aircraft/ avionics/accessories vendors from all over the world. These four momentous EAA milestones: the re-creation of the 1927 Lindbergh tour, the creation of the magnificent EAA Aviation Center with its invaluable aircraft collection, the nationally known annual B-17G Aluminum Overcast tours, and the unparalleled AirVenture Oshkosh convention and aerial extravaganza has left no doubt that EAA is the most visible, most creative, and exciting civil aviation organization in the world! Paul Poberezny, from that very first meeting with aviation friends on a frigid Wisconsin night in the family coal bin crowded basement, essentially through his own force of character and power of personality 20
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Paul remained a true homebuilder all his life.
stayed the course through 60 years of miraculous and momentous achievements. EAA has become the largest, most successful, most respected organization in the history of general as well as sport and recreational aviation. Its name is known worldwide and always with the utmost of reverence, thoughtfulness, consideration, and more than a certain amount of disbelief. Paul’s son, Tom, was born in 1946, and his daughter, Bonnie, in 1954. In time they, too, became completely immersed in the family passion for EAA and aviation. Tom became the U.S. National Aerobatic Champion at the tender age of 22 as well as a member of the U.S. World Aerobatic Championship Team later that same year. Tom also enjoyed more than 40 years in top EAA management. Bonnie would evolve to becoming an exceptionally talented executive on Paul’s staff in the EAA Aviation Center. Bonnie was always a tower of strength in support of Paul and Audrey’s never-ending 60-year effort for EAA. Paul and Audrey created, fostered, and nurtured a concept that did not exist in any form and brought forth a pure miracle and force for good in aviation and the United States of America. At “a place called Oshkosh” there is never a discouraging word, never
a frown; it is a smiling, happy, immaculately clean, and upbeat environment; it is as near a spiritually uplifting, near heavenly experience as one can imagine. The entire overall complex with all its attributes is an ongoing and constant reflection of what Paul wished it to be and what he constantly strived for and essentially required it to be. He succeeded, and succeeded on a scale that exceeds the most extreme, ambitious imagination. Can any of us identify or pinpoint any other extremely gifted individual that we believe could even scratch the surface in emulating the accomplishments of this giant? The author knows of none.
Aviation Leader
Paul Poberezny now belongs to the ages. He was the perfect person at the perfect time in the perfect place. He left no stone unturned on the behalf of those of us in aviation and very particularly sport and recreational aviation. He was a leader in name, thought, and deed. He was the epitome of “Lead, follow or get out of the way,” and all of us are the beneficiaries of his strengths. How could we have ever been so fortunate? He was, and shall always be, in a class by himself. There is a new, eternal, and inspirationally bright star in our heavens…it too is in a class by itself.
Paul created an entirely new wide world of aviation. In his passing, we have witnessed the end of an inspirational era of aviation. Paul’s EAA leadership and its members’ individually oriented opportunities spawned entire industries in powerplants, airframes, materials, avionics . . . his leadership inspired countless aviation innovations, his leadership brought forth advanced designs of experimental airplanes that were so infinitely capable, they were flown around the world . . . one of his devotees was so capable, so far advanced in his concepts, he designed and built an airplane that did the absolute impossible—it was flown around the world, more than 25,000 miles, non-stop, non-refueled by the design-engineer’s brother. The creativity that has evolved and exploded from within EAA and that first small gathering of aviation friends in Paul’s basement on January 26, 1953, has changed the world of aviation forever, and, for the better, of course. The charismatic Paul Poberezny was the epitome of what the gifted and inspired human spirit can accomplish if simply permitted to dream its dreams, energize the friendly free enterprise forces to accomplish those dreams and create for all mankind the tangible benefits of those dreams. Paul was, in many ways, an ordinary man, but in his unbounded efforts for aviation, his sheer greatness shone through. Aviation has never had a person in any way comparable to him, it is virtually impossible to envision anyone ever reaching his level of aviation accomplishments again. He created an entire era essentially through his vision, foresight, leadership, his power of personality and persuasion. His perseverance was without comparison. His passing marks the end of
an era, an era that captured the hopes and dreams of millions of us. There are simply no words for the magnitude of what he has done for so many. Perhaps we should recall Sir Winston’s words, “Never in the course of human events has so much been owed by so many to so few.” With apologies to Sir Winston, “Never in the course of world and civil aviation has so much been owed by so many to one single individual.” We have lost a living legend and leader beyond even world-class aviation accomplishments. Few of us are ever privileged to be close to true greatness; a great number of us had that privilege in our friendship and association with Paul Howard Poberezny. His life did not start with the slightest promise of greatness; it began in the most humble manner possible. He was born dirt-poor of immigrant parentage from the Ukraine in the midst of the worst economic depression in the history of the nation, yet, 91 years later there are no names more well-known, or more respected, or more revered in the entire world of aviation, all of aviation, than Paul Howard Poberezny. One can speak of vision but like electricity and gravity, we can neither define it nor understand it. Paul had to have vision, but more honestly, more accurately, Paul’s vision was precisely as defined by Thomas Edison, 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration. He was without peer in his quest and determined drive to bring sport aviation to the pinnacle of the public’s view not only in America, but the world. He was a human dynamo in his efforts; he was tireless, absolutely and completely tireless in his endless efforts for aviation, and not from just his early or middle life, but to the very end, he had an unquenchable
thirst for aviation excellence, from his unpowered glider of the early 1930s to such as the Flying Flea, to the mighty EAA P-51D and B-17G, and oh yes, he was current and typed in the B-17 in his last year of life on this earth. He “flew them all,” nearly 400 types, from the primitive, simplistic gliders to the OX Swallow to the military jets, he flew the full gamut of the military warbirds of his day and flew them well. He was a natural born leader, he was the EAA founder and eternal leader, he was our leader from that first cold January night in 1953 till his last day in our midst and, now, even beyond…there has been no other like him and no mortal can ever take his place or accomplish what he accomplished. He was bigger than life itself. Paul Howard Poberezny will live forever in the hearts and minds of those who knew him and those who witnessed his countless amazing accomplishments. Those of us who were privileged to know him know we have walked with a giant among giants, a mortal who achieved light years more than mere mortals can ever perceive. In the months and years to come, hopefully we will find the perfect ways to honor Paul and his memory in the most fitting and appropriate manner possible. Paul reached legend level years and years ago, yet wore his “Pope Paul” title in the most humble manner imaginable. The inspiration of his legacy will emotionally move aviation to higher levels for generations to come and for generations yet unborn. We can be certain the very most select of the who’s who of the greatest of aviation’s dearly departed were waiting with open arms to welcome home one of their very own. Very well done, Paul. Very, very well done! www.VintageAircraft.org
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Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum’s 1929 Monosport Model 2
Sole Survivor
by Budd Davisson
Monosport
The word for the day is “Monocoupe.” Now, real quick, what images popped into your head when 22
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The Mono Aircraft company had a convoluted history in which it morphed into, and out of, having a Monocoupe identity.
When examining the seemingly crude mechanics of an aircraft like the 1929 Monosport it’s important we put it in context and remember that it was state-of-the-art at the time and a winning racer. Use the Model A Ford of the same year in the background for reference.
The Mono Aircraft company had a convoluted history in which it morphed into, and out of, having a Monocoupe identity.
you saw that word? More than likely they featured a sporty-looking, high-wing, high-performance machine that just reeks of old-time
testosterone. But the breed wasn’t always that svelte. In fact, the Monocoupe forebears, like the little Monosport, are about as svelte
as a tumbleweed. It’s possible that “funky” is the correct adjective. On the other hand, when looking at something such as the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum’s Model 2 Monosport, you really have to put it in context. You have to judge it against what “was,” not what “is”
or what came later. First, it has to be pointed out that because of a blizzard of corporation changes (1929 wasn’t a great year for corporate continuity), technically, the 1929 Monosport may or may not be a Monocoupe, but it probably is a Mono. The com-
pany name changes came so fast and furiously, it’s really hard to tell what’s what. Paraphrasing Wikipedia (which isn’t always the last word), in 1927, Central States Airplane Company was established to build Don Luscombe’s Monocoupe. In January www.VintageAircraft.org
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The rocker arm covers aren’t sealed and only keep the grease in the general area. Note the flattened exhaust collector ring.
Glenn Peck had to fabricate the entire exhaust system.
No photos exist of a Monosport Model 2 instrument panel so some guess work was involved.
1928, the company became the Mono Aircraft Division of Velie Motor Corporation, hence the Velie Monocoupe. In early 1929, the Velie interests were sold to Allied Aviation Industries, a holding company. By May, these interests were divided into two separate companies: the Lambert Aircraft Engine Corporation and the Mono Aircraft Company of Moline, Illinois. Both companies passed into receivership in 1931 (are you still with us?), re-emerging in 1932 as the Lambert Engine and Machine Company and the Monocoupe Corporation. In July of 1934, the two companies joined under the newly formed Lambert Aircraft Corporation with Monocoupe continuing to operate under its own name. In 1940, the company was dissolved and its assets passed to the Monocoupe Aeroplane and Engine Corporation (transferring operations to Orlando, Florida). Whew! That was exhausting. Anyway, the Monosport was a follow-on to the more familiar Velie Monocoupe, which—believe it or not—was a real competitor in the small plane air races so popular at the time. The Velie-powered aircraft had 60 hp (on a good day), but as the competition became stiffer, it desperately needed more power. However, the next logical step up in power was the 90-hp K-5 Kinner or 110-hp Warner, either of which was simply too much (power) for the original airframe. So, it was redesigned for the new engines. It became wider (still painfully narrow for a side-by-side aircraft, which minimized frontal area), the wings took on graceful ellipLeft, The long arm to the left of the control stick in the photo connects to the belcrank in the spar to actuate the ailerons. Rube Goldberg must have been a Mono employee.
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tical tips, and the drag-producing outrigger gear disappeared to be replaced with a centrally mounted gear. This gear was cleaner and the airplane was once again competitive in racing, but experience eventually showed that about the best thing which could be said about the new landing gear was that it kept the prop out of the dirt…most of the time: Apparently, the geometry was such that it led to the unintentional destruction of almost the entire Monosport fleet, one at a time, usually via landing accidents. Sixteen Monosports were built, nine Model 1’s with the 110-hp Warner and seven Model 2’s with the 100-hp Kinner K-5, but only one survived, the rest succumbing to crashes or multiple gearrelated accidents. The sole survivor is 8989, a Model 2 that is owned and operated by the Historical Aircraft Restoration Museum located at Creve Coeur Airport just outside of St. Louis, Missouri. With its restorer, Glenn Peck, at the controls, the historic old aircraft made a heroic flight up to EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2013 where it collected the award for Outstanding Closed Cockpit Monoplane, Silver Age (1928 to 1936).
Just Along For The Ride
Glenn, a longtime aircraft restorer and pilot, is the first to admit that the flight up was anything but routine. He says, “You only have to look back through the records of this airplane to see that it had, and still has, an obvious landing gear problem. The records show five landing gear and wing repairs. One or more for each owner. The gear geometry is such that, when off the ground and extended, the lowest point of the 24-by-3 tires are nearly inside of the gear leg pivot points, making the effective track
The leading edge of the fin is adjustable right and left by stacking washer and the lift strut has a universal fitting at the top.
In true early aircraft style, streamlining is via balsa fairings, fabric tape and dope.
less than 4 feet wide. So, when you land, there’s a possibility of one leg wanting to spread and the other wanting to stay inboard or go some other direction. All the way up to OSH, I just assumed I had an unknown number of successful landings available to me, so I did my best to both limit the landings and put it on grass whenever possible. At Oshkosh, no grass was available, so I only flew it in, then flew it out at the end of the week.
“Making the trip a little more exciting was that we only had a small amount of run-in time on the engine, so it was a real question mark. Theoretically, it had been overhauled by ‘someone’ for the last owner. But I took it completely apart, and it’s a good thing I did. There was glass beading media in a lot of the nooks and crannies, a cracked crankcase, and some of the clearances weren’t right. It was also missing a proper exhaust, but www.VintageAircraft.org
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The original owner of 8989 poses proudly with his new purchase.
a few photos and a lot of scratchbuilding solved that.” To modern eyes, and even to those accustomed to looking at older, radial engines, the K-5 Kinner defines the term “antique engine.” Even though it was state of the art for engines of its size at the time, it was developed fairly early in the era of dependable radial engines. So, a lot of systems we take for granted on radials, or any other aircraft engines (the flat fours were still years away), didn’t yet exist for engines of this size. The oil system and valve train lubrication were still less than stellar or not there at all. “ The oil system is questionable at best, and we spent a lot of time trying to get it right and make it reliable,” Glenn says. “For one thing, the pressure gauge on the panel measures pressure at the pump, which is quite a distance from where the pressure is actually needed. The pressure relief valve is supposed to maintain 100 psi, and the standard instructions are 26
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
to land if pressure drops to 80 psi and shut off the engine and land if it gets to 50 psi. The problem is that the relief valve is located on the wrong side of its engine. It read the pressure after the oil goes through the entire engine, and we couldn’t trust the gauge to tell us what pressure the engine was actually seeing since it actually was quite a bit higher than the gauge reads until the oil warms up. So, lacking time to change the original, we hid a separate, modern gauge that we knew was reading correctly behind the panel. It showed that we had managed to keep 95 psi with 90-degree temps. That made me feel better during the trip to OSH.” It has since been installed into the panel. Higher temps later required heavier oil than what the manual called for, which has solved the pressure problem.
Kinner Power
When walking around the engine, it’s easy to mistake the cov-
ers over the valves as being valve covers as we usually think of them. Normal valve covers tightly hold grease and oil, which is pumped into them to lubricate the valves and rocker arms. Not so on the K-5 Kinner. The valve covers are just that—covers. All they do is keep the oil and grease on the valves more or less contained so all of it doesn’t blow back all over the airplane (they are marginally effective at that), and they retain the parts when they come loose after the operator neglects the required valve adjustment every 10 hours and waits the extra couple of hours it takes to get home first. Glenn says, “The No. 5 exhaust valve adjust nut let go at 11 hours, 7 minutes total time. Fortunately, I was only a few minutes from the scheduled fuel stop at Poplar Grove Airport on the way home from Oshkosh.” Incidentally, by some sort of aeronautical miracle, the serial numbers on both the engine and prop say that they are the same
Recreating the photo at left, Glenn Peck poses proudly with 8989 just before taking off on the first post-restoration flight.
“. . . as long as you remember that you are no longer in 2013 but 1929, and you’re pretty much along for the ride. It’s something of a time machine . . . units that were on the airplane when it left the factory. “You hand-grease the zerks on the rocker arms every five hours,” Glenn says, “and lightly oil the valves with a needle at the same time. Actually, I’ve started greasing both before almost every flight. The old manuals are really vague, and the metallurgy of the time wasn’t very advanced. Still, I think, if you use common sense, read the manual and believe it, and use modern lubricants, the Kinner will outlast those of us who are flying the old engines.” Antique magnetos are another area that can be problematic, and those on the K-5 Kinner are no exception. “The mags were another concern
on the trip,” Glenn says. “These are Scintilla SBs, and the condenser is wound internally to the coils. There are no parts available, no manual, and you pretty much run what you can find or make. We almost didn’t make it to OSH, because just after takeoff on the third leg, a mag coupling failed. It’s a really odd contraption made of a stack of shims for flexibility driven by a fork affair to dampen the oscillations caused by the long stroke and time between power pulses, which will demagnetize the magnets. We would have been down for the count except Scott Taylor at Poplar Grove Airport, Illinois, stepped in and machined a new coupling for us in less than 24 hours. He’s known for help-
ing guys, and he certainly saved the day for us on this one. We made it to Oshkosh only about two days late, and part of that was due to weather. We definitely wouldn’t have made it at all if it hadn’t been for Scott.” It’s little details, such as the mag drive, that made the project take so long to complete in the first place. “When we decided to restore the airplane, it had been sitting in the museum for nearly 10 years,” says Glenn. “To walk around it, it looked like a complete and really pretty nice airframe. I have a company, Peck Aeroplane Restoration, and we had been restoring big dinosaurs, including a DH-4, Boeing 40B, Zenith Z6A, and other monsters, and I was looking forward to a smaller project that could be finished fairly quickly. Looking at the Monosport, I figured it would take about 10 months. But then, after we took it to my shop, every time we turned around, some small part, usually several, was missing. We had all the big parts: the wings, www.VintageAircraft.org
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The Kinner K-5 engine was supposed to have been “overhauled”, but when Peck took it apart he found everything from glass beading media in galleys to cracked cases.
motor, etc., but we were missing all the small parts that tied the big ones together. The big parts, like the wings and fuselage, were in great shape, but we were going to have to replicate dozens and dozens of things that were missing. And we didn’t know what a lot of them even looked like.”
A Brief History
Considering 8989’s long, erratic history, it’s pretty amazing 28
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that any of it existed, much less the small parts. From the time it was built, it went through a long line of owners, each of them adding their bit of damage or modification. In 1952, when the airplane last flew, the chapter written by the last owner was typical of the airplane’s life. Follow these 1952 logbook dates closely: •August 14. Previous owner flies one hour, probably with the buyer.
•August 15. New buyer finalizes the sale and flies one hour with previous owner. •August 16. New owner takes possession and flies an hour. •August 18. Logbook says, “Ship damaged in wind storm—right landing gear + right wing + aileron damaged.” Hmmmm! Wind storm damage. Rrrriiiight! The airplane was taken home for repair, and receipts for parts and materials date as late as 1972. Unfortunately, the owner/restorer died in 1973, and the airplane became the stuff of legends; the airplane was in a barn owned by a widow who refused to sell it. But it wasn’t bought for lack of trying: Lots of potential buyers lined up at her door, but she just wouldn’t part with her loving husband’s prized possession. Finally, the late B ud Dake, Monocoupe luminary, kept after her until she understood what he meant when he said that the best way to honor her husband would be to finish the airplane and get it back into the air. So, in the late ’80s, Bud became the proud owner of the sole-surviving Monosport and put it on display in the museum for long-term storage in what looked to be a complete, but uncovered, state. It wasn’t until Glenn Peck started working on it that it became apparent that, somewhere in time, many boxes of small parts had gone missing in action. Glenn says, “Bud had a new set of wings built, but we’re not sure the airfoil is exactly right because the original wing was in such sorry shape and only a couple of photos survive. It had been stored outside, so it was barely good for patterns. Regardless, I didn’t have to worry about the basic wings. However, most of the brackets and linkages for the control system were missing.
“ The fuselage was also good, completely primed and painted, and any repairs done. So I had the basic fuselage and it looked like an assembly job, not a restoration. But just about everything else about the fuselage was missing, and some of it, like the window/ door trim, was hard to figure out. For those, I made up a pattern on the workbench and cut out the aluminum window and door fairings in a single piece with a router. As for fuselage sheet metal, we only had the top piece of the cowling and the nose bowl, but we figured it had to be similar to the Velie in concept and just went from there. “The saving grace for everything on the outside was photos. We only had five of them. But I pored over those with a fine-tooth comb, and we got most of the details right. The interior, on the other hand, especially the instrument panel, was very much an unknown because there were no photos of the interior or instrument panel. We only had one ‘possible’ corner of the panel visible through a window, so we built from there. “We were told that the instrument cluster in the middle of the panel that came with the airplane was supposed to be original equipment, but we can’t prove that. However, we do know what the panels looked like in the models before and after the Monosport. We also know they used some of the same, unique mechanical control units on the dash that controlled the spark advance and mixture. We had one original of the same type vertical slider control that was in the Curtiss Robin we had previously restored, and we made the others. The panel details were all assumptions on my part, and if anyone reading this has photos or information that corrects what we’ve done, we’d sure
like to know about it.” The control system is something of a Rube Goldberg invention, especially the way the control stick and push rod system for the ailerons work. Often, systems such as these result in heavy controls, but Glenn says, “The controls are neither heavy nor light. Somewhere in the middle, but the airplane is surprisingly responsive, considering the era in which it was designed.” When it came time to cover and paint the airplane, Glenn wanted to use modern materials but maintain a vintage look. He explains, “I used Poly-Fiber throughout, cover and finish, but when I was finished shooting the color, I didn’t wash it or wax it. If you wash and wax 30 days later, it glosses up. I did neither so it still has some residue from the solvents evaporating on the surface that
makes it look like a very old, but cared for, dope finish. If we want it to shine, all we have to do is wash/ wax or buff it, but I really prefer the ‘old airplane’ look it has now.” Apparently, the judges at Oshkosh ’13 agreed with Glenn’s taste and gave the airplane their highest award for the category. Monocoupes were a passion to both Bud Dake and Haswell Ogle, the Monosport’s last owners, and the award is a fitting tribute to them both. Glenn summarizes flying the airplane by saying that you’ll be okay “. . . as long as you remember that you are no longer in 2013 but 1929, and you’re pretty much along for the ride. It’s something of a time machine and you find yourself asking, ‘Didn’t Slim used to fly the mail along through here? I think he even bailed out right over there.’ But that was before he was famous.”
www.VintageAircraft.org
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AirVenture 2013 Pre-war Aeronca Chief, 1939
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Mike Kosta, Vintage Flight Line chairman (center), presents the Vintage Flight Line Volunteer of the Year award to Margy and Ron Natalie. Aeronca C-3
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Walking the Line Sparky’s 2013 AirVenture Notebook photos and captions by Sparky Barnes Sargent Pretty weather, near-perfect temperatures, and gorgeous vintage airplanes—but that’s not all there was to enjoy as I threaded my way through the vast acreage of airplanes and aviators. As was the case last year, the pilots with whom I visited unabashedly shared that the main reason they keep returning, year after year, is to reunite with the friends they’ve made here. Often, it may be the only time they see each other—which bespeaks the “perma-bond” that aviators tend to form amongst themselves.
In a way, it’s like an annually occurring “old home week” for many of us. Yet it’s pleasantly more than that, because that devotion and bond also extend to their airplanes—especially the ones that have become family members through years of loyal service. So once again this year, it was my privilege to have the delightful opportunity to greet old friends and acquaintances, and meet “new” aviators and listen to the stories they chose to share with me—and with you. C’mon, join me as I “walk the line!”
Jim Hudgin hails from a flying family who owned Hudgin Air Service FBO in Tucson, Arizona, for many years. His father and four uncles were one of the top Piper dealers in the country and also owned Grand Canyon Airlines. So it’s no surprise, then, that Jim would have an affinity for Pipers. He flew N4612H, his beautifully-restored 1948 Piper PA-17 Vagabond, to Oshkosh from his home in Lewisburg, Tennessee. Smiling, he shares, “It’s a fun airplane to fly! There was a lot of headwind during the flight here, so it was slow compared to other years, and bumpy. I’ve owned the Vagabond since 1988; it was damaged by a tornado, so there were a number of years it wasn’t flyable. I rebuilt the airplane and moved where I could build a hangar and an airstrip. I’ve had it back flying now for eight years, and I have about 800 hours on it now. I’ve won awards for it, mostly at Sentimental Journey in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, and a couple of minor awards here at Oshkosh, but I don’t generally have it judged.”
Fun-loving Vintage member Dean Del Bene
of Monee, Illinois, was relaxing with friends in the Round Engine Rodeo area. He’s owned NC18407, a 1937 Stinson SR-9C Gull Wing, for 40 years and has about 1,200 hours in it. It’s powered by a 265-hp Lycoming and is a longstanding award winner—most recently, it received the 2009 Antique Continuously Maintained Aircraft award at AirVenture. Sharing a bit about his airplane, Dean says, “American used a Route Survey plane, a Stinson Reliant, and we were given permission to use the blue-and-orange American paint scheme years ago. It was a basket case, and it took 10 years to restore it. I did all the fabric work and the painting,” shares Dean, adding, “but I had the help of a lot of friends. Jim Leonard was one of them, and we made a promise to the airplane when we had it in the garage. Its wings were off, and we were hand sanding on its belly, and we’d tell her, ‘C’mon baby, be good to us and we’ll take you to the Bahamas!’ And that’s exactly what we did, after we got the airplane fully put together. We flew it to Bimini in the Bahamas; it caused quite a stir there.” Dean had his first airplane ride when he was 9; his uncle took him flying in a Piper Cub. He got kind of queasy from all the maneuvers, but was hooked nonetheless. “I didn’t start flying until my late 20s—it took a while, because as you know, it takes some money to do it,” he explains, adding, “I soloed in a Piper Cherokee 140, and I bought my first airplane in 1967—I’ve had airplanes ever since then, and I’m 77 now. I have about 6,500 total hours now, with a commercial multiengine instrument license.” He’s been coming to the EAA fly-in ever since it was in Rockford. “We got the Stinson flying in 1983 and have been here 30 consecutive years. I wouldn’t miss it! We’ve flown it to Lakeland and Oshkosh frequently through the years,” he says. “It’s a lot of fun because of the people that you
meet! The people are wonderful; there’s nothing like pilots.” Reminiscing with a smile in his voice, Dean says, “We set a speed record from Midway Airport to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, nonstop! The plane only goes about 120 mph, but we got up into the jet stream, which was blowing about 100 knots, and we just surfed along, farther than the airplane is capable of going, and faster than it’s capable of going. We set an average speed of 170 mph for that flight. A banquet was held at Kitty Hawk for pilots who established records in 1985, and the National Aeronautical Association acknowledged Dick Rutan and Jeanne Yeager’s Voyager record, my record, and others for that year. The awards were presented at a later date at the Smithsonian museum in Washington, D.C., and it was an affair I shall never forget.” Dean enjoys the Stinson because it’s roomy, comfortable, and stable. “It flies very nice; it’s a good airplane and doesn’t have any bad habits. The only thing you have to watch like any tailwheel—is landing it, and you have to watch the winds,” he says, chuckling. When asked if there is anything the airplane has taught him through the years, he responds, quick as a whip, “Humility!”
It was easy to see that Marvin Pugh of
Yakima, Washington, is an experienced fly-in attendee. He had a nice camping and cooking arrangement set up right beside N2207D, his 1952 Cessna 170B. “I’ve owned this airplane seven years, and it’s pretty much in the same condition as when I bought it; I’ve just done little maintenance items from year to year. I had a Cessna 180 for 21 years,” he shares, then adds with a laugh, “but the 170 is cheaper to operate! I come here for the camaraderie, to see a bunch of people, and camp together. I went to the International 170 convention in Kentucky [right before AirVenture].” Marvin has been flying since 1973, when he soloed a Champ, and has flown mostly tailwheel airplanes. 42 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
Now here’s a rare plane!
This 1931 de Havilland Puss Moth (N223EC) is owned by Ben Cox of Winterbourne Down, Bristol, United Kingdom. He and his copilot, AnneMarie, were camping by the airplane. This Puss Moth is powered by a 145-hp DH Gipsy Major 1C and cruises at 100 mph and lands at 40 mph. Its wingspan is 37 feet, and the wings can be folded. (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.) www.VintageAircraft.org
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Vintage member John Patterson of
Frankfort, Kentucky, is the owner of NC14047, a 1934 Cabin Waco YKC. Powered by a 220-hp Continental, it cruises at 105 mph and lands at 55 mph.
N500HP is a 1963
Greg and Cindy Heckman of Polo, Illinois,
are all smiles with their handsomely restored 1946 Funk B85C, N77727. It won the Classic Grand Champion Gold Lindy award. (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.)
Mike Araldi of Lakeland, Florida, and his 1938 Waco AGC-8 won the Antique Reserve Grand Champion Silver Lindy award. NC2312 was featured on the cover of Vintage Airplane in July 2012, accompanied by an article entitled “Mike Araldi’s Antique ‘Flying Diary’ An Alluring Waco AGC-8.
Dee Howard Company 500, registered to TP Universal Exports International LLC of Eagan, Minnesota. It’s powered by two water-injected 2,500hp Pratt & Whitney R-2800s and is a transport category airplane with a pressurized cabin. It holds 1,546 gallons of fuel and burns 200 gph, with a 325 mph cruise and a range of 2,200 miles. Its wingspan is 72 feet, and it measures 60 feet long. It stands 14 feet 6 inches tall and has a max weight of 35,000 pounds.
A group of industrious men were vigor-
Terese and Roger Brown of Port St. Lucie, Florida, were happy to finally debut NC29457 at AirVenture this year. Just out of a lengthy restoration, their 1943 Howard DGA-15P’s glossy black fuselage reflected the images of its many admirers. The judges awarded it the Antique World War II Era Champion Bronze Lindy. (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.)
This 1948 Aeronca 11CC Super Chief was an “Oshkosh 1st Time Flyer 2013.” Powered by an 85-hp Continental, it cruises at 95 mph and lands at 38 mph. N4311E is owned by Robert Heavirland of North Branch, Minnesota.
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This sunshine-yellow 1932 Waco UEC is powered by a Continental R-670. NC12472 is registered to the EAA Aviation Foundation Inc.
ously wiping down a polished 1937 Spartan 7W Executive until it shimmered in the morning sun. (L-R: Mike Spirito, Alex Boone, Adam Schooling, and Carl Johnson, kneeling.) Vintage member Alex Boone, with his polishing cloth in hand, took a few moments to talk with me. “I’ve had the Spartan just over a year—long enough to know that you should probably only own one polished airplane in your life! The Spartan really has been my pinnacle of general aviation for 20 years, and they only come up for sale about once every five to seven years—so I was lucky enough to become the proud owner. It had been in Cleveland, Ohio, and was in very good shape when I got it. We’ve done some engine work on it,” he says, adding with a smile, “and a lot of polishing!” NC17613 is serial number 12, and is powered by a 450-hp Pratt & Whitney, with the “American Flyers” logo on the side of the fuselage. Alex and his friends flew in from Lexington, Kentucky, and the 410-mile trip to Oshkosh took about three hours. “It’ll cruise 150 knots, and it burns around 20 gph. Spartan’s early literature stated it would cruise at 200 mph for 1,000 miles—but I don’t think I could obtain either one today. But it will probably fly longer than you will want to; it’s got a five-hour range.” Alex finds the Spartan to be a very docile and responsive airplane. “We came in yesterday at 10,500 feet, and at that altitude, it’s still a very solid airplane. The gear is far enough apart and has a lower center of gravity than the Stearman I had, and it has a lockable tail wheel—all of which helps for ground maneuvers,” shares Alex, adding, “This is my first time to Oshkosh—I’ve been here less than 24 hours, and it’s already overwhelming!” www.VintageAircraft.org
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This striking 1946 Globe GC-1B Swift was at the end
of a row of handsome Swifts this year. N80919 is powered by a Continental IO-360-D engine and is registered to Bruce Mayes of Honolulu, Hawaii.
Vintage member Mike Lazarowicz of Port Clinton,
Ohio (right), was visiting with his buddies Bill Miles from Lillian, Alabama (left), and Larry Haas from La Cygne, Kansas (center), beside his freshly restored 1946 Taylorcraft BC12D. As it turned out, Mike not only had a good time seeing his friends, but also when he received the Custom Class A (0-80 hp) Small Plaque award for N95817. Sharing a bit about his airplane, Mike says, “I bought this Taylorcraft for $1,150 in 1969, when I was 17 years old. I went to college, and my friend helped me re-cover it the second year; I flew it all the way through college, got all my ratings, and then I sold it in 1973. I bought it back six years ago and restored it. This is the same exact paint job I had on it in 1970, when I was an 18-year-old kid. It was what I liked! You can restore them to original, but my goal was to make it a flier and enjoy it, and relive my youth!” Mike grins when he refers to his buddies, saying, “I met Larry through the Taylorcraft forum and then Larry introduced me to Bill. They own four Taylorcrafts between them, and they ‘stalk’ me at every meet— they’re always behind me at least four steps!” Bill used to volunteer in the Federal Pavilion, and he especially enjoys coming to the fly-in just to socialize and look at airplanes. Bill has an extensive history in aviation, from flying crop dusters to transporting prisoners to flying for the airlines. He soloed in a Taylorcraft in 1946, back when Mike’s plane was brand new. Explaining why he owns two of them now, Bill says with a gentle laugh, “I like the airplane because of its flight characteristics. It’ll outfly a Cub. In fact, when I’m flying with a Cub in formation, I have to pull the throttle halfway back. I enjoy landing mine on my 1,340-foot runway in my pecan orchard; it’s plenty wide in there for the Taylorcraft. The tree trunks are 90 feet apart, and the tree limbs go overhead and make what kind of looks like a tunnel that you land in.” Being good friends with Bill has its perks; Larry has experienced the delight of landing in the pecan orchard in Bill’s Tri-Pacer as well as the Taylorcraft. It was Larry’s 44th consecutive year at Oshkosh; he’s a talented restorer and homebuilder. Describing a little bit about his aviation background, Larry smiles and says, “I’ve owned two Taylorcrafts for 51 years now, and they’ve both won prizes up here. I learned to fly in one, then went and bought one. I flew it a year or so, and then my dad learned to fly, so we had to have a second airplane. We painted them just alike, and we went everywhere in two airplanes.” It’s easy to deduce from these gentlemen’s stories that throughout nearly 70 years, the Taylorcraft is still a “keeper.” Yet, as Mike points out, “Airplanes at Oshkosh are great, but the people are the real story!” (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.) 46 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
N7040E has been beautifully restored and is “Flying in Memory of Wallace Smith, 19541976, and Glenn Hulslander, 1928-1993.” This 1960 Cessna 175A is owned by David Smith of Milaca, Minnesota, and received the Outstanding Customized Bronze Lindy award.
W. Lee Hussey, II of Martinsville, Virginia, is the proud owner of this 1964 Piper PA-24-400 Comanche. With its cowling open and its rocker box covers shining in the sun, it attracted quite a bit of attention. N8455P received the 2013 Contemporary Grand Champion Gold Lindy award (and was the 2010 Bronze Lindy winner).
Above: This un-
signed, time-worn image was painted directly on an interior wall panel in the VAA Red Barn and had apparently been covered over for years. Curiously, it is remarkably similar to NC14163 at right.
This gorgeous 1934 Stinson SR-5A bears the logo “Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance Company,
Springfield, Illinois” on its fuselage. NC14163 is powered by a Lycoming R-680 and is owned by Keith Swalheim of Cottage Grove, Wisconsin. It cruises at 120 mph and lands at 70 mph. It received the Antique Transport Category Runner Up award. (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.)
This 1929 Spartan C3-165 was on the flightline very briefly one day. NC705N is owned by Lee Kunze of Howards Grove, Wisconsin, and is one of five C-3s listed on the FAA Registry. Appropriately enough, Tempus Fugit II adorns its cowling (Latin for “Time Flies”).
www.VintageAircraft.org
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Longtime EAA members will be sure to recognize
the blue jacket with patches that EAA lifetime member Camilla Roberts is wearing in this photo. There’s a poignant story behind the jacket. “Our friends, Eric and Irene Manuel, would come to Oshkosh with our chapter, and he passed away last year at 96. He came up here until he was 94,” shares Camilla, adding, “Their children gave me Irene’s jacket, and the patches represent all the years I’ve been here except for one, when I wasn’t here. They both volunteered, and I still volunteer.” Camilla’s eyes sparkle when she says, “My first airplane ride was when I was 18 months old, in my mom’s arms, on NC414H, which is the Tri-Motor that flies out at the Grand Canyon now. They charged a penny a pound for passengers, and we have it on 8 mm film!” She’s been coming to Oshkosh since 1974, and her father, Larry Roberts, has flown the Cessna 170A here 42 times. They are active members of EAA Chapter 563 in Peoria, Illinois, and Larry is a Century Club member, having flown at least 100 Young Eagles. He’s owned N5799C, a 1950 Cessna 170A, since 1967, and it’s staying in the family, since it’s registered in Camilla’s name now. She has her private and is currently logging hours in the Cessna 170 to meet insurance requirements, so she’s usually accompanied by her father or a flight instructor. “Dad learned in a Taylorcraft, and then he went to the 170, whereas I learned in a Cessna 152 with a nose wheel,” Camilla explains, adding, “Dad has about 2,270 hours total flight time.” During her very first visit to Oshkosh, she met a lot of other kids to play with, and that kept her coming back. “Our EAA group from Peoria used to be pretty big; a lot of them have gotten older now or have health issues, but there used to be about 50 of them that would come,” she recalls, adding, “My great uncle and great-great uncle and cousins also used to come. Later, we met people that fly in from other parts of the country, and so now they’re kind of like our EAA group was. Another thing about Oshkosh: I remember hearing the Apollo astronauts and veterans share their experiences up here. It’s like a history lesson, but you don’t realize you’re actually interested in history, until you hear somebody talk about it. And then it’s like, oh! Why didn’t my history teacher talk about this stuff?”
This 1968 Siai-Marchetti F.260 was a rare sight on the
flightline. According to the FAA Registry, N7895 is powered by a Lycoming IO-540 series engine and is owned by William Matukaitis of Sterling, Massachusetts.
Close-up view of N51ZD, taxiing out for takeoff. Joe Duke of Jacksonville, Florida, received the Seaplane Gold Lindy award for his 1954 Grumman Albatross. 48
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Richard Epton of Williamson, Georgia, is a frequent flyer in N108N, his 1946 Temco D-16A Twin Navion. Polished ’n pretty! This 1947 Cessna 140 is owned by Rich and Elaine Harris of West Nyack, New York. Powered by its 85-hp Continental, it cruises at 105 mph and lands at 60 mph. NC2350N was the Classic Category Class II (81-150 hp) Bronze Lindy winner during AirVenture last year (2012). Vintage member Mark Weinreich of River Falls,
Wisconsin, and his youngest daughter, Lisa, of Missoula, Montana, were camping beside N1999V, their 1947 Cessna 140. Mark was using his iPad and the ForeFlight app to review his planned route of flight from Oshkosh to Red Wing Airport and cheerfully took a few minutes to share a bit about himself and his airplane. “I’m a retired airline pilot. I just retired six months ago, and I’m really flying now!” he says with a hearty laugh, adding, “I learned to fly while in the Army, in an Army-sponsored flying club and later flew helicopters in the National Guard after the Vietnam era. When I got out, I thought I was going to be a college professor, but I ran out of money and time and had kids. So I accepted an airline job and flew 30 years for Mesaba Airlines out of Minneapolis, Minnesota. I had a pretty good career over there.” Mark is also an A&P mechanic and has refurbished the ragwing 140 during the 10 years he’s owned it. He proudly popped the cowling to show off his handiwork. “This is overhauled by me! I did the 100-hp STC for the O-200, and that extra 15 hp makes quite a bit of difference,” he says and smiles, elaborating, “With my daughter, myself, and tent, we’re right at gross weight. But with the 100 hp, we notice a difference on takeoff. It climbs right up now. Another modification I made was changing the tail wheel, which makes it more stable on the ground and easier to turn.” This was the second time he’s flown into Oshkosh, and each time he’s had his daughter with him. “Both of my daughters have been flying with me since they were little,” he says happily, adding, “Lisa wants to learn to fly; she’s had some lessons. And my wife’s been a real trooper, coming over here and camping and never complaining. This airplane has a lady’s paint scheme; the two previous owners were a guy and gal, and she picked the paint scheme. My wife loves it, and I’ve learned to love it!” www.VintageAircraft.org
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Tia Robertson with her 1946 NC95106 Taylorcraft BC12-D and her son, Nathan.
Ian Robertson and N2551C, the family’s 1954 Cessna 170B, with friend Eddie Cengic.
Phillip Robertson, with N9895A, their 1950 Cessna 195A.
The “Flying Robertson Family.” Tia and Phillip Robertson are longtime fliers, as both profes-
sional and general aviation pilots, and they’d always hoped to pass along their love of flying to their sons. Their dreams were fulfilled earlier this year, when Nathan and Ian earned their private certificates, and it was their mother, Tia, who was their flight instructor in the family’s Cessna 170B. Twenty-three-year-old Nathan was all smiles as he described his flight to Oshkosh: “My dad and I flew the 195 up from Woodstock, Georgia. We had great weather and visibility, and we saw all the big buildings in Chicago. We shared PIC responsibilities; I’ve just recently started learning how to fly the 195, and it’s very challenging!” Twenty-year-old Ian flew the family’s Cessna 170B, and his 21-year-old friend, Eddie Cengic, accompanied him. All the while, Tia was flying her Taylorcraft. “At the beginning of a leg, we’d have my mom in sight,” says Ian, laughing, “and then we’d pass her. Every time we’d land, we’d fuel up the 170, and then my mom would come in, and we were like her pit crew waiting there, ready to clip on the ground wire for the fuel pump, and fill up her 12- and 6-gallon tanks. Then we’d send her out real quick: go, go, go! We’d take off, but we’d catch her and pass her again. She didn’t fuel up her airplane once! I think flying airplanes is extremely fun; I want it to be a career.” Tia is also teaching Eddie to fly. “I have my written done, and am working on my private pilot’s license, but I’ve been caught up with work and school,” says Eddie, adding with a grin, “but coming back up to Oshkosh has brought my interest back up! Seeing all these beautiful planes and flying here with Ian. I’ve told Tia I definitely want to finish my private license.” Tia’s laughter and excitement light up her countenance and warms those around her like a cheerful ray of sunshine. Smiling happily, she declares, “Phillip and I are delighted that our boys love flying as much as we do; being able to share that as their mom and instructor has been wonderful. We are so proud of them! When I let the boys solo my Taylorcraft, that was a real big deal to me for several reasons, one of which is that I’ve owned it for 32 years, and it’s my baby! It’s exciting to fly up here as a family; I’m glad the bug finally bit them; we just waited until they showed an interest in it. They’re working on their instrument ratings now!” 50
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Vintage member David Carlson of Lakeland, Florida, was enjoying the early morning beside N7974B. He likes being at AirVenture “just to be around other people, to go hangar fly, and hear some good stories. They get better every year!” His wife, Diana, is a pilot as well, and David shares that “when we fly together, we switch off being PIC; I’m also a CFI and am currently giving checkrides in the Civil Air Patrol.” They’ve owned the airplane for two years now. Commenting with a chuckle, David says, “We’re getting older! We started out with a 1979 Cessna 172, and then a 1966 Cessna 182, and now we have a 1957 Cessna 172. It’s a dream to fly; a little slow, but it’s okay. It only has a little over 2,400 hours, with its original engine, which has been overhauled once. These are the original colors, except it was bare metal where it’s white now, and the blue stripe is a little higher to get the large numbers on it, since we fly to the Bahamas. We upgraded the flight reference instruments and avionics, but we still use the venturi-driven attitude indicator and directional gyro as backup and for the copilot.”
Joseph Flood of Franklinville, New Jersey,
with his 1939 Aeronca 65-C. NC23927 won the Bronze Age (1937-1941) Outstanding Closed-Cockpit Monoplane award. (Watch for an upcoming feature on this airplane.)
Vintage members Doug and Judy Range of
Burrton, Kansas, were relaxing by their 1949 Piper Stinson 108-3 enjoying their honeymoon. They were just married the weekend prior to AirVenture, and it was Judy’s first visit to Oshkosh. “I’m fascinated and I’m ready to come back next year! When we get back home,” she says and smiles, “we’re going to see if I can find someone to teach me how to at least get it down safely. We’ll be putting up a hangar on our own hayfield airstrip soon. It’s awesome!” N4126C has always been a Kansas airplane; in fact, Doug is its second registered owner. “This is the first year for us to bring the airplane; we bought it about 10 years ago. I soloed in this; I was in my 50s when I did that. I finished up getting my license in it, and now I’ve got over 300 hours in it.” The airplane had 1,050 hours total time on it when Doug bought it, and it still has its original Franklin engine. “The wings were re-covered in Ceconite in the 1980s, and the next year, the fuselage was done in Stits,” says Doug, adding with a chuckle, “When I got it I had to change the radio out. We put a new one in, along with a transponder and the intercom, all in the same hole that the previous radio came out of, and even lost six pounds!” Doug was introduced to flying as a child, when his father got him a ride in a Mooney. “I just fell in love with flying. That’s why I’m so passionate about the Young Eagles program. I only fly one at a time, because if you fly more than one, they only get an airplane ride in the back seat. I turn the controls over and the kid flies the airplane. I have them climb, descend, turn right, turn left, and if they’re having fun, I let them fly back to the airport. I tell them afterward, ‘You proved you can fly an airplane; now you keep yourself straight and study hard, and one day you can be a pilot!’ I’ve taken over 100 kids up now, and I like giving the kids a goal, something to work for, look forward to, and help keep them out of trouble.” www.VintageAircraft.org
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Syd Cohen of Wausau, Wisconsin, and Scampy,
a 1946 415-D Ercoupe, are a friendly and familiar sight at many local and national fly-ins. NC94196 is powered by an 85-hp Continental; it cruises at 108 mph and lands at 54 mph. Scampy has won at least 17 noteworthy awards since 1992, and Syd has 2,540 hours in his airplane. Syd was attracted to Ercoupes because Dick Korupp introduced him to flying in the one Dick owned. Years later, Syd and several fellow school teachers went together and bought an Ercoupe that had come up for sale at the Mosinee Airport. “The plane belonged to Bill Unertl, who was a paraplegic . . . and his nephew suggested he learn to fly an Ercoupe. He found this Ercoupe in Wisconsin Rapids and flew it for 10 or 11 years. But then he lost his medical, and we bought his plane for $6,500. Syd ended up buying their shares in the Ercoupe for the original cost of $1,400 each. In the 1990s, Scampy underwent a ground-up restoration. Throughout the years, Syd has introduced 1,113 Young Eagles to flying. Jake Lasee was one of them; now he’s 14 and completely hooked on flying. “That flight was just awesome,” he recalls, his eyes shining, “and yes, I’m going to learn to fly!” Syd notes, “Jake makes radio control models, and they don’t just fly; they’re gorgeous!” This year was Syd’s 41st time at Oshkosh; he’s flown the Ercoupe there 31 times, and he’s led the flight of Ercoupes 21 times. “I love coming here; this is absolute heaven,” he says, with a big grin. He’s already making big plans for 2015, in anticipation of the 75th anniversary of the Ercoupe production (which started in January 1940 with the C Model). “EAA said they’d do something special for that,” explains Syd, “so I proposed that the 2015 Ercoupe convention will be in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, right before AirVenture. That’s only 30 miles away from Oshkosh, and there are a lot of things to do there. Then we can have a mass flight over here; I’m hoping for at least 75 Ercoupes! Anyone who’s interested in joining us for the 75th anniversary can visit the Ercoupe Owner’s Club website for more information: www.Ercoupe.org.”
Vintage member Richard Hawley of Conifer,
Colorado, grew up surrounded by aviation and wouldn’t have had it any other way. “I was born on a grass strip next to a crop duster, so I’ve been doomed from the start to be a pilot,” he says and smiles. “I grew up wondering why other kids didn’t have airplanes! I went through college, got a couple of degrees, and was a teacher for a little while, but then I realized I really wanted to be in the sky more than I wanted to be in a classroom. So I resigned from teaching to work on the ramp for Braniff throwing suitcases on airplanes, while I was getting my ratings.” Richard eventually acquired the necessary ratings and was hired as an airline pilot. Then Braniff went bankrupt, so he flew charters for a couple of years. “Then I went to Southwest Airlines, which was like heaven on earth. I was there for 20 years and two months, until they dragged me out backwards. I know that that airplane still has little scratch marks on the door from my fingernails!” After that, he discovered that he had more time to work on his airplanes, and one in particular. “I still have the world’s slowest Fairchild restoration project going on. NC19015 is a 1937 Fairchild 24G (145-hp Warner) that my father purchased in 1953,” he says, elaborating, “It has the extra big fuel tanks because it was used as a submarine patrol plane during WWII. I hope to get that airplane back in the sky before I die. That’s my goal.” His wife, Lynne, suggested that he also needed an airplane to fly, and now he’s owned N9855A, a Jacobs-powered 1950 Cessna 195A, for 23 years. “I’ve flown it so long it’s just like an old shoe—you just slide in it, it’s so comfortable. I have about 1,100 hours in it. Home base is Denver, Colorado’s Front Range airport,” he says, adding thoughtfully, “It’s been a wonderful week here at Oshkosh. I like seeing the vintage and antique airplanes, and there’s always something that somebody just finished restoring. And this year, by total coincidence, the Cessna 190 tied down straight behind me is N9854A—one number off from mine. What are the chances of that happening? Being at Oshkosh is a must every year!” 52
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Brothers Jim (left) and Tom Schoettmer (right)
of Greensburg, Indiana, pooled their resources and bought their 1946 Taylorcraft BC12D in 1992. It had been sitting at a grass field at New Carlisle, Ohio. Tom called the owner, who gave him a ride in it, but they couldn’t agree on a price. A couple of weeks later the owner called Tom back, and the brothers bought the Taylorcraft. “I’m not a licensed pilot, but my older brother Tom is,” shares Jim, explaining, “I just wanted to have an interest in it with him; I basically love for him to be able to fly. We’ve been coming to Oshkosh about every three years.” They enjoyed time aloft in NC5045M for six years prior to grounding it for safety’s sake, when the AD on the wing spars was issued. Several years passed, and then they decided if they were ever going to fly it again, they needed to have it restored. One thing led to another, and eventually, Stoinoff Restoration in Batesville, Indiana, a familyrun company owned by Bob Stoinoff and his sons Rob and Scott, completed a thorough and meticulous restoration. The project included new wing spars, new wing tanks, and a new cowling (with a Univair nosebowl), shock cord covers and door hinge covers, and an air breather scoop. Magnum Aircraft Engines in Fort Wayne, Indiana, overhauled NC5045M’s original engine. All the instruments were overhauled, and Tom was fortunate to discover and purchase an original Taylorcraft compass on eBay. The airframe was covered and finished with the Poly-Fiber process. Tom well understands what is involved with restorations; back in 1986, he won the Class II Bronze Lindy award for his own hands-on restoration of his 1952 Cessna 170B. He says he “learned to fly in a Cessna 150 back in 1972, and I did my tailwheel training in a Taylorcraft in 1974. I fell in love with classic airplanes when I was old enough to walk out of the house and look up into the sky! When I was growing up, I’d watch them flying, and when I’d drive out in the country with Dad, we’d see an airplane on a runway, or at a hangar, and he’d say, ‘Let’s stop and look at the airplane!’” Tom’s wife, Trudie (center), was all smiles and enjoying being at Oshkosh with the fellas. “I had never flown in a small airplane until I met Tom about six years ago and we just had our fourth anniversary last week. I just fell in love with flying when he took me up. I’d always enjoyed flying commercially, but being in a small airplane was just a totally different experience. I love the Taylorcraft, and since it’s side-by-side seating, it makes it easier for me to ask Tom any questions I have. And now he’s trying to get me to learn to fly!” NC5045M was virtually aglow on the field, drawing many admirers to examine it in detail, including the judges, who selected it for the Class I Bronze Lindy award.
Vintage member Brian Neal flew N6126D (a PA-22150) from his home in Monrovia, California. This is his eighth trip to Oshkosh, and he shares that he keeps coming back because, “As much as anything, it’s the friendship of about eight to 10 guys I’ve come to know here, and we camp together every year. Plus I’m a big AeroMart person; I go there every day, and I like to look in the big hangars at the vendor exhibits and look at the airplanes. So it’s a bouquet of activities.” Brian soloed in a Cessna 150 and was attracted to tailwheel airplanes due to his father’s influence. “My dad was a pilot, and he learned to fly in a J-3 and always liked taildraggers. About the time I was getting my license, he pointed out a Piper Pacer sitting underneath a hangar shed, and said, ‘You know, that’s a really nice airplane. It’s got four seats, good performance, and gets there cheap. It was less than a year after that that I bought my first airplane, an original Piper Pacer,” he recalls, adding, “I bought this airplane in 1977, when I was 22 years old. It was originally a Tri-Pacer, and I’ve had quite a few upgrades and modifications done to it over the years. The best one was the taildragger conversion, by far. It made a much nicer airplane out of it. I’ve flown it about 1,600 hours in 33 years; my big cross-country trips are up here and to Texas where my family still lives.” www.VintageAircraft.org
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The 84-day odyssey of Cal Rodgers Mark Carlson Cal Rogers
Part 2
ERNIE VISKUPIC, WINGMAN PHOTOGRAPHY SAN DIEGO
The Takeoff-Begin Part Two
Coast to Coast With the Vin Fiz
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Rodgers had the new EX, painted with the bold VIN FIZ logo, delivered to Sheepshead Bay on the south coast of Long Island in Brooklyn. The EX was on the beach with light Atlantic surf touching the wheels. On the afternoon of September 17, 1911, before a modest crowd, he climbed onto the wing and seated himself in the wood and canvas pilot’s seat. He was wearing a simple business suit and tie under thick sweaters and a sheepskin vest. On his head was his familiar cap and clamped between his teeth was an unlit cigar. Rodgers had agreed to carry a U.S. Mail pouch to California. The sturdy leather bag was secured to a central wing strut. He would be delivering the first transcontinental air mail. The ground mechanics had filled the gas tank and upon Rodgers’ signal pulled the big starboard propeller through, until the 35-hp engine chugged to life. It was 4:30 p.m. The plane rolled slowly and with the crowd watching wobbled, picked up speed, and then lifted
into the cool afternoon sky. He banked to the west. Rodgers was on his way. The Special was in Jersey City on the west bank of the Hudson River and started north, paralleling the Hudson River Valley. Rodgers saw the distinctive white boxcar and kept it in sight as they passed through Paterson. His first goal was Middletown, New York, 104 miles away. Hearst’s chain of papers started following the epic journey. After two hours the sun was dipping low ahead of the EX, and Rodgers looked for a suitable place to land. He chose a flat field alongside the railroad tracks and settled in. The first leg of the long journey had ended successfully. Taylor and the train arrived and immediately fueled the EX, checking for loose bracing wires and controls. Rodgers hugged his mother and kissed his wife, feeling good about his initial progress. A night in the Palmer-Singer coach refreshed him and the next morning, he again climbed into the EX, eager to continue on to Binghamton, New York, 120 miles to the west.
But almost immediately Rodgers’ luck changed. Just after lifting off, a wheel struck a tree and the plane spun and fell into a farmyard, crushing a chicken coop. Rodgers was slightly injured, but the EX had suffered its first major damage. An irate woman stormed out of the farmhouse and demanded Rodgers pay her for the damage to her chicken coop, which he dutifully did. The EX was towed back to the field and repairs were performed to broken struts, snapped wires, and torn fabric. It wasn’t until September 21 that he was able to try again. After a less violent takeoff, the resilient Rodgers again banked to the west and headed for his everdistant goal. He maintained an altitude of nearly 4,000 feet, which gave him excellent visibility, but when low cloud intervened, he was forced to fly lower to keep the precious rail line in sight. Looking for known landmarks and town names painted on water towers and barns, he kept an eye on his watch and the gas gauge until two hours had passed. Then he found a www.VintageAircraft.org
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ERNIE VISKUPIC, WINGMAN PHOTOGRAPHY SAN DIEGO
place to land. Sometimes the Special was there with the crew waiting. But lacking a compass, he did get lost. On September 22 Rodgers mistakenly flew south from Hancock, New York, along the wrong railroad into Pennsylvania. He recognized his mistake and turned back north after landings at Throop and Scranton. Then he had another serious takeoff crash in Redhouse. Leaving New York at Salamanca on September 28, he crossed the corner of Pennsylvania into Meadville. From there he flew along the south bank of Lake Erie to Kent, Ohio, seeing the fertile valleys and rolling hills pass under his wings. 56
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People on the ground heard the strange chattering of the engine and looked around, puzzled at the source. Then someone would point into the sky and say “There! It’s an aeroplane!” Inevitably they would spot the bold VIN FIZ on the underside of the wings and wave as Rodgers soared over. From town to city, from crossroads to railroad junctions, Rodgers stubbornly flew on. After daily conferences with Taylor over the maps, Rodgers would take off and find the railroad line that would lead him to his next destination.
The Reality Entering Indiana on October 1, he landed at Huntington. The next day he crashed on takeoff, requiring three days to repair. On the October 5 he made it as far as Hammond, where a broken skid had to be replaced. Then high winds delayed his takeoff until October 8. Time was beginning to run out. His many forced landings and repairs had cost too much. As Rodgers crossed into Illinois and skirted the southern shore of Lake Michigan, the sobering truth was undeniable. He wasn’t going to make Hearst’s deadline. It was October 9 when he reached Chicago.
But he persisted, and followed the Illinois Central Railroad west to stops in Lockport, Peoria, and Springfield. He f lew southwest down the Illinois River toward the Mississippi River. Then the Vin Fiz flew upstream along the Missouri River to Kansas City, Missouri. On October 17, 30 days after leaving Sheepshead Bay, Rodgers had only reached McAlester, Oklahoma. The Hearst papers, which had been following Vin Fiz from the start, continued to report his progress, and in some cases, the lack of it. Even though he would not be able to win the $50,000 Rodgers never considered quitting. After all,
he was being paid by Armour for every mile he flew, and even though he had lost out on the 30-day goal, he was becoming more and more famous with each passing day. Mabel Rodgers obtained local newspapers in every town the train stopped in, and she told her husband he had the entire nation behind him. The Wright EX slogged south, enduring crashes and engine trouble, bad weather, and bumpy landings. For most pilots a serious crash would be a wake-up call, prompting an examination of their chosen profession. But Cal Rodgers suffered at least seven major crashes that required repairs and medical care. Another 16 were serious enough to need work on the plane before flight could be resumed. Cal Rodgers, while being an excellent athlete, was not an experienced pilot. He won several air competitions, but a fair degree of luck was involved. When something went wrong in the air, a pilot with more flying time might often have been able to land with less damage than Rodgers sustained. Rodgers had only flown Wright brothers aircraft and probably felt a loyalty to them. But the EX was hardly the ideal biplane for an extreme long-distance series of flights over several weeks. Daily takeoffs and landings took their toll on the EX, which had never been designed for such work. Texas was so large that more than 20 flights were needed to traverse the Lone Star State. An engine exploded on October 20 at Kyle, Texas. But repairs were swift, and he flew on to San Antonio on October 22. The determined Rodgers was well past the halfway point by late October. After following the Rio Grande Valley northwest with landings at Alpine, Sierra Blanca, and Fort Hancock, he reached El Paso on October 29. New Mexico
proved to be a breeze. After two landings in New Mexico on November 1, he reached Willcox, Arizona. He stopped in Tucson and Phoenix, and aimed the EX for the Golden State. On November 3 he crossed over Imperial Junction, California, just 200 miles short of Pasadena, when an engine cylinder burst. Hot steel shards lanced into Rodgers’ shoulder and tore into the wing fabric. Gritting his teeth, Rodgers turned back and managed to coast the EX to a safe landing in Imperial Junction. The Vin Fiz Special reached the town and set to work while Mabel accompanied her husband to the local hospital to have the metal fragments removed from his right arm and shoulder. The EX required a day to repair. The next day the bandaged pilot was off again, driving hard for Banning, California. He reached Banning on the afternoon of November 4. The next stop was Pasadena, the elusive goal. November 5 was a clear day with high cirrus clouds and perfect visibility. Rodgers took off early and flew on, keeping one ear cocked for any unusual sound in the engine. But the four cylinders banged on, and he landed at Beaumont, a sleepy farming town, and then on to Pomona, among the alfalfa fields. A crowd of nearly 20,000 people were waiting at Tournament Park, the site of the first Rose Bowl game in 1902, outside Pasadena when they heard the chugging of the Wright’s engine approaching from the east. Cheers erupted from every throat at 4:04 p.m., when Cal Rodgers settled the battered Vin Fiz on the grass and cut the engine. He unstrapped the battered mail bag and handed it to the Postal Service representative. It had taken him 49 days to reach Pasadena. The first www.VintageAircraft.org
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past Hearst’s deadline, it was a remarkable feat in aviation history. For the first time an aircraft had flown from coast to coast, linking the oceans by air.
Yet Rodgers wasn’t fully satisfied. He wanted to go all the way to the Pacific, 23 miles away.
To the Pacific or Bust
PHOTOS ERNIE VISKUPIC, WINGMAN PHOTOGRAPHY SAN DIEGO
transcontinental air mail took 10 times longer to deliver by air than it would have by rail. Officially, Rodgers had done it, and even though he was 19 days
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Seven days later, after Taylor and his team had tuned the engine and tightened the bracing wires, Rodgers, with his characteristic grin and cigar, was off again, bound for Long Beach. The coastal city had won the bid for the honor of being the site of Rodgers’ ultimate triumph. He would receive $1,000 to land there, plus part of the receipts for an exhibition of the plane afterwards. But Rodgers’ luck hadn’t changed for the better. A few minutes into the flight, the engine, which had been pushed beyond what its builders had intended, suffered a broken fuel line and forced him to land at Covina Junction. The Special reached him and repairs were swift. A short time later Rodgers took off again, casting his eyes to the distant blue line on the western horizon. Then the engine quit. Rodgers kept the falling EX under control, but he crashed on the Orr Ranch outside Compton, California. This was the last crash, but it was severe. The fuel tank dislodged, smashed through the radiator, and split open as it fell onto Rodgers’ legs, crushing his ankle. Gasoline soaked his clothing, and he was unconscious. Rodgers was taken to a hospital while his wife watched anxiously. She knew he wasn’t done yet. When he awoke, his first words were “How far do I have to go?” He had survived many crashes that could have been fatal. Orville Wright wrote to a friend, “That man Rodgers was born with four horseshoes in his pocket.” Weeks were needed to literally rebuild the EX for the last hop to Long Beach, just 12 miles away. The bot-
ERNIE VISKUPIC, WINGMAN PHOTOGRAPHY SAN DIEGO
tle of Vin Fiz had disappeared after the crash, and Rodgers, like many pilots, was superstitious and asked his mechanics to go to the crash site and find it. They said there were “a million of them,” but he wanted the one he’d carried from New York. Only after several searches was the battered bottle found buried in the dirt. On December 10 Rodgers was surrounded by wellwishers as he limped on crutches out to the Vin Fiz. He stopped and regarded the plane, realizing it wasn’t the same aircraft in which he’d left Sheepshead Bay on September 17. While it was still a Wright EX and the black VIN FIZ letters stood out boldly, all that
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remained of the original was one rudder and a wing strut. He climbed in, strapping his crutches to a strut and signaled his team to start the propeller. A moment later, engine chugging away, Cal Rodgers lifted off and turned west. A crowd of nearly 50,000 spectators who’d been waiting for word of Rodgers’ takeoff was on the beach as the Vin Fiz came into view over the hills. Rodgers grinned in triumph when the wheels touched down on the firm sand of Long Beach. Wanting to fulfill his ultimate goal, he had the plane rolled forward until the wheels were washed by the Pacific Ocean surf. The crowd swarmed around the plane and clapped the grinning pilot on the back. Flash powder flared in the sunlight as dozens of photos were taken of the historic moment. He had done it. From Sheepshead Bay, New York, to Long Beach, California, with 70 flights, a dozen serious crashes, two engine explosions, and several injuries, 84 days had passed. An Olympic marathon runner (assuming he never stopped or slept) could run across the country in less time. Interestingly, Rodgers’ actual time in the air for 4,321 miles was just over 82 hours, at an average airspeed of 51.1 miles per hour. His longest single flight was 133 miles, and the most distance in a day was 315 miles between McAlester, Oklahoma, and Fort Worth, Texas. He used eight propellers and 20 wheel skids. Robert Fowler made another attempt to fly across the country. He left southern California on October 19, and reached Jacksonville, Florida, on February 8, 1912. The second crossing of the continent by air took 112 days. Armour’s cost for the flight was more than $23,000. 60
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The Vin Fiz Special returned to Dayton.
The Finish Line Cal and Mabel decided to stay in Pasadena and bought a home there. Even though the last six months of his life had been focused on the coast to coast flight, Cal Rodgers wasn’t content. He began doing exhibition flights around the Los Angeles area in his trusty Wright Model B. He housed both planes in a hangar at Dominguez Field (now the site of Cal State Dominguez Hills). He later moved them to a field in Long Beach. Cal Rodgers finally ran out of horseshoes on April 3, 1912 (coincidentally exactly a week before the Titanic left Southampton), and flew over Long Beach. Flying past the spot where his long journey had ended, he encountered a flock of seagulls. Various accounts state he either tried to scatter or avoid the birds, but one was entangled in his rudder controls, and he fell from the sky and crashed in the surf. Cal Rodgers died of a broken neck at the age of 33. As for the current status of the Vin Fiz, there is some controversy. The National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., has the only “original” Wright EX Vin Fiz in existence. How it got to be there is the issue. Cal’s cousin Lt. John Rodgers inherited the Vin Fiz and attempted to donate it to the Smithsonian, but they had a Wright Military Model on display and turned the offer down. Mabel was by then married to Charles Wiggin, who accompanied the train during the 84-day trip across the country. She accepted the plane from John, and the couple flew it around southern California at various air meets. Cal’s mother won the Vin Fiz in a court order in 1914 and sent it to Dayton to be restored. But for some
reason it was not done, and the plane was destroyed when the factory was sold in 1916. However, according to Charles Taylor, the Vin Fiz was restored and presented to the Carnegie Institute in 1917, a year after it had supposedly been destroyed. Carnegie donated the plane to the Smithsonian in 1934 where it was restored and put on display. The only logical explanation is that there were in effect two Wright EX Vin Fiz airplanes. One was the original that Rodgers flew to California. But it had been rebuilt so many times that little remained of the actual plane that left New York. This is the one that was lost in Dayton. The Vin Fiz Special carried enough spare parts, i.e., wings, engines, propellers, wheels, struts, rudders, elevators and so on, that another Vin Fiz was apparently built. This is the one Cal’s mother sent to Carnegie and ended up in Washington. It is on public display today.
The Boy Who Wanted to Fly Eleven years after Cal Rodgers landed in Long Beach, a single de Havilland DH-4 took off from Pablo Beach, Florida, and headed west. The date was September 4, 1922. After one refueling stop, the DH-4 landed in San Diego, California, completing a flight of 21 hours, 19 minutes, the first transcontinental flight in less than a day. At the controls was the man who’d once watched the fragile planes in the sky over the 1910 Dominguez Air Meet, Jimmy Doolittle. Calbraith Perr y Rodgers was buried in Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburg. On his headstone is the inscription “I endure. I conquer.” He was enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame on December 17, 1964, along with Orville and Wilbur Wright.
Welcome New VAA Members
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Los Gatos, CA Acworth, GA Ray, MI Manhattan Beach, CA Golden, CO Sutherlin, OR Jupiter, FL Waunakee, WI Waterford, WI San Antonio, TX Richardson, TX Mount Horeb, WI Lake Geneva, WI Greensburg, IN Cresco, IA El Paso, TX Dayton, OH Parker, CO Chattanooga, TN Dallas, TX Lakewood, CO Prattville, AL Mooreland, IN Pleasant Hill, CA Germantown, TN Spring, TX Woodstock, IL Meridian, MS London, Ontario Prior Lake, MN Muncie, IN Walnut Creek, CA Marshall, WI Plainfield, IL Rancho Murieta, CA Oconto Falls, WI Gatineau, Quebec Waunakee, WI Clifford Township, PA Hartford, WI Hartford, WI Nora Springs, IA Holdenville, OK MS State, MS Stratford, TX Mckinney, TX Hobbs, NM
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Straight & Level
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er’s death on August 22. I knew his good health was slipping away from him, and he was likely not long for this world. But I still suddenly found myself completely unprepared emotionally for Paul’s death. I guess a lot of the emotion was all about the concept of “Paul the Founder” and the fact that we will never have another founder of EAA. Paul was the ultimate gatekeeper at EAA, and he was forever watchful over his flock of members. My guess is that he has a new gate to keep watch over these days. I have long felt that I was very much blessed to have had a special relationship with Paul Poberezny. I will surely miss the challenging conversations I was privileged to have with him over all these years. As a true leader throughout his adult life, The Colonel always enjoyed challenging the leadership of the VAA with various ideas and concepts that would make you immediately wonder, “Where in the world is he taking me with this?” Paul was forever my true mentor at EAA, and this was just his way of challenging us all to always do better. Blue sky and Godspeed to you, Paul, and I hope to see you and your spirit in the pattern around Oshkosh. VAA Board Member Jeannie Hill passed away on September 1, 2013, after a courageous battle with cancer. She was preceded in death by her husband, Dick Hill. Jeannie and Dick were longtime fixtures at EAA and in the Vintage area during Oshkosh. For many years during the convention, Jeannie served as chairmen of hospitality at the VAA Red Barn Headquarters where she performed a myriad of responsibilities, which included operational responsibility for the Shawano Fly-Out, the annual VAA Picnic, and many more duties. Jeannie was elected to the Vintage Aircraft Association board of directors in 1990 and continued to serve in that capacity until her death. Jeannie was a committed VAA chairman and director, and she will be dearly missed in the Red Barn Headquarters in future years. Winter is coming upon us, so pay close attention to your aircraft checklist, as well as your personal checklist. Buckle your seat belt folks, because 2014 is looking good for us as an organization. Thanks for being a part of it!
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, AND CIRCULATION (Required by 39 U.S.C. 3685). 1. Title of Publication: Vintage Airplane. 2. Publication No.: 062-750. 3. Filing Date: 10/9/13. 4. Issue Frequency: Monthly. 5. No. of Issues Published Annually: 6. 6. Annual Subscription Price: $42.00 in U.S. 7. Known Office of Publication: EAA, 3000 Poberezny Road, P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Contact Person: Randy Halberg, Telephone: 920-426-6572. 8. Headquarters or General Business Office of the Publisher: Same address as above. 9. Publisher: Jack Pelton, EAA P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Editor: Jim Busha, c/o EAA, 3000 Poberezny Road, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Managing Editor: None. 10. Owner: Experimental Aircraft Association, P.O. Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. 11. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amounts of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: None. 12. Tax Status: Has Not Changed During Preceding 12 Months. 13. Publication Title: Vintage Airplane. 14. Issue date for circulation data below: 10/1/2013. 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation (Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months/ No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date): a. Total No. of Copies Printed (7,286/7,692) b. Paid Circulation (By Mail and Outside the Mail): 1. Mailed Outside-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (Include paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies) (5,615/5,579). 2. Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (Include paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies) (0/0). 3. Paid Distribution Outside the Mails Including Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Distribution Outside USPS (354/351). 4. Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail Through the USPS (e.g., First-Class Mail) (15/15). c. Total Paid Distribution (Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3), and (4)) (5,984/5,945). d. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (By Mail and Outside the Mail): 1. Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies Included on PS Form 3541 (0/0). 2. Free or Nominal Rate In-County Copies Included on PS Form 3541 (0/0). 3. Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes Through the USPS (e.g. First-Class Mail) (246/246). 4. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or other means) (198/397). e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3), and (4) (444/643). f. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15e) (6,428/6,588). g. Copies Not Distributed (See Instructions to Publishers #4 (page 3)) (660/1303). h. Total (Sum of 15f and g) (7,088/7,891). i. Percent Paid (15c divided by 15f times 100) (93.09%/90.24%). 16. Publication of Statement of Ownership: Publication required. Will be printed in the November / December 2013 issue of this publication. 17. I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or information requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (including civil penalties). T.S. Platts, Executive Administrator, 10/9/2013. PS Form 3526, September 2013.
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Vintage Trader
S o m e t h i n g t o b u y, s e l l , o r t ra d e ?
Classified Word Ads: $5.50 per 10 words, 100 words maximum. Classified ads may be submitted online at www.EAA.org at https://secure.eaa.org/advertising/classified_ad.html Advertising Closing Dates: 10th of month, two months prior to issue date (i.e., January 10 is the closing date for the March issue). EAA reserves the right to reject any advertising in conflict with its policies. Rates cover one insertion per issue. Classified ads are not accepted via phone. Payment must accompany order. Word ads may be sent via fax (920-426-4828) or e-mail (classads@EAA.org) using credit card payment. Include name on card, complete address, and type of card, card number, and expiration date. Make checks payable to EAA. Advertising Correspondence: EAA, Classified Advertising, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086
AIRCRAFT
1953 Piper PA 22-135 Tri-Pacer. 1475 TT. Hangared, Logs, 8/13 Annual. Great vintage plane. $21k OBO. Call George at 512-694-4067
BOOKS
Aviation Books. home.windstream.net/av8terz
EMPLOYMENT
Established Midwestern company seeking seasoned IA with leadership experience. Candidate must have an extensive background in hands-on restoration activities, be able to manage large projects and be skilled in business development. Our restoration business is unique and requires extensive experience with vintage and Warbird type aircraft. Send resume and salary requirements to wasiresume@gmail.com
WANTED
Restoring a 1929 Alliance Argo, looking for engineering drawings, blue prints, and anything that could be of help. 508-566-6673, dthissell@gmail.com Donate your Airplane to Samaritan Aviation, a charity that provides missions and medical services to remote areas of the world. www.samaritanaviation.com 970-249-4341 Copyright ©2013 by the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association, All rights reserved. VINTAGE AIRPLANE (USPS 062-750; ISSN 0091-6943) is published and owned exclusively by the EAA Vintage Aircraft Association of the Experimental Aircraft Association and is published bi-monthly at EAA Aviation Center, 3000 Poberezny Rd., PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54902-3086, e-mail: vintageaircraft@eaa.org. Membership to Vintage Aircraft Association, which includes 6 issues of Vintage Airplane magazine, is $42 per year for EAA members and $52 for non-EAA members. Periodicals Postage paid at Oshkosh, WI 54902 and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Vintage Airplane, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. CPC #40612608. FOREIGN AND APO ADDRESSES—Please allow at least two months for delivery of VINTAGE AIRPLANE to foreign and APO addresses via surface mail. ADVERTISING — Vintage Aircraft Association does not guarantee or endorse any product offered through the advertising. We invite constructive criticism and welcome any report of inferior merchandise obtained through our advertising so that corrective measures can be taken. EDITORIAL POLICY: Members are encouraged to submit stories and photographs. Policy opinions expressed in articles are solely those of the authors. Responsibility for accuracy in reporting rests entirely with the contributor. No remuneration is made. Material should be sent to: Editor, VINTAGE AIRPLANE, PO Box 3086, Oshkosh, WI 54903-3086. Phone 920-426-4800. EAA® and EAA SPORT AVIATION®, the EAA Logo®, VAA Vintage Airplane® and Aeronautica™ are registered trademarks, trademarks, and service marks of the Experimental Aircraft Association, Inc. The use of these trademarks and service marks without the permission of the Experimental Aircraft Association, Inc. is strictly prohibited.
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NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013
VAA
Directory OFFICERS
President Geoff Robison 1521 E. MacGregor Dr. New Haven, IN 46774 260-493-4724 chief7025@aol.com
Secretary Steve Nesse 2009 Highland Ave. Albert Lea, MN 56007 507-373-1674 stnes2009@live.com
Vice-President Dave Clark 635 Vestal Lane Plainfield, IN 46168 317-839-4500 davecpd@att.net
Treasurer Dan Knutson 106 Tena Marie Circle Lodi, WI 53555 608-592-7224 lodicub@charter.net
DIRECTORS
Ron Alexander 118 Huff Daland Circle Griffin, GA 30223-6827 ronalexander@mindspring.com
Dale A. Gustafson 7724 Shady Hills Dr. INpolis, IN 46278 317-293-4430 dalefaye@msn.com
Steve Bender 85 Brush Hill Road Sherborn, MA 01770 508-653-7557 aaflagship@gmail.com David Bennett 375 Killdeer Ct Lincoln, CA 95648 916-952-9449 antiquer@inreach.com Jerry Brown 4605 Hickory Wood Row Greenwood, IN 46143 317-422-9366 lbrown4906@aol.com Phil Coulson 28415 Springbrook Dr. Lawton, MI 49065 269-624-6490 rcoulson516@cs.com George Daubner N57W34837 Pondview Ln Oconomowoc, WI 53066 262-560-1949 gdaubner@eaa.org
Steve Krog 1002 Heather Ln. Hartford, WI 53027 262-305-2903 sskrog@gmail.com Robert D. “Bob” Lumley 1265 South 124th St. Brookfield, WI 53005 262-782-2633 rlumley1@wi.rr.com Joe Norris 264 Old OR Rd. Oshkosh, WI 54902 pilotjoe@ntd.net 920-688-2977 S.H. “Wes” Schmid 2359 Lefeber Avenue Wauwatosa, WI 53213 414-771-1545 shschmid@gmail.com Tim Popp 60568 Springhaven Ct. Lawton, MI 49065 269-624-5036 tlpopp@frontier.com
ADVISORS Lynne Dunn 145 Cloud Top Lane Mooresville, NC 28115 704-664-1951 lynnednn@aol.com
Susan Dusenbury 1374 Brook Cove Road Walnut Cove, NC 27052 336-591-3931 sr6sue@aol.com
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