Con grats. You will be the envy of many in this form. Glad you are safe and 
enjoing 
Coupe flying.

Socialism will eventually run out of other peoples money.

--- On Tue, 8/11/09, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [ercoupe-tech] Across the Divide -- 1600 miles in four days in an 
Ercoupe
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, August 11, 2009, 8:50 AM


Folks,

We did it!  I bought Mike Sigman's beautiful 415D, N3041H, in Arlington, WA on 
Friday, and had a checkout ride that afternoon.  My best friend and former AF 
navigator, Tim Herfel, and I left KAWO Friday afternoon and headed for 
Pasco/Tri-Cities.  After getting nervous about fuel we made a quick stop at The 
Dalles and arrived at Pasco around 2200.  We planned on leaving Pasco and 
getting to Billings on Saturday, but bad weather in the mountains and at all 
the en-route airports delayed our departure until 1500, so we flew to Bozeman, 
MT and landed there around 2100 on Saturday.  Initially we were concerned about 
whether or not we would be able to get the altitude we needed to get across the 
mountains on the west side of the Continental Divide, but we eventually made it 
to 11,000 and were encouraged that we would be able to get on top of the 
mountain passes and weather.  We left Bozeman around 1000 on Sunday, and flew 
KBZN-KSHR-KTOR-KTQK and actually
 arrived at Scott City, KS before sunset on Sunday evening.  We were delayed 
out of Scott City on Monday due to low ceilings on the back side of some heavy 
weather around Goodland, but finally left around 0930 for the flight home.  We 
refuelled at Clinton, OK, and started our final leg to 3041H's new home in 
Weatherford, TX.  Due to our late start we had to fly through the brunt of the 
afternoon turbulence and had a 30 KT headwind all the way home.  We had to 
"thread the needle" through military training airspace and were grateful for 
flight following and traffic advisories from Fort Worth Center and Sheppard 
Approach.  We finally landed ar KWEA around 1510.  The airplane did great, and 
Tim and I got around ten years of GA flying experience in four days!  The only 
concern was a small oil seep from around one of the pushrod boots that streamed 
a streak of oil down the left side of the fuselage.  We used 2 1/2 quarts 
during the whole flight.  I'm
 still trying to absorb what we accomplished.  Thanks to Mike Sigman and Chris 
Byrd for all their help and morale support by phone along the way!

I'll fill in more details and submit an article to Coupe Capers when I catch my 
breath.

Best,
Dave English
N3041H



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