Speaking of hot days in Texas. Last year I bought a number of coupe 
books from the estate of a coupe owner. Seems he tried to take off on 
a road that was too short on a day that was too hot. This happened 
after many, many years of flying. Mike @C35


--- In [email protected], WILLIAM BIGGS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> 
> And check the wind IMMEDIATELY before takeoff.
>  
> We live on a 2600 ft grass strip. There is a county road crossing 
just past the south end and was an old barn about 50 yards directly 
in line on the south end.
>  
> A neighbor had an A36 Bonanza (later model, under 1000hr, $250,000 
airplane).
>  
> We are about 30 miles from Bush's compound in Crawford (HOT TEXAS 
SUMMERS) and when he is in town you must file a IFR flight plan to 
takeoff.
>  
> Neighbor filed flight plan, taxied to the north end of the runway 
to take off into the wind, temp close to 100 degrees, requested take 
off clearance. Was held for over 30 minutes. He had wife, baggage and 
full fuel, headed for vacation.
>  
> Finally got clearance, started takeoff roll, couldn't get altitude 
but kept pushing it. Crossed the road at about 2 ft altitude, just 
missing a pickup and  went right thru the barn. Lucikily no serious 
injuries to him or his wife, totaled the plane.
>  
> Wind had ben gusting at about 20 knots and HAD SHIFTED 180 DEGREES 
while he was on hold.
>  
> With the somewhat marginal takeoff performance of Ercoupes, this is 
something to keep in mind.
>  
> Loss of the barn was a plus for our Ercoupes.
>  
> Bill 
> 
> 
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Fri, 4 Apr 2008 
> 11:45:43 -
0500Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Re: Stalls
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> I wrote:
> > I once got engine silence at extreme climb angle like 
> > Frank did.  It was also with an extreme climb prop,… 
> > No sweat unless you're trying to clear trees after a 
> > too-short takeoff run.
>  
> John Cooper wrote:
> > At the risk of pointing out the obvious, the deck angle required 
> > to attain "engine silence" puts you so far behind the power 
> > curve that it's not the right technique for clearing the trees in 
> > the first place.
> > 
> > With any "luck" the prop will stop before you hit the trees… ;)
>  
> <Dark chuckles> because you are exactly, absolutely right!  Thank 
you, John.
>  
> To clear the trees on a too short takeoff, you'd better be a lot 
smarter than to be pulling up too much in an attempt.  "Attempts" are 
for dummies.
>  
> Doing it right and knowing you've got it right with extra margins 
is the only way to go.
>  
> There are generally options such as using best angle of climb (and 
knowing what it is from your testing program), lightening the plane, 
using the other runway or waiting till the cool temps of the next 
morning.
>  
> JMHO
>  
> Ed (the chicken hawk)
>  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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