I wanted to mention a few things.  First, I apologize for not showing my
face at Oshkosh.  I arrived on Monday and left Sunday morning.  I offer no
excuse for not stopping over to say hello.  I did fly up in a Beech
Sundowner at a speedy 110 kts : )   The trip from Georgetown, TX to Fon du
Lac, WI and back gave me all sorts of confidence about making the trip in
the Ercoupe next year.  Once again I stayed at Marian College which offers
nice dorm rooms and breakfast each morning starting at 6 am.

Speaking of the Ercoupe, as I mentioned some time back I decided to have the
engine overhauled earlier than TBO as the maintenance records were less than
stellar when I purchased the airplane.  I sent the engine off to AeroMark in
Florida.  It took about 8 weeks from the time it was shipped until it was
returned.  I ended up having the 0-200 crank installed.  As some may recall,
when I did the first restoration on the airplane, about 2.5 years ago, I had
good engine compression, but could only achieve about a 300 fpm ROC.  I
switched to a new climb that increased it by 50 fpm on a cool day (cool in
this part of TX is about 80 degrees F).

Well, after a carburetor overhaul problem (jetted incorrectly), I got to go
test fly it today...  With an OAT of 105 degrees F today, I got a climb out
of a solid 700 fpm at 2400 rpm!  At 2000 AGL performance dropped to about
500 fpm, but still very nice from my perspective.  I did not fly above 3000
AGL today as I was looking for other sqawks.  By the way, my overhauled
(last year) air speed indicator displays 5 mph after starting (not rolling)
since installed. In addition, in the air, the indicator is about 20 mph
high.  This was the case before overhaul of the instrument.  Seems all is
right with pitot and static lines.  Wondering if anyone has ideas about
this.  I fly by attitude and use a GPS, but would like to make this work
right if possible.

This was an expensive way to get a better climb rate, but I am happy with
the results.

Thanks for all the suggestions and technical advice offered by the group...

John

PS - Part of my time at Oshkosh was spent with Joe Kittinger and his wife
Sherry, both with whom I relish time with.  I wrote an article about him in
the August issue of Sport Aviation.  At 80, he flew with the Aeroshell team
during a demonstration flight at Oshkosh.  He still has the right stuff...
by the way, there were errors in the article around Joe's combat experience
and his age.  That was a mixup between me and the editors at SA (who happen
to be top notch by the way).  All to be corrected next month.

Reply via email to