pilots...show me your forums!

Started by Le Pirate, July 31, 2008, 08:09:02 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Le Pirate

I grew up flying with my grandfather (1964 beechcraft baron, if you're intrested), and I've decided I'd like to start working towards getting my license. I was thinking light sport, but I think I'll just go ahead and get the sport license, so I can move up later. I've been really interested in the thoughts of building a kit plane...I figure by the time I finish, I'll have my license  [laugh]. I'm not dead set on a kit...If I can find the right plane to buy, I might think of it. I'd really like something like a 2 seat pusher, but I'm not dead set.

I know, I know....People say not to buy the plane till your sure you want to fly. I'm sure. I've been up hundreds of times, so I'm not worried about though.

So...Pilots, show me your planes if you've got one (Everyone loves plane porn right?), and what forums do you guys frequent. I always like to check out forums for new things I'm getting into.

....................

bryant8

2008 848
Mods: Full Termignoni Race Exhaust/ECU Tuned by AMS, Ducati Performance Dry Clutch Slipper Clutch, Öhlins steering damper
Next: Öhlins TTX shock and Öhlins fork internals, track body work
26.2 done 12/5/2010
70.3 by 10/12/2011
140.6 by 12/31/2012

Timmy Tucker

I hang out at JetCareers under the same name. It's a cozy little forum w/ a feel similar to the DMF. A lot of the members know each other outside of the forums, just like here. It's definitely more aviation-career oriented, but there's a wealth of knowledge and lot's of good peeps there.

http://forums.jetcareers.com/
1999 M750 - "Piggy"
2007 S4RS

Goldeneye


Airborne



1969 piper cherokee 140b.

I just got back from Oshkosh yesterday  ;D

Had we bought the plane before we started learning to fly we would have actually SAVED money. My dad and I threw a lot of money away renting 172SP's

-sean
2007 Monster S2R, Vespa GTS 300, Vino 125

Tommy T.

Quote from: HobokenHooligan on August 01, 2008, 06:06:22 AM

1969 piper cherokee 140b.


Ah, the Cherokee.  Someplace between the Stearman he soloed and the Piper Comanche that was his last plane, my Dad owned a Cherokee Arrow.  My daughter (who soloed a glider at 14 and soloed power on her 16th birthday) flew the Cherokee a couple of times.

My earliest clear memory that is purely mine (not reinforced by family stories or old photos) is from age 16 or 17 months.  It is of climbing through the passage way above the bomb-bay on dad's B25 at Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1944.  At that time he was an Army Air Force instrument flight instructor. 

vampireduc

Of the good in you I can speak but not of evil.  For what is evil but good tortured by its own hunger and thirst.

'97 M750...sold
'99 900ss...project, waiting on parts to finish the rebuild (sold)
'99 750ss...parts for the 900ss (sold)
'97 M750...again!

DY


Hank

I don't fly them, I work on them

CRJ's


And the airplane with the biggest shit to size ration I ever worked on, the DeHavilland Dash 8



Aircraft are fascinating, If you've never worked on one.
'00 Monster 750 Dark
Current mods: K&N and removal of the intake silencers,  AFAM 14 tooth front sprocket.  Termignoni high mounts <---Best mod yet!, Evoluzione slave cylinder,
NEW: removed dinky plastic covers and emissions canister for moar n00dity!
"I like my women the way I like my roads; with plenty of curves!"

Le Pirate

I've been lurking a little on the purple pilot board a little.


Someone offered me up some flight instruction in trade for some consulting work, which is what re-spurred my interest in flying. I've looked around some, and I think in about a year (after the wife gets settled in her new job), I might pick up a Cessna C150. I've found quite a few for some reasonable prices (20-25k). I've talked to the owner of one who picked his up for learning purposes too, and has kept it.

here is one in texas:

http://www.aerotrader.com/find/listing/1966-CESSNA-150-84906135


of course it'll be gone a year from now, but it's what I'm looking at. It will, however, put my new bike on hold.
....................

Timmy Tucker

I got my PPL and MEL way back in '99 and quit flying when I was almost done w/ my instrument. I've been "working on" finishing up and getting my CPL/CFII's ever since. Kinda like Jamie Foxx's character in "Collateral", if you've seen that movie.

I've finally managed to pull some shit together, done some networking/called in old favors/pulled strings and it looks like it will actually be happening in the next 2-3months.

And fwiw, I did my entire PPL in a cherokee. 
1999 M750 - "Piggy"
2007 S4RS

Airborne

Quote from: Le Pirate on August 17, 2008, 06:59:23 PM
I might pick up a Cessna C150. I've found quite a few for some reasonable prices (20-25k). I've talked to the owner of one who picked his up for learning purposes too, and has kept it.

here is one in texas:

http://www.aerotrader.com/find/listing/1966-CESSNA-150-84906135


My father and I looked into the 150/152, I took one up for a few hours and to me it felt like an ultra light. We ended up with that cherokee I posted up earlier in the same price range you're talking about. It had 1700 smoh on but a full instrument package. Its really only a two place although it has two jumpseats in the back that can be used for a third adult with light fuel or two kids. It flys a lot more like a 172,  very stable in the air. Airspeed indicator reads in mph and 85 is the magic number, incredibly easy to fly. Try and see if you can rent some time in both types before you pull the trigger.
2007 Monster S2R, Vespa GTS 300, Vino 125

Le Pirate

Quote from: HobokenHooligan on August 18, 2008, 07:35:04 PM
My father and I looked into the 150/152, I took one up for a few hours and to me it felt like an ultra light. We ended up with that cherokee I posted up earlier in the same price range you're talking about. It had 1700 smoh on but a full instrument package. Its really only a two place although it has two jumpseats in the back that can be used for a third adult with light fuel or two kids. It flys a lot more like a 172,  very stable in the air. Airspeed indicator reads in mph and 85 is the magic number, incredibly easy to fly. Try and see if you can rent some time in both types before you pull the trigger.

thanks. That is something I'll look at. I plan to do a lot of looking over the next year for the right plane. I'm still looking at the possibility of a kit built, but I'm not sure if I have the time....and I also wouldn't use a kit built to learn in.
....................