GumpAir wrote:There have been a couple I could get misty-eyed over if I let myself.
A ratted out '56 C180 and a C207 with 30,000 hrs on the airframe. Sit in 'em for enough thousand hours and always getting you home, you get attached.
Go figure...
Gump
I really think u can bond with certain air craft. My first A/C was a PA12 108 worn out to barley( maybe legal) legal. Always thought that 30 kt wind would turn the prop in the tie down.

Brakes were nearly non existed, had to be really careful when
taxing made lots of 360's only one brake worked

really looked forward to winter so could go to skies...no brake problems

...But in the winter the airspeed froze and would not work till spring so kind of a trade off

the only plane I ever owned that would run out of oil before gas

Ever try to thaw a qt of oil at -20 degs

Had lots of good times with that old plane.
Had an old C207 in Btt for a winter it was the oldest the company had

Had a real feeling with that old plane, used to talk to it...really... (didn't have a dog like Gump to talk to)...We survived the -60 deg wx and flew tons of hrs talking to each other. She would tell me to look out the window.... at the strut.....is that oil suppose to be there NO !!! Land now at Crevice creek beg some oil off Bill Fickius back to BTT. Went like that all winter. Take off AM before daylight. Set flaps for take off night before (Flap motor would not work at -50) Don't even think about cyc the prop ( before eng covers covered the prop dome) Oil pressure line In 207 went thru the forward baggage comp. No indication for an hour or so after take off. Flaps would come up on there own when u got up to warm air
You were a team with the sled....U took care of each other....Dam can't even remember the A/C # and spent way more time with it then my first wife
