Backcountry Pilot • Finally Flew the 185 Home

Finally Flew the 185 Home

Have you modified your aircraft? STC? STOL Kit? Major rebuild from just a data plate?
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Finally Flew the 185 Home

I finally had a chance to bring my 185 home from a major restoration. Turned into a 10 day odyssey. First I had to pick up where I left off, gather all my bits & pieces up from all over the hangers. Then figure the final CB layout, I had to add a bunch more. Hang and re-rig the flight controls from paint. It was amazing just how badly it was rigged before, but consistent with most 180/185's we see: completely buggered up rigging. That alone gave a bunch of speed back, about 5 knots, by my calcs. Paperworks was fun, a 3 page logbook entry, 5 337's. The most fun was the FAA, they decided that now installing a Garmin GTX330 is a major modification requiring a field approval. Naturally they tell me that on a Friday.

So I get the 8" (no kidding 8 frigging inches of paperwork!) of paper scrapped together all the signatures in the right places, enough of the interior to fly the bird home installed and by tuesday morning, I had a weather window to do the test flight and get a shot from Georgia to Flagstaff in VFR between storms. So off I go. The autopilot is a dream, coupled with the GPSS steering, I just have to hang back and gel. Lots of entertaining glowing lights to watch, which keep my ADD brain amused for about 2 hours. The worm in the apple was, no matter when I fly I always have a headwind. Oh, but today was special, a 48 kt headwind, didn't matter much what altitude I chose. The Aspen makes it doubly depressing, always showing a small arrow with the speed. Just needed a small caption saying; "your screwed!"

So a bunch of fuel stops later I make it Clovis, its getting dark and my brain is addled. Luckily the airport car is available, as there really isn't much in the way of taxis there. The airport crew car is worth a book. a 1980 Honda, no muffler, 1.5 gears. no wipers and cuts out between 35 and 45 mph. 20 years of MacDonalds wrappers and other mysterious things rolling around on the floor (probably the gears that shot out of the transmission), A real chick magnet. It was free and actually made it to and from the hotel, so the price was right. It had me laughing the entire way. Excellent Mexican restaurant, had a Mexican beef stew burrito (new to me).

So the next morning the car gratefully started up, but the fuel gauge read empty. So I pull in and put so go juice in. Well, it probably had plenty, as it didn't go up any, couldn't see it in the dark. It is a beautiful clear, really cold morning. I get to the airport and the plane is coated in frost, not pretty, like kill you with no lift frost. No matter, it is sunny and judicious rotating the plane around will let the sun melt it off. The self service is broken and the fueler is late, really late.

I finally fuel up, take off and try not to violate Cannon AFB's many restricted areas. I get to 10,500 and it is smooth, clear and NO WIND for a change. So I one leg it to Flagstaff. I must say, one of the cooler items I put in the plane was the P&S Engineering PMA8000BT audio panel. It is a clever bluetooth enabled audio panel. It connects automatically to my iPhone and plays music and lets you make & receive illegal phone calls while you fly. It is really clear and folks can't even tell your in an airplane.

Its home now. I still need to powder coat and silk screen the panels, finish the fit of the interior panels, put a bit more soundproofing in. Then I get the complete orgasmic joy of replacing the completely destroyed headliner (putting in new skylights devastated it). It is snowing up a storm in Flag now, so it will be after the white stuff stops falling and I finish putting some ski tracks in the fresh snow. Meanwhile it is safe and snug in the former meat storage locker that is my hanger here.

If anybody needs a really complete set of VG's & the STC for a 185, I pulled mine off at paint. You just need to order the paint kit for the mask to put them back on. I don't like them, its just me, other people thick they are great. PM me with something to trade (even money, although I could use the 3rd row seat, well not really use it, ET went home and he had the correct sized legs to fit. I just want it to collect).

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dogpilot offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Congrats! Looks awesome!
Bigrenna offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Nice to see the Stewart gauges out! Nice! Very nice!
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Gorgeous bird!
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Purty bird!!! Good (descriptive) storytelling too!
Crzyivan13 offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

48kt headwind? Let me guess, was it Monday? I flew out to Van Horn on Sunday to begin an Aoudad hunt. Thought about landing on the ranch road by the lodge, glad I didn't come Monday. There we had 40 to 60mph wind, blew up a heck of a sandstorm. Glad I decided to hangar the bird, saved the paint from a beating.
Barnstormer offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Absolutely beautiful plane, I love that panel.

Marty
180jocky offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

I actually flew back thursday/friday last week.

I had to use a fairly sophisticated program to design the panel: Scissor CAD, eventually decided to put the engine monitor on top for faster scan pattern. A bud had the CNC to do the panel cut outs.
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dogpilot offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

What is involved to powder coat the panel? Does every item get unwired and removed?
BTW if the VG's are from Micro, Annie is not inclined to let the STC go to another N number. At least when I tried to give mine to Whee for his Luscombe.
The headwind is a bummer coming west. Brought a 210 from Lakeland to Prescott one day. I was pretty tired falling into bed.
Great looking tail dragger! Maybe some photos at end of runway KSEZ are in order at sunset.
Thanks for the post.
flightlogic offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

To do the panel I just unscrew the gauges and let out the switches. Everything is plugged or has a quick disconnect. The right panel is simply a blank off plate. The part around the MVP-50 removes with 4 screws. It isn't a cake walk, but takes about an hour to get them all off.

Photos at Sedona, no need to fly it there, the locals can visualize it and make it appear

There is a debate on STC transfers, kind of depends on your local FISDO. Has to do with sales of parts approved under Part 61, items deemed serviceable by a mechanic. They will sit on the shelf, somebody may has a need, perhaps an experimental. I would have liked to keep the ones on the tail feathers, but the wing installation, my opinion, is useless drag.
dogpilot offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

How many skylights did you put in? Dig the patroller doors, are they original to the plane?
Barnstormer offline
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Re: Finally Flew the 185 Home

Phil,
It has the original doors and the original two skylights, I put the bubble windows in. Just replaced the plexiglass all around. Getting the old out and the new in means new headliner. At the moment the interior looks like vandals and visigoths sacked it. I've been working on small items inside and fitting the plastic bits. I scored some actually nice plastic, better than what I had for the patrol door inside trim. Nobody makes it anymore. I've had to strip out all the old wind lace and need to repaint the sills and the headliner grabby fixtures around the edges. Once I get through with all the dremel action on the panels and they fit reasonably well, I'll put the new headliner in.

Unfortunately I have to diddle with the Caravan in New Mexico next week, so I will need to leave things like they are for a bit and fly back & forth. FInally put the re-built gearbox back in the Caravan, along with some new Pratt blades. Test flew it and it worked really well. So now I have to finish up some details on it and send it north to Alaska, Kodiak to be exact for the season.

It will be done for the spring flying season…
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