×

Message

Please login first

Backcountry Pilot • Nice Control of the Airplane

Nice Control of the Airplane

Links to general aviation backcountry flying-oriented videos. It can be yours or stuff you find on the internet. Please no airline/military.
7 postsPage 1 of 1

Nice Control of the Airplane

Terryd23 offline
User avatar
Posts: 68
Joined: Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:50 pm
Location: Poconos
Terry

1964 Cessna 172E

John Mohr puts on a great show - It's a shame all the people at the show I saw him at were more enthralled with the F-22 than the paces he puts that STOCK Stearman through.

Chris
sticknrudder offline
User avatar
Posts: 182
Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2007 7:39 am
Location: San Jose
Aircraft: 7GCBC
C182
J-3

Nice Control of the Airplane

I thought his routine was one of the best I have ever seen.Really a pleasure to watch.

Bill
willyb offline
Posts: 167
Joined: Sun Oct 01, 2006 4:29 pm
Location: Maynard,MA

John Mohr is THE MAN.

Here's a high-quality video of the routine that he flew at the gathering of Mustangs and Legends last year.

http://www.airshowbuzz.com/videos/view.php?v=24a4d8e5
Oregon180 offline
KB and Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 1259
Joined: Tue Jun 19, 2007 10:37 am
Location: Ashland
Aircraft: C180B

sticknrudder wrote:John Mohr puts on a great show - It's a shame all the people at the show I saw him at were more enthralled with the F-22 than the paces he puts that STOCK Stearman through.

Chris


I fly a stock 220 hp Stearman at least once a week during the summer and I can tell you that what he does with his Stearman is simply amazing. It is truly a shame that the non-pilot population does not get it, but it is even more impressive when a pilot has had the chance to try it in a stock 220 and finds out for themselves just how good he really is.

On the flip side to that same coin...if his engine ever so much as coughs on the upline of one of his maneuvers he is done for. That is not something even the best pilots can overcome and these old round engines have been known to cough or stop on occasion. There is not enough power to compensate with a stock 220 at his altitude and as was said, 75% of the airshow crowd would not be any less impressed if he did it 100 feet higher.
lowflybye offline
User avatar
Posts: 634
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 4:29 pm
Location: Madison, AL
"To most people, the sky is the limit. To a pilot, the sky is home."

Maybe he does it for the 25% that knows. I was at a military airshow years ago in Dax France. Most of the Nato and old soviet block countries were there with their helicopters, The German in his BO-105 was particularly spectacular with foward and backwards flips from a hover etc., But the Spainish guy flew an old UH-1, he never got 25 ft. off of the ground and at times his blades were so close to the ground they kicked up dust in the turns. For those that knew better, he far outshone the German. Most knew, Dax is the home of the French helicopter school.
a64pilot offline
Posts: 1398
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 6:40 am

That reminds me of a brown bear capture project once on Kodiak. We used a helicopter outfit out of Kenai, and the owner and his sons were absolutely superb capture pilots.

At one point, we had a bear try to double back and run under the helicopter. The pilot (one of the sons, and probably the best of the three) flew the helicopter (a Jet Ranger) backwards, putting the full rotor blast in the bear's face, while threading is tail rotor between clumps of brush, cottonwood trees, etc.

We got the bear.

When we were gathering up to go, I asked the pilot "Do you know how close your tail rotor was to that brush when you were backing up?"

His response: "I know EXACTLY how close my tail rotor was".

And I have no doubt he did. It's a lot of fun watching someone who is REALLY good with a helicopter work animal capture.

MTV
mtv offline
Knowledge Base Author
User avatar
Posts: 10514
Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 1:47 am
Location: Bozeman

DISPLAY OPTIONS

7 postsPage 1 of 1

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

Latest Features

Latest Knowledge Base