Sat May 25, 2013 11:40 am
Not that gent's first rodeo, I'm told.
The Beaver is VERY intolerant of high AOA. Watch them descend for landing sometime.....nose appears waaaay down. Yard one out of the water and you'd best get the nose down, or it just won't fly. Get the nose down quick and it'll fly in ground effect till it's got enough speed to climb.
Troy is right also, in that he'd have been off the water in half the distance if he'd ever let the plane settle over onto the step.
One winter in Kodiak there was a construction outfit building a runway at Karluk, a village at the west-southwest end of the island. They needed a parts chaser, and they hired a guy to fly a Beaver on floats that they leased from Kenmore. He based it out of Lilly Lake instead of keeping it in salt water at the City Dock all winter. I'd hear him fire up in the morning, with the P&W 985 cranking up, then I'd hear those floats busting ice, as he warmed it up. He'd bust ice to clear a channel, then take off to Karluk. He landed on the Karluk River, which near the bay didn't freeze that winter. Then back to town, and he'd land on the near end of the ice to break it back, taxi to his dock, then go bust more ice. He did that all winter. Kodiak doesn't get REAL cold, but there was some significant ice that winter.
Next spring I was at Kenmore looking for float parts, and lo and behold parked in their yard was that very Beaver. It was out of the water (Kenmore stores all it's floatplanes on land, nothing stays in the water overnight) so I walked over to take a look at the float bottoms.....and they looked practically new. I was amazed, knowing what he'd done with those floats that winter.
Now, taxiing a floatplane in ice, especially fairly thin ice, in a crosswind, is a uniquely bad idea. Don't ask me how I found that out.
MTV