Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Happy New Year!

Pilots!

I wish to thank everyone, students, renters, faculty, staff, friends and family -- for being a part of the Fly Corona! experience in 2008. We are looking forward to a fantastic 2009, and hope you will be a part of it.

Whether flying, driving, sailing, or just hanging around - please have a safe New Years. We will see you in 2009!

Blue Skies,

- Mike



The office will be closed tomorrow, New Years Day. After-hours procedures apply as always. See you next year!

Friday, December 26, 2008

The latest pilot in the world...

Pilots!

Please join me in congratulating our latest addition to the roost, U.S. Private Pilot Jayani B., who earned her wings in Cessna 1ES with DPE Tom Hamm.




Way to go, Jay!

Blue Skies,

- Mike

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Some more wings!

Pilots!

Please join me in congratulating the newest pilot in the world, U.S. Private Pilot Jason B., who earned his wings in Cessna 17J with DPE Ken Earl. Way to go, Jason!




Some other news:

Cessna 25R has a rebuilt nose strut

Cessna 68U is still having her tanks resealed

Cessna 04H will be pulled down for 100hr this week.

Cessna 630 will follow right behind for 100hr.

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CFI Roman is no longer with us. We wish him well on his future endeavours.

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We have had an issue lately with pilots who are taking night flights, racking up charges well beyond their active account, and then becoming strangely difficult to get a hold of. We have been in "nag" node over these flights, so please do not take it personally if we're seeming adamant and less forgiving than usual. We have a number of flights which remain unpaid, and this will ultimately hurt the school if this remains unchecked.



Fly Corona will be closed on Christmas day. After-hours procedures apply for booked flights, please contact the office with any special requests.

Have a safe and wonderful holiday!

Blue Skies,

- Mike

Friday, December 19, 2008

The newest pilot in the world!

Pilots,

Please join me in congratulating the newest pilot in the world, U.S. Private Pilot Chris H., who earned his wings with DPE Ken Earl in Cessna 1ES.

Way to go, Chris!



Blue Skies,

- Mike

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Shoulder stripes and skinny ties...

Pilots!

Please join me in congratulating the newest Commercial-rated Pilot in the U.S., Daniel F. who earned his money-wings in Cessna 25R with DPE Ken Earl.



Way to go, Daniel!

Blue Skies,

- Mike

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Welcome to Fly Seattle!

...the frozen-est flying ranch around! Brrr!

Pilots!

Bitterly cold rain pelted us all day today, and with icy clouds haunting the airport from above, not a lot of flying going on around the ranch. We stayed dry, and I hope you did too. More importantly, I hope the goofballs on the freeways did not plague you -- but one more reason I'd rather be flying. :)



Some maintenance updates. Despite being able to see our breath in the hangar, maintenance is cranking out some hits.

Cessna 630 has a new oil access door. We will be re-painting it as time allows.

Cessna 68U has turned up some more water in her fuel tanks -- this time we have arched a skeptical eyebrow at the situation. We are re-gasketing the fuel tanks tomorrow as a precaution, so expect some downtime.

Cessna 20U has completed her 100hr. We did some corrosion treatment on her landing gear. The Corrosion-X chemical is also what you saw "weeping" through the aircraft's seams on the wings and fuselage at the last 100hr. It's like popeye's spinach, but for aluminum. All of our planes are Corrosion-proofed annually, except for 85Y, 1ES, and 17J, which were corrosion-proofed at the factory.

(the factory corrosion-proofing is a zinc-chromate paint baked onto the aluminum. It is what makes the innards of those 3 planes a greenish-yellow.)

Cessna 04H goes in for 100hr this week. She is limited to solo flight ONLY at this time. We normally do not do this, but our planes crunched on us all at once, so we figure there is no reason to penalize the solo pilots.

Cessna 1ES is back from her lightning-bug imitations. 3 starters, 3 batteries, 12 feet of new wiring, and 6 high-amperage relays later, she's behaving well. Welcome back, 1ES!

Cessna 17J completed her 100hr. We are having the scratchy intercom issue looked at again tomorrow (the third time). There is an elusive loose wire or bad ground making everyone crazy.

Piper 85Y has a new battery.

Cessna 25R has been flying just great. Thanks, 25R!



There are many pent-up checkrides trying to get through when our skies turn blue again. Please be patient if we ask you to wiggle around on the schedule a little bit, especially in 1ES who made many pilots postpone their rides.

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Ice!

Many pilots know that the #1 mistake a VFR flier can make is the awful VFR-into-IMC maneuver. This particular little lapse in judgement accounts for nearly 25% of all aircraft accidents! But how bad can a cloud be?

Well today, the clouds were too much even for IFR-flown little planes -- the freezing level (ie the altitude at which the temperature is 0C outside) was down to 2,000 feet, simply unheard of in California! When an aircraft flies through clouds in sub-freezing weather, it is at risk of turning into a snow-cone, with disastrous results!

NASA has done extensive studies on airframe icing. Fascinating stuff, but dangerous! If you're going to pull the boneheaded VFR-into-IMC (and you're not, right?) -- it surely is double dumbbell points for doing it into an icy cloud and turning your plane into cocktail ice.

Check it out:

NASA's icing course



Ice is for dummies

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Fly Safe, Drive Safe, Be warm! Great night for fireplaces, fuzzy slippers, and cocoa... mmmm!

See ya,

- Mike

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Fare Will

Pilots,

Please join me in congratulating CFII/MEI Will Becker, as he sails off to fly your mail around for Ameriflight, in the Piper Chieftan. Will will be the critical link in the chain that makes sure your Pottery Barn catalog arrives on time! :)

We will all miss Will sorely. We are seeking someone to fill his shoes. Wish him luck on his new endeavours!




The planes are grumbling at us this week. Here is an update:

Cessna 630's charging system remains offline. We will throw wrenches at it today and see what shakes loose.

Cessna 68U is receiving a new door hinge.

Cessna 20U is running great. Thanks 20U!

Cessna 04H is having her nosewheel shimmy dampener worked on.

Cessna 1ES is being ferried back from Riverside, finally. We have sorted out the source of the lightning, and now all that remains to do is to verify correct operation. We appreciate everyone's patience.

Cessna 17J is going great. Thanks, Julie!

Cessna 25R is doing great too. Thanks, 25R!

Piper 85Y is running fine, however, certain flight school general managers (cough) took her to Chino airport at night for some touch-n-goes, and a bird struck the nosewheel on upwind climbout. We are replacing the nose-gear door hinges, which got tweaked. We expect her back up today.

(85Y was running fantastically, for the record -- this is pure Murphy at work :) )



Gorgeous winter Saturday today. Grab some sky!

Best,

- Mike

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Quick updates

Pilots!

What lovely fog we seem to be blanketed in lately. Perhaps we should stock cocoa and marshmallows in the office to accompany the ground sessions that everyone is getting forced into! :)

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Cessna 68U has had her fuel system torn apart, and lo and behold, we found 1 CUP of water distributed throughout, in the fuel tanks, gascolator, carburetor, and fuel lines.



This is not something that happens in one shot, but indicates 68U has been trapping water and it has been missed on a series of pre-flights. Bad juju! Engines do not run well on water.

During your preflight, if you pull water on a fuel sump sample -- sump it again! Rock the wings gently to move any water that might be trapped outboard of the fuel drain.

When it's dewy in the morning, this sort of stuff is bound to creep up on it -- and it has stopped engines at inopportune times! Be careful, and scrutinize that fuel sample!

Cessna 68U has been returned to service with a newly flushed out fuel system.

Cessna 630 is down for alternator troubles.

Cessna 1ES is still shooting lightning bolts. How rude.

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In light of 1ES's recent tantrums, we have decided to offer Cessna 17J at $109 to Block renters for the next 3 months. This will be effective immediately, and we will offer this through February on a trial basis.

Cheap glass! Thanks Santa!



Blue Skies,

- Mike