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Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 3:22 am
by Scudrunner
Picked up the Pitts from Ontario Monday morning, made Winnipeg via Elliott Lake, Marathon, Atikokan in 9.8 flight time.
Cocktails and debriefings in Winnipeg then made YBW via Carlyle, Maple Creek in 7.4 FT Tuesday.

I couldn't believe the one parachute on offer with a butt pad made my head hit the canopy I'm 5'9" so the other one it was to be.
I had never flown a Pitts before other than a ride in the front seat of one when I was 14, however I had one hell of an instructor teaching me on a Fleet Canuck back in the day. In the lead up to this I flew various other taildraggers to get my hands and feet back and that helped a ton. Shes a handful and I of my 9 landings I went around on at least 3. In Marathon the wind was gusting with a strong cross wind probably 10 knots if you did that calculations. And it was very cool to get a text from my Dad saying nice landing in Carlyle as he watch via webcam. :lol:



Spartan Cockpit, but heck of a ride. She ain't meant for cross country.
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Lakes Near Kenora
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I think this was Wheatland County Airport near Brandon (abandoned British Commonwealth Air Training facility.
Many of the hangars are still in good shape.
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Dodging cells
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WAWA Ontario
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Crossing Lake Huron North to Elliott Lake

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 3:43 am
by Scudrunner
Now heres a strange one, experts might be able to shed some light on.

On my last leg I diverted because my Oil pressure gauge which had been rattling around (probably because she hadn't flown since 2013) was normally around 60psi but would bobble down to 40 then back up suddenly started to go to 20 PSI. The Oil temperature then fell down to 120 where it had been normally at 160 to 190 most of the flight.

So I thought WTF oil pressure down the oil temp should have been going up......

Landed, because why not there was a runway 10 minutes away, as soon as I was on the ground all went back to normal. Checked the oil she was down so I topped her up and all was well again.

I figure shes got a happy spot for oil and the pick up for the pressure gauge is in the back of the engine and gets more with the tail on the ground. The oil temp probe must be reading at a spot when shes below a certain level its not getting temperature of the oil.

Christian inverted oil system on a O-320

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 9:49 am
by Colonel
Congratulations!

A Pitts is a hell of a lot of fun over the airport, but it must be one
of the worst cross-country aircraft I have ever flown. Some Pitts
pilots prefer to take the aircraft apart and truck it cross-country
and get pretty proficient at disassembly and re-assembly. Jim Leroy,
Clarence Speal come to mind. Carole Pilon does that with her
450 Stearman.

Great photos! I'm so glad you took them. Many years ago, I realized
that I liked looking at the world, framed by biplane wings.
of my 9 landings I went around on at least 3
That is superb decision making, and is why some people crash
taildraggers, and some don't. Pay attention, kids. Don't push
a bad approach into a bad landing. Know your skill limits - you
will increase them over time - but carefully fly within them, and
if I could teach pilots ONE THING about tailwheel landings, is
would be:

If you ask yourself, "Should I go around or not"? If you have any doubt
about your approach and landing, your left arm goes all the way forward.

Get full power on, get the alpha down, get some airspeed, get some energy
and get the hell out of there. Climb back up to downwind, calm down,
and learning from your mistakes, make a better approach. If your name
is Bob Hoover, you can push a bad approach into a good landing. But it
probably isn't. The only time you force a light aircraft onto the ground
is when it's on fire, or the prop has stopped.


re: funky oil pressure/temp indications ....

It's hard to tell sometime, what's real and what isn't. I would
start with the basics:

I strongly prefer straight-grade. I run it year-round. W100 is
good, W120 is better. 5 to 10% Camguard is essential. Try not
to run multi-grade. If it's that cold, get out the sled instead.

With the slobber pot of the Christen 801 inverted oil system,
I run the oil level full. Really. When it gets down far enough
that I can add one full quart - in my case 11 - I bump it up to
full - in my case 12 - but not one sixteenth of an inch over. It
does not like to be overfull. But it likes to be full. Yes, I pay
a little bit in horsepower for crankcase windage but with a wet
sump - a really strange design for acro - I like that the windage
keeps everything wet. Run it full, esp the four cylinders.

The next thing is to consider replacing your oil relief spring. I
find they last about 10 years, then the K factor starts to weaken
and the oil pressure drops. They are cheap and it's an easy job.
You can shim them with washers for 70-90 psi straight and level.
I think Kenny re-plumbed your inverted system to read the same
pressure inverted as upright, which is pretty cool. Most read 10
psi less inverted.

The next thing to look at is your vernatherm in the oil pressure
screen housing. If memory serves, it should actuate and close
around 170F to force oil through the oil cooler, to try to maintain
180F oil temp. You can actually pull the vernatherm and put it
in a pot of cool water and boil it, and watch it to see if it's working
correctly. They are horribly expensive, so only replace it if you
think it's busted. It's analogous to your thermostat in your car.

The next thing to look at is the upright/inverted check valve on
the firewall. Sometimes you need to reseat the balls and change
the springs. Similar to the oil relief valve in the crankcase.

Again, congratulations! A Pitts is a wonderfully weird aircraft
that is a joy to fly, but will continually test you, and make you a
much better pilot. The S1 is a very pure form. Note that your
aircraft is quite happy revving to 3300 RPM. It will not hurt the
engine, but your neighbours will not be happy. At least, that was
with the prop that I flew it, which would redline the RPM during
takeoff at the end of the runway, which was it's way of telling me
to pull to the vertical :^)

It sounds like you have taught yourself to land it. Fantastic. Do
lots of that. I got better after my first 10,000. You can take more
crosswind than you would believe possible, with that short fuselage,
tiny vertical fin and big rudder.

Please promise me that if it goes to shit during aerobatics, you will
do the following:

1) power off
2) let go of the stick
3) look at the gas cap, and full rudder opposite the yaw that you see

The above Beggs-Mueller sounds simple, but is very difficult for pilots
to actually do, in practice. That is how you recover from a spin in a
Pitts with minimum loss of altitude.

Pitts pilots generally come to grief:

a) during landing (you got that)
b) during an unrecovered spin (see above)
c) during low-altitude acro (top gate)

If you master those three, you will happily live and learn. In the meantime,
drain the oil and fill it with straight W100 and 10% Camguard. Replace the
battery with Earth-X Lithium whenever it is convenient. Put a Battery Tender Jr
on it at the end of the day - install a pigtail to the battery to make this easy.

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 2:09 pm
by Scudrunner
Funny you mention the battery tender, I got 9 starts out of a full charge.
When I put it on the tender here in Calgary it showed I had about 1/4 charge left.
So I probably could have at least two more starts out of her.


This planes only electrical system is a battery that powers the starter and an emergency fuel pump.
However there is a switch on the panel that sends battery power to a cigarette lighter outlet which helps run the Radio. (and emergency fuel pump).

Since starting was the most important thing on this plane for this mission I left it off and ran the handheld Icom off the battery pack.
She will need a transponder on her as she will be flown out of class C airspace but i'm leaving that system design to my dad the guru of avionics.

Basically Ill take her up and have fun with her, I can't believe how many planes sit it hangars and never fly.

This has to be the cheapest fun one could have flying. She had more annuals than she had hours in the last decade.
Then I show up and pound 15 hours on her in 36 hours. :D

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 2:20 pm
by Slick Goodlin
Congrats on getting her home!

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 2:29 pm
by Chuck Ellsworth
Excellent!!!!

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 2:55 pm
by Tailwind W10
Good on Ya Scud! Hope you have tons of fun with it.

Just for your consideration:
https://bandc.com/product/alternator-8- ... #regulator

I've got one of these as a backup alternator, at 3 pounds sitting on the accessory case it's perfect to run a transponder and com radio. If you replace the battery with lithium it probably would be a wash for weight.

Just sayin' ;^)

Gerry

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 4:52 pm
by Colonel
I think Peter put one of those on his factory S-1T, which believe it or not,
came with a battery, but no charging system (presumably to save weight?)

For local flights, I don't think you really need a charging system. Just get
the lithium battery. Hook the Battery Tender Jr up at the end of the day
before you go home, which you should always do with any kind of lead-acid
battery anyways to avoid sulphation. It will vastly extend the life and cranking
power of your lead-acid battery!
She had more annuals than she had hours in the last decade
I cannot emphasize enough, for private-owned aircraft: 10% Camguard and
a $30 Battery Tender Jr. They will save you tens of thousands of dollars and
your aircraft will always be ready to go, when you arrive at the airport.

Fly the snot out of that thing! I'll bet the compressions are PERFECT now!
The neighbors will LOVE 3,300 RPM on the downlines! Well, maybe not.

PS. See what I mean about the tailwheel lock? You pull that cable to turn
sharply, and around comes the tail! I cannot imagine flying without a locking
tailwheel, be it an S1, Beech 18 or Hornet Moth.

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 5:04 pm
by Colonel
PPS Fedex dropped this off last week:

Image

New Softie crossover seatpack 240 reserve chute, brand new from the factory in WA.

I'll give it to the kid for his Pitts, I'm worth more dead than alive these days :^)

Re: Officially a Pitts Pilot

Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2020 9:07 pm
by Chuck Ellsworth
I cannot imagine flying without a locking
tailwheel, be it an S1, Beech 18 or Hornet Moth.
Even the DC3 needs a tail wheel lock to help keep it tracking straight when the tail wheel is on the surface.....

...and the DC3 is arguably one of the easiest tail wheel airplanes to land, it is just a big J 3 Cub.