I am happy to report that my father and I have purchased this machine.
Congratulations! You will have a LOT of fun with it!!
One piece of advice:
don't run it out of gas. Keep the legs short, lean
the mixture for max airspeed and ALWAYS top off the fuel tank before
every flight. If you are unhappy on final, left arm goes forward and go
around, and full tanks gives you the option to be choosy about your approaches.
Handheld works fine with external antenna. Rig a power connector to it,
and the same with the GPS. Keep an eye on your ground speed! Many times
I have had to divert because of increasing headwind resulting in insufficient
fuel reserve at my destination. This made the guys on my wing REALLY happy,
but that's why I was lead.
Enough time has gone by that I think I can mention I had a portable mode C
kit for ferrying Pitts. This goes under your left arm. A mirror is required to
see the numbers, is all.
I had an aluminum plate for the ground plane of the transponder antenna
that I mounted in the belly over the lexan. ATC seemed to think it worked
ok. The frequency is so high, the wavelength is very short, so you don't need
much ground plane area. See FAA AC 43-13.
PS. The zip ties were TSO'd by Frieburger and Finnegan.
For some odd reason, I am reminded of the time I was IFR at 11,000 over
Cuba in a Pitts. Funny how memory works.
On a different trip, I remember Miami Center gave us all three squawk
codes, which is retarded. Lead squawks, wings are standby. Problem is
my Dad's transponder was U/S, so I reached down every 30 seconds and
switched my code between his and mine, which would have been a garbled
mess with three aircraft squawking in such close proximity anyways. The
really weird thing, is that he knew afterwards that I was doing it, without
any discussion of that beforehand!
I'm so proud of you. Now, every time you take off, four Transport Inspectors
are going to run into a room to decide what to do about it!
The good news is that you are now a member in good standing of the