The trip to Oshkosh was big enough that I split the story and photos among 6 blog entries. Here are links to the individual entries.
I'd originally planned to arrive and depart Oshkosh VFR. I managed it coming in. However, Wednesday morning, the field was open for VFR traffic, but it sure looked to me like the visibility didn't support safe or at least certainly legal VFR. So since I'd discovered on the way up that IFR reservations weren't a months-in-advance type of deal, I grabbed my laptop and requested a reservation for IFR outbound first thing Thursday morning...and got one!
By the time I made this decision, I didn't have a chance to get to a
printer to print out an IFR windshield sign. I didn't have markers to
make one. I didn't have transparent tape (or a scissors, really) to
cut up the VFR sign and make it into an IFR. So I cut and folded
creatively to make the sign into an IFR one:
As it turned out, I left so early that the marshallers weren't in
position, so I didn't need it.
I filed this recommended route from the NOTAM:
I took off on 27, got turned south, then turned east to join my filed
route at SHLTZ intersection.
It looks like I'm following the lower GPS here. I guess I must have
put the filed route into both GPSs, and then when I was cleared direct
to SHLTZ I then put that directive into the lower GPS.
I found this pair of indications amusing. Notice the box that the
airplane is inside in the upper photo:
That's a restricted zone, probably military use.
Since ATC can vector
you around traffic or around the whole area if need be, it's Ok to fly
through them flying IFR.
About halfway across Lake Michigan, they just cleared me directly to
my destination, Lansing Michigan, so you see here I'm leaving the
filed route and going direct-to.
It was a lovely day to fly, but enough clouds that it was firmly IFR
weather when I got to Lansing, so I flew the ILS approach.
Here's the route I ended up flying, from flightaware.com.
I had a meeting in Lansing, then I went back to the airplane, which
wouldn't start. My first order of business was to set out the tent
and sleeping bag since they were wet when I loaded up the plane at
5:30am.
I arranged for a mechanic to look at the plane the next day, so I
needed a car to head to a hotel. I asked the FBO to get me the
smallest car that Enterprise had; I got a mid-size Jeep sort of thing.
It had the same retro display types as the Chrysler we'd driven April.
I'm not going to go into the long annoying story of my stay in
Michigan. Suffice to say that the plane sat on the ground in Lansing
for far too long while I ran around trying to get a part fixed that
wasn't broken.
Since I had to do a bunch of driving, I got another car, and I
specifically asked for a sedan. I got a Hyundai Accent, which I
really like, and it got tremendous gas milage. Something over 41 mpg,
verified at the pump.
Back in the air, heading south to home. Have a little weather to
dodge around.
As it turns out, my course stayed just to the east of it.
The finger of rain in the last photo is the fuzzy middle bit of this
photo, looking over the right wing.
Finally, passing Cincinatti on my way home.
This year, I took comparatively few photos. I was only at the show for three days. Monday I was concentrating on going to the Aeromart, picking up stuff, then getting it back to my camp site. By that point, I really didn't want to go out again. Tuesday I spent the day with my Uncle Bob, from whom I caught the flying bug. We walked around and went to some cool stuff, but I didn't take many photos. Wednesday I had other things to do, so I didn't take a lot of time walking around. Then Thursday I left. Being at Oshkosh is an excersize in becoming used to B-17 bombers flying overhead; so I didn't take pictures of stuff like that.
You know you're at Oshkosh when traffic has to yield to, say, a
Sopwith Camel taxi-ing. I didn't catch people having to stop for it,
but here it is continuing to taxi to parking:
Various groups have displays of mock-ups of war-style tent-cities.
They have authentic vehicles to go with them. Here's a really nice
early Willy's Jeep.
And the obligatory instrument panel shot.
The Jeep has a manual transmission. The tall gearshift connects to
the main gearbox. It's a dog-leg configuration, meaning that first
gear is DOWN from neutral:
R 2 | | +--+ | | 1 3The other two smaller levers control the transfer case. One shifts from 2-wheel-drive to 4-wheel drive, the other selects low range or high range.
Again, traffic yielding to a taxiing airplane.
While walking around with my Uncle, I ran into Bruce King of bkfliers.org and his second prototype.
He has designed and built a single-seat experimental amateur-built
airplane that he's built two of and is now selling plans for. He
first flew his second prototype this spring, and I've been followin
his his work via the web. I got a chance to talk to him and look over
the engine compartment of his airplane.
Bruce put a flywheel-end drive VW engine in it:
I always enjoy seeing interesting things that people use for cowl plugs.
One thing that was really cool was that for the first time in several years, Mooney itself had a presence at the show. Unfortunately, I only stopped by very very briefly on Monday because I was carrying my loot, and I didn't get there before they closed on Wednesday.
Three WW 1 era planes (replicas, I assume). I think the one in the
center is full sized and had an actual radial engine; the other two
had flat-4 VW engines.
This entry is pictures of my camp site at Oshkosh and the charging implements that I brought along.
Here's where I camped, at the west end of the North 40. The position
is being indicated by he Stratus GPS.
The inital unloading:
As a historical note, the weather at the time I landed was ASS cold.
Something like 43 degrees F and windy. And I didn't have anything
with long sleeves, because Oshkosh tends to be hot or humid in the
summer. While I was unloading and pitching the tend, I wore my
headset. I looked like a big-ol dork but at least my ears were warm.
I tied the plane down to "The Claw" anchors.
The knot securin the rope to the anchor is a double-bowline.
The top of the rope is tied to the plane's tie-down loops with two
double locking half-hitches.
I pitched the tend behind the right wing facing the fuselage
as close to the wing as I could make it.
That way, I could step out of the tend and be at the luggage door in
about two steps, which was nice.
My walkway in and out was between the horizontal stabilizer and the
tent, which isn't ideal, but it worked, and kept the whole camp site
fairly compact.
I realized I was going to be mostly away from plug-in electricity, with my phone and laptop and camera. In the past, I've brought a big battery pack to charge things from. Those dont' last very long, though. So this year I stopped by Harbor Freight and bought a brief-case size fold-out solar panel, with fittings so that I can connect it to car chargers to charge my gear.
Here's the briefcase solar panel sitting on the tail catching the
morning sun:
On the wing getting the mid-day sun
And then on the windshield to catch the late afternoon sun
The solar panel has a cable attached to it, that comes in the lower
right to the plug at the bottom center:
The it plugs into a car-charger-type socket (top center). Then
there's a car charger at the top center (with the blue light), into
which is plugged a usb cable which then charges a device.
Here's another charger charging the Stratus unit:
There are charging stations around; there's a big one at the North 40
shower house. Here's someone who has a battery back like I had who
had plugged them there:
EAA had other places around the grounds for this function too:
Honda combined this concept with advertising both for themselves and
their generators by putting stations like this around the grounds:
This is a running generator with a couple of power strips on a little
platform. It also had several chargers and cables already. I
plugged in and charged my phone at one of these a couple of time.
This station was right by the food court, and it was well-used.
Ok, finally time to depart to Oshkosh. Early Sunday morning. Here's
the end of the route:
North through Illinois, then curve west to fly to the city of Ripon to
start the VFR arrival procedure. By the way, it was GREAT to have the
NOTAM stored in the documents folder in Foreflight.
Once under way, I realized I was going to tangle with a bit of
weather.
The colored blocks are AIRMETs, which are areas of meteorological
warnings. The grey one is IFR.
I also realized my course was going to cross throguh some rain, so I
diverted a bit farther west.
Having diverted around the precip, I was noticing that the ceilings
(green and blue boxes) ahead of me were getting pretty low, so I
stopped and took a look at things at Rockford, Illinois.
I waited an hour and a half, at which point the weather seemed to be
getting better rather than worse, so I headed out again. Things were
mostly better, so I continued on into Oshkosh.
I don't have any photos of the last part of the flight; I was a single pilot, doing it for the first time, and so I was kinda busy. I hope someday I can have a movie camera in the plane taking footage when I go.
I got to fly myself to Oshkosh this year, in a plane of my own. w00t! The narrative of the journey, with all the gory details of the flying, is in this entry in August. This entry and the three after it have all the photos (which three weeks after I wrote the narrative entry, I've finally edited).
I had a few things to do to the airplane before going to Oshkosh. One
was making sure the lights were all up to snuff. One of the two
lights in the rotating beacon was out, so I ordered and replaced the
other one.
I also replaced the standard incandescent landing light with an LED
one. It was a bit more expensive, but it draws MUCH less current.
The specified approach to Oshkosh asks all airplanes to have all their
lights, including landing light, on throughout the entire approach. I
wanted to go easier on my electrical system. The old light is on the
right and the new one is on the left.
Here's the LED light, installed and wired. The old light is a
standard filament light, and so it doen't care which way electricity
flows across it. The LED DOES, and as it turns out, it needed it
flowing the opposite way as the old lights had. Fortunately there was
just enough extra slack in the wires to attach them in the right
direction without stretching.
In addition to printing out (and studying) the procedures in the
NOTAM, I printed out windshield signs to hold up so that the
marshallers on the ground will direct my airplane to the right spot.
The bottom one is for arrival, I want to park in "General Aviation
Camping" (which is the area known as the "North Forty" at Oshkosh.
The top sign is for departure, indicating that I'm intending to depart
using "Visual Flight Rules". You'll hear more about that in the
fourth entry on this trip.
And finally...I'm off! The Stratus sitting in its door handle
providing backup GPS guidance and weather updates
It was definitely summer Thunderstorm season. This trip was fairly
calm, but there were storms to the south behind me that I managed to
avoid (this is looking over my left shoulder.
It was nice weather, so I flew the route VFR, but I still had the GPSs
tuned in.
All of a sudden the Apollo started warning me a Restricted Zone.
There's a tiny tiny one in Indiana that I happened to fly near (I was
well above it but I didn't know that).
The restricted zone is the blue thing in the middle, labelled
"R-3405". It's apparently a tethered balloon.
I scheduled things so that I was at work a few days before I
actually left for Oshkosh, to combine trips. Here's my office, with
my iPad and the Stratus recharging.
I flew up to Oshkosh early Sunday morning, but I rented a car for just
one day starting late morning Saturday so that I could run around town
and get last-minute supplies and stuff. It also allowed me to bring
my luggage and supplies back out to the airplane the night before
departure, so that when I actually left, I only had one bag to walk
out to the plane with. The car I rented was a Nissan Sentra. I don't
have any photos of the outside, but here's the instrument panel:
And oddly enough, unliky the vast majority of cars nowadays, it has an
actual dedicated "accessory" position on the key cylinder.
In entry 2, I'll actually fly to Oshkosh itself (eventually).