Jump to content

FlyingVizsla

Members
  • Posts

    1,638
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    14

Everything posted by FlyingVizsla

  1. Try the Shop (Clear Prop) on this site. We bought gel seals for my David Clarks - I see Ian has them for $30. Profits go back to running this site. See this https://www.clearprop.com.au/headsets/headset-parts/ear-seals-silicone-gel/
  2. If you are referring to ELAAA Pty Ltd - Keith Page is a Director, and other Directors are on this forum who may be able to tell you about progress.
  3. Checklists do serve a purpose - I worked in construction - a couple of our lads self assessed (ticked & ignored) the Hot Works Permit. Angle grinding on a hot windy day without clearing the dry grass from where they were working or having water on hand. Up she went! Grass fire raging towards the car park and private land while they raced around trying to find something to fight it with. Wall of flame between them and car ... total write-off. If they had heeded the requirements it may not have happened. As it was he had to bear the loss of his vehicle and the wrath of his boss, and the local farmer lost a few hectares and a day mopping up. No checklist and he could have pleaded that No-One Told Me ... and the company might have been compensating a whole car park full of vehicles and an irate grazier.
  4. Mining includes all the little Mum & Dad mines (think opals, gemstones) and in some States Quarries too. The big coal mines have a fatality rate you can count on one hand. That graph shows the proportion of fatalities (not the proportion in reference to the size of the industry). Eg if there were 100 deaths in 2016 then 26 were Transport etc and 3 were Public Admin. In reference to the industry (a % of all people so employed) would show that agriculture tops the list as the most dangerous.
  5. There's an airpark, but the subdivision has no services - they are relying on buyers to provide their own off-grid solar etc. None sold as far as I know. The Maryborough Millitary Aviation Museum hopes to have a museum building up and running in 2020 and is presently restoring things and displaying in another hangar. The local prison has flights transferring prisoners & staff. No RPT, but there's a RAA flying school, Aero Club with C172 and some gliding enthusiasts getting that Club & School going again. Fuel on site or short walk to Servo. Large grounds with off-street parking, sharing with other useful facilities and organisations, with public amenities for 'festivals' like the Wings & Wheels a few months ago. Right the beside the town. I don't think it is under any threat because it is making itself too useful.
  6. Can you add "country" to the avatar please. So I know when responding if they are USA or Australia etc. Particularly useful if they are talking regulations or prices. The old system had a flag or location text. Sue
  7. Too much sugar is a problem, when it adds extra calories that are not needed. Particularly in our modern age when we are less active. Mr FV often says "what's wrong with young people these days ..." (among a litany of other things ..) "they don't eat enough FAT." I remind him that when he was their age, and eating lard sandwiches, that he milked the cow, chopped the wood, walked his sisters nearly 2 miles over swamp & hills to school where he carted water, chopped wood .... Compare that to the teens who wander from bed to kitchen to car & school room while attached to their screens. They don't need more fat, they need more exercise. He chose Splenda because it is made from cane sugar, with less calories. Our tastes have been moving towards sweeter food and manufacturers have been adding sugar as a cheap and appealing ingredient. Remember when Peanut Butter was all peanut? Now in a Choice taste test, the best ranked were also the highest in sugar & salt. When we look through his early Ultralight pictures - they were all weeds - you needed to be on the light side to get the Wheeler Scout off the ground. Now we are looking for increases in MTOW to accommodate our larger frames.
  8. Mr FV swapped his white sugar for fake sugar (Splenda & Hermesetas) and lost 4kg, cleaned up his fatty liver & high iron stores. He's now working on reducing the amount of "sugar" in coffee and on Weetbix and taking less on his plate. Keeping active is the key for both of us. He's a great advocate for drinking more water, and lots of it - he tells everyone.
  9. I like the CSIRO Total Wellbeing Diet because it is based on the Australian Dietary Guidelines. There's no additional food or meal replacements - no cost to participate. Research had shown that protein spread throughout the day and low GI foods kept people satisfied for longer. You can still have treats, but these are one a day (beer, chocolate etc) not in place of food. People lose weight on it and change eating habits. The other thing that convinced me was their estimate of the weight I could expect to lose over 12 weeks - 1.9kg - pretty reasonable given I am tiny and only just overweight. None of the overblown hype of the commercial (food additional ...) Lose 10kg a month!, drop 3 dress sizes by summer!, diets. And it is not a restrictive diet, it is a healthy balanced diet. It is the only one I have investigated fully. Have a dau-in-law who has been on just about every one; the weirder it is the keener. They all get tossed aside for the next lot of shakes, supplements or evil foods. Regardless of Diets, just reducing your plate size should go some way to reducing your MTOW.
  10. If you don't want to risk any money - try the CSIRO's Total Wellbeing Diet. CSIRO Total Wellbeing Diet $199 fully refundable at the end of 12 weeks if you are lighter than when you started. No shakes or supplements, just a healthy eating plan. I found the recipes a bit complex, but if you just stick to the Units (protein, veg, fruit etc) it is easier. Fully on-line, based on science from Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, refund offer only for Australians, but the program is available to everyone. We lowered our MTOW by 8kg & solved his liver problem.
  11. I've had my C152 since 1995. Just me & the dog for many years. Always thought they were designed for 6' Texans as I had to sit on cushions to fly - then 10 years ago I married a 6' bloke who complains he has to take his boots off to fit in. Very forgiving aircraft - has been a trainer nearly all its life. I would land and guys would race over the field and tell me they soloed in her or did their PPL exam in her. Not so much in the last decade - (maybe because of the 6' bloke? ) or maybe they have got too old to fly. It was the C152 demo model on the East Coast of Aust and did time in the larger flying schools. Yep - love the Cessna. Mind you we spend more time in the RANS S7 now.
  12. Welcome to the forum. There would be a few cobwebs, but planes have also inched up a notch too. Not to mention all the legislation ... What type of aircraft are you pedalling? What did you do 40 years ago - Cessna? Piper? That era you had to do a minimum of 15 hours a year to keep the PPL and I knew a few who for one reason or another, let that slide and ended up giving it away. Then that was removed and you only had to do a BFR to fly. There were a few in the 1990's who came back to it. It never leaves you! Sue
  13. Hi Lyle! Yes, I still have INC, but we fly the RANS S7 more often, cleaning up the GA Lightwing for sale (you can only have sooooo many planes), working on the Karasport, and cleaning up the other "projects" in the shedssss. 400 years of work ahead of us .. Scout, Turbulent, Sonerai (half built project his son bought), various engines ..... I would like to build a plane before I get too old to fly it.
  14. Love the C152! Been flying one since 1995. Please let us know how the Solo goes, and I am hoping the weather holds - nothing worse than expending all that nervous energy only to have it put off. Good luck Darren. Sue
  15. Hi Storm, don't need to be a pilot to enjoy flying! We enjoy the discussion on engines and new technologies. Sounds like you are already enjoying what's on offer. Sue
  16. Mr FV & I live simply and don't use products that kill everything. The next generation does and constantly have the "sniffles", feeling crook etc. Father & son worked at the same place for 18 years; dad retired with nearly all his sick leave unused (paid out at end of work, so no incentive to use or lose) and son had used all his and some. Not conclusive proof considering the different work ethic between the generations, but observation of how sick they are in a sterile environment. They don't fly - so maybe that's it! I did a Uni course on Soils - amazing how many billions of bacteria live in a teaspoon of soil, yet we are quite happy to eat food that grew in it, ate it or sat on it.
  17. We are long term AOPA members, and we have not seen that letter - did they consult us? From my limited view of AOPA, it seems Ben is at war with RAA. The membership numbers were a surprise as I understand they were hovering about 2,300, suddenly they have 3,600? If you are worried about RAA being run by a few - AOPA is all about Ben, not "the Board" or members. No doubt he has a lot of enthusiasm and a strong agenda. Unfortunately the website he ran, that RAA used for Classifieds, was a dead duck, with complaints of sold aircraft still listed years later, scams taking money still up long after users identified them, and no response from the Owner (see posts on RecFly). RAA cancelled the relationship. Why have a go at their ex-magazine editor? It sounds like sour grapes. I am somewhat disturbed by the recent Letters coming out of AOPA. Particularly the ones to RAA. Why are we still members? We understand the swings and round-abouts of AOPA, and while they are not representing our interests at this time, they are supporting the general pilot community in some way. I hope in the future they will drop the combative attitude and try to represent ALL pilots and aircraft owners.
  18. Why we no longer have Tail Draggers:- On another (non-aviation) forum, someone posted this to explain why : Piper Aircraft being successfully sued for product negligence for producing taildraggers. From memory the pilot and airport manager had problems, and the pilot taxied for takeoff but the airport manager stepped in front of the airplane to stop him, and was killed by the propeller - the pilot cannot see directly in front until sufficient power is applied and the tail comes up. Hence the pilot could not see the idiot in front of him until far too late. The case essentially killed light planes in the US for a decade. When protective laws were passed all the light airplanes were subsequently tricycle geared. Any other Urban Myths to debunk?
  19. I was quite happy to pay an Annual Fee at the airports I used, and a casual fee at those I didn't visit that much. Councils have difficulty with "donations" where there's no fee stipulated for RAA and it tends to be coded to something Miscellaneous and news of your honesty may not make it back to the airport management. As for giving false call signs - has happened to me - someone was flying in/out of Archerfield Mon/Fri using my call sign. I explained to Avdata that it wasn't me, no doubt they caught up with them. I hired my plane to a grazier with fuel card, and I started to get fuel bills, en-route & landing fees - fortunately the re-fueller put the aircraft rego on the bill and it turned out he "lent" my card to his charter operator son. A member of our club regularly did the same thing, but being local they tracked him down and banned him from landing there without prior notification. CCTV & recordings have changed the ability to cheat. As for the costs of running an airport - our little grass strip at Childers costs the Club about $700 in fuel, plus the value of a ride-on, paint and volunteer hours. The Council puts in about $5,000 a year and gets about $110 in lease fees, nil landing. Less than a third of the Club members pay rates there. In Springsure the Council sold the footy field to the Footy Club, the other sports pay rental, including the Show Society on the Showgrounds.
  20. Try Aeroclub.com.au Aviation Events, Aviation Directories, Aviation Community That site is kind-of on auto pilot; the website owner is near impossible to contact (we have been trying for years to get our defunct Flying Club removed) and it relies on people listing their own events. You can get emails, weekly, fortnightly, monthly; or just check. Some events were set up "ages ago" as a recurring event, and now don't happen, so you have to check with organisers. This site - Recreational Flying - also relies on people listing their events. I did volunteer to keep the Events up to date, but then we moved and couldn't get enough internet to get Google Maps up, with about 1kb/s most sites bombed or thought I was a mobile phone. So had to "retire". If you know something is on - please list it on RecFly. You don't have to be the owner of the Event. Sue
  21. Been following the race - started today. Outback Air Race 2018 | Supporting the Royal Flying Doctor Service Following progress on the Live Track Outback Air Race - Live Track Thanks to AvPlan EFB | Outback Air Race 2018 Big dinner in Bundaberg tonight. Go Team Skippy! Several RAA aircraft too. Love the team names .. VH-WWW flew past us - Triple Whisky "On the Rocks"
  22. We went - was surprised at the number of people there, given the people we talked to said they hadn't heard of it before we told them. A lot came for the car & bike show, and that was big. Many stalls, clothes, food, pipe band, fund raisers for Angel Flight, RFDS, the Aviation Museum open - all free. Mr FV complained that he couldn't get close to the planes, but with joy flights in & out, so many wandering with kids, dogs, food etc they had to rope it off. We got out when it got quieter. A great day running into old flying friends.
  23. The magazine (incl printing) is a separate contract. The $16k reduction in printing is the office - not printing reams of paper to tell you your Membership/Rego will lapse soon, in a month, in a few days, Thanks - here's your receipt & card. Postage should be down too, as we get most of that by email. As should wages as we don't employ someone to print, fold and envelope it. The building (the biggest asset) is subject to the Canberra real estate market and has had its ups & downs in value. Insurance for pilots & the organisation has only one direction - UP. 2012 annual report had 9411 members, I know they are over 10,000 now. They have muddied the waters a bit by not counting Non-Flying members (only Pilot Certificate holders) so when they quote membership numbers I am not sure which cohort they are referring to. I am also looking forward to the Annual Report.
  24. On this site under Airstrips In the AOPA Airfield Directory In the Country Airflields - you'll have to google that one - one directory per State? Things you have to consider - by publishing you have declared to Council, neighbours, public that you have an active strip. Make sure your insurance and approvals are in place. Best to state "Prior Permission Required" so you have some control.
  25. I would be interested in what they have to say. Women are very under represented in RAA. There has been a history of treating female Board members badly. So there's some easy pickings - get them up from 2% - encourage girls, women, wives, sisters, mothers to learn. The first step toward a career for girls, freedom and travel for women. Some really lovely planes out there. In the 1990s some blokes whinged to me about women learning to fly - I said to them "Do you want a girlfriend who is keen for you to keep flying, or one that tells you to sell the plane and stay home more?"
×
×
  • Create New...