teakettle31

A Site To Catalog My Aircraft Adventures

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Piper PA-23 Apache and Aztec

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Piper. Model: PA-32. Nickname: Apache, Aztec
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane ME Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane multi-engine land (and Sea!)
> Engine Description: twin piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/4/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 6
> Number of Times Flown: 6
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: PA23-250, PA-23S-160

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 148
> Date First Flown: 6/26/2004
> Location First Flown: Col James Jabara Airport, Wichita, KS (KAAO)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Bill Johnson

N13865, PA-23-250 Aztec (File photo)
(c) jetphotos.net

Recollections: My first flight in the Aztec (nicknamed “Aztruck”, for it’s impressive useful load and sturdiness) was with a friend, Bill Johnson.  We went out for a Familiarization flight, conducting stalls and Vmc demo, etc and I was impressed by the Aztec’s handling qualities and the quickness with which the airplane was comfortable in all phases of flight.  Bill was a patient (no, “fearless” is probably a better word) right seater as I flew his airplane doing several test pilot techniques.

N34DA, PA-23S-160 Apache (file photo)
(c) jetphotos.net

I later earned my Multi-engine Seaplane rating (courtesy of the FAA) in a twin “Apache” (same model as Aztec but smaller engines) in San Andreas, CA, with instructor Ray Arcnaeux as we flew in the gorgeous foothills of the Sierra Nevada.

N34DA
(c) Sierra Seaplanes

Filed Under: 126-150, Airplane ME Piston, Complete

Angel Aircraft Model 44

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Angel Aircraft Corportation. Model: AAC 44. Nickname: none?
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane ME Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Twin piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 6/25/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 1.4
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: none

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 137
> Date First Flown: 6/26/2003
> Location First Flown: Orange City, Iowa (KORC)–now closed?
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Carl Mortenson, CEO of Angel Aircraft

Recollections:
This was another amazing experience given to me by the FAA.  I went to Orange City, IA (in a Beech 58 that was unknowingly out of annual…but that’s another story!) to visit the Angel Aircraft Corporation.  Google this company for more, but what an amazing place and family.  The Model 44 received type certification and was intended by the Mortenson family to be a twin engine missionary aircraft.  Sales unfortunately didn’t materialize.  My mission during this visit was to validate their production flight test procedure as part of the AAC’s application for a Production Certificate.  I flew with the Model 44’s designer and company owner Carl Mortenson in serial number 1.  As nice a man as ever walked the earth, Carl had an engineering acumen that matched.  We prayed before we flew and then flew the Production profile on this unusual twin-pusher design that was capable of landing and taking off from extremely short and rough jungle strips, with room for a stretcher behind the two pilots.  The machine handled very well and passed all of it’s checks.  I left Iowa feeling lucky to have flown this unusual machine and to have met Carl and other members of his family.

Angel Model 44, Serial Number 1 (file photo)
(c) Wikipedia

Filed Under: 126-150, Airplane ME Piston, Complete

Beechcraft Model 18 Twin Beech

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Beechcraft. Model: 18. Nickname: Twin Beech
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane ME Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Twin piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 6/25/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 2
> Number of Times Flown: 2
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: BE-18, D-18, H-18, C-45

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 93
> Date First Flown: 6/27/1997
> Location First Flown: North Las Vegas Airport, NV (KVGT)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Qual Eval with USNTPS

Recollections: Ah, the twin Beech!  What a machine.  Unfortunately, my experience with her is not what I wish it was (but there’s still time!).  My first flight, which is poorly recorded in my US Navy logbook, took place while conducting a “Qual Eval” (Qualitative evaluation), during a US Naval Test Pilot School staff field trip in the summer of 1997. I flew with a pilot recorded only as “Walker” (you out there?  contact me to fill in details!) in the summer of 1997, in N1828D.  A search of this N number reveals the owner as “Walker James” of Henderson, NV (near Las Vegas and–most importantly–Nellis AFB).  I believe I conducted this Qual Eval during a field trip to Nellis (this was a common stop on field trips, to visit facilities that–at the time–were pretty well-kept secrets and which, as I write this, I’m not 100% sure what is classified or not, so I’ll just zip it).  

Twin Beech N8612M, Serial BA-650 (file photo)
(c) jetphotos.net

So, what of my first flight in the Beech 18?  Well, that’s even fuzzier, possibly due to what I’m sure was a good time in Las Vegas.  I remember much better my 2nd flight in a twin beech…when I went to buy one in 2004 while working as an FAA Test Pilot in Wichita, KS.  I decided that–to travel the midwest for work and fun–I needed a twin engine airplane.  After consideration of Beech Barons, et al, I decided that the machine for me was a Twin Beech.  A gorgeous one was for sale near Pittsburgh, PA and so my son Will and I traveled to Pittsburgh, rented a car and drove to the Beaver Falls, PA airport to fly with the owner, Bill Burdis.  The plane (Serial BA-650, a late-model H18 registered then as N8612M and later N87711) was wonderful and, while clearly a plane I’d need to get proficient in, well suited to my mission. Sure, it was a bit heavy on the controls (but there’s a beauty in that) but she was solid, nostalgic and I fell in love.   After flying with Bill for a 1.2, we made him an offer.  In the end, it was an offer he COULD and DID refuse, selling the plane instead to a well-known twin beech pilot, Steve Oxman.  It was probably for the best, as I ended up moving jobs to the Seattle FAA office within just a 6 month period and keeping a twin beech in Seattle probably would’ve proven a difficult task.  It would be another 15 years before I would once again attempt to become an owner of an aircraft, when Fred Quarnstrom and I purchased our Birddog.  

Twin Beech N1828D (file photo)
(c) jetphotos.net

Filed Under: 76-100, Airplane ME Piston, Complete

Northrop T-38 Talon

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Northrop. Model: T-38. Nickname: Talon
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Tactical Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Twin jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 10/30/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 600
> Number of Times Flown: 491
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: F-5

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 20
> Date First Flown: 2/24/1986
> Location First Flown: NAS Patuxent River, MD (KNHK)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: US Naval Test Pilot School, Ken Carlton

Recollections: The T-38 Talon.  WHAT AN AIRPLANE!  Fuel flow while taxiing almost same as going Mach 0.9 at altitude (what?!).  Doesn’t carry much fuel, though (the first time I took it on a cross country, when I got to cruise altitude and noticed I had used over a quarter of my fuel, I considered declaring min fuel…until I did the math and realized that the airplane’s cruise fuel flow was ridiculously low for how fast it was going).  This airplane is my favorite jet.  12,500 lb, supersonic, the designers were geniuses.  I credit this airplane with teaching me efficiency in flight test…you had to be prepared, think through your test points, combining fuel efficiency (using “energy paper, a pre-set piece of paper which combines potential and kinectic energy into one plot, to help you transition from one point to the next in the most efficient manner) with safety.  After detailed planning, I “chair flew” every flight in the airplane, so I wouldn’t waste a second…you just didn’t have fuel to waste.  I flew it every chance I got (53 times alone during my 11 month course as a TPS student) and then flew it another 400+ times as an instructor.  The airplane was perfect for TPS and is one of the reasons it’s been there for 50+ years.  Why is it perfect? Well, the efficiency thing, for one.  But is also has–at least for Navy pilots–very different flying qualities than a Navy jet.  It’s a “front side” airplane, meaning you’re on the front side of the drag polar (most of the time) and this requires different pilot technique. 

T-38 “Teakettle 15” at USNTPS
U.S. Navy photo by Photographer’s Mate 2nd Class Daniel J. McLain (RELEASED)

It’s also an airplane that brought tragedy to USNTPS when, in July of 2000, we lost Gareth Rietz and Ray O’Hare.  A day doesn’t go by that I don’t think about these two and those they left behind.

T-38 “Tester 08” Airborne
(c) US Navy

Filed Under: 1-25, Complete, Tactical Jet

Morane-Saulnier MS.760 Parisjet

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Moran-Saulnier. Model: MS.760. Nickname: Paris or Parisjet
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Business Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: twin jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 1
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: n/a

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 120
> Date First Flown: 4/3/2002
> Location First Flown: Mojave Airport, CA (KMHV)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: National Test Pilot School (NTPS), Greg Lewis

Recollections: The original “VLJ”, this unusual French airplane was designed in the 1950’s.  I came to fly it during the syllabus for “Flight Test initial training” upon beginning my job with the FAA flight test group.  The National Test Pilot School (NTPS) used the airplane for several exercises, noting that it was FAA certified.  With a gross weight of 7650 lb, it was ahead of its time….decades before the “Very Light Jet” craze produced the Cessna 510 Mustang, the Eclipse 500, or the Cirrus Vision SF50.

My logbook says the exercise I conducted at NTPS (flying with the always-awesome Greg Lewis) was a “FAR Part 25 flight”.  My memory is that the airplane was somehow certified under Part 25, even with its diminutive weight, probably to account for things like transport category single engine performance.  

MS.760 Paris (Stock Photo)
(c) www.machdiamonds.com

Filed Under: 101-125, Business Jet, Complete

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