teakettle31

A Site To Catalog My Aircraft Adventures

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Aviat Pitts Special S-2

November 3, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Aviat Model: S-2 Nickname: Pitts Special
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane SE Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane SE Land
> Engine Description: Single engine piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/5/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 1
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: S-1

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 34
> Date First Flown: 5/21/1987
> Location First Flown: NAS Patuxent River, MD (KNHK)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Jim Palmer, part of a USNTPS Qual Eval

Recollections:
We brought the Pitts in for a student qual eval exercise. Based on the date, I had JUST come back onto staff as a JO IP and I’m sure was excited to fly a new plane.  The flight was all acrobatics and spins, including an outside loop (I believe the first time I’d done one) and Jim taught me how to do a proper “airshow roll” (utilizing rudder and elevator to keep the fuselage in line as the airplane rolled).  

Pitts S-2 Stock Photo
(c) Airliners.net

Filed Under: 26-50, Airplane SE Piston, Complete

Edgley Optica Scout

November 3, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Edgley. Model: Optica. Nickname: Scout
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane SE Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Single Engine Land
> Engine Description: Single Piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/5/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 0.6
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: EA-7

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 50
> Date First Flown: 12/29/1988
> Location First Flown: Summitt, Delaware (KEVY)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Qual Eval with Duane Erickson

Recollections:
I ferried a T-28 from Martin State to Summitt, Delaware (gear down) at the behest of my TPS classmate, JB Hollyer.  When I got to Summitt, Duane Erickson let me fly the Optica. It was a very interesting, if slow, airplane.  

Optica Scout, Ex-registration G-TRAK, now N130DP, stock photo
(c) Airport-data.com
Optica G-TRAK; sotck photo
(c) airport-data.com and Anthony Noble

Filed Under: 26-50, Airplane SE Piston, Complete

Cessna O-1/L-19 Birddog

November 3, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Cessna Model: O-1/L-19. Nickname: Birddog
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane SE Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane SE Land
> Engine Description: Single O-470B 212 HP

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/3/2025. (and counting!)
> Number of Hours Flown: 530 hrs
> Number of Times Flown: 399 (and rapidly increasing)
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: OE-1, OE-2

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 108
> Date First Flown: 6/30/2000
> Location First Flown: Carson City, NV
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Hibbard

Recollections: My first flight in a Birddog–much to my surprise while reviewing my logbook many years later–was in 2000 as part of a Qual Eval during a staff field trip.  I simply didn’t remember the flight.  Logbook shows 3 landings and, I suppose, it’s a good sign that I don’t remember.  I guess my Beaver time as a TPS IP meant I could handle the Birddog, an airplane I later came to own and love.  I actually had NO information in my logbook about this flight but I was talking recently to a great friend, Dan “Shaka” Hinson (Ops O during my time at TPS, now a VP at Textron) about Textron hosting the Birddog’s 75th anniversary and he mentioned this same qual eval, and provided me with the location and pilot we flew with.  Small world!

O-1 Birddog N4848M (Serial 24575)–the first airplane I was the owner of. (c) Bob Stoney

Fast forward 20 years for my SECOND flight in a Birddog.  This one was with Mark Cardwell, a Fedex Captain who lives near Memphis, TN and gives of his time by taking people interested in the Birddog flying, to see if they like the airplane.  My great friend Fred Quarnstrom and I had decided to partner on an L-19/O-1 and we decided we should go fly one to make sure we liked it.  Mark bravely got in the back of his airplane and off we went.  Well, I just LOVED the airplane, it handled so nice (you might think a “Cessna’s a cessna” but something about having the Birddog’s stick in your right hand just makes it fly better) and so Fred and I decided to take the plunge and buy a Birddog.  For me, this would be the first plane I’d owned and I had some trepidation about getting in over my head….as I’d always had professionals ensuring the airworthiness of the aircraft I flew.  Not only did Mark take us flying, as it turned out he found us the right airplane to buy.  Mark asked us “have you found an airplane yet?” and, despite having been scouring every source of Birddogs for sale and even made trips to Texas and California to see specific airplanes on the market, we hadn’t found a plane yet so we said “not yet”.  Mark: “Well, you should go talk to Steve over there; Steve’s got a Birddog and he’ll sell anything he owns.”  So, we went and introduced ourselves to Steve Stires, also a Fedex Captain (seemed like everybody we met was a Fedex Captain!)  After some discussion, we bought Steve’s Birddog, a gorgeous 1958 French O-1E that had been completely restored.  Covid got in the way but, later that year I went and picked up N4848M from the Olive Branch, MS airport and flew her back to Seattle.  Since then she’s travelled to Oshkosh 4 times, Texas a 5th long trip and brought us so much joy.  For me, the concern I felt about airplane ownership has totally disappeared because the plane has been generally reliable and, when it falls short, I have learned a great deal about airplanes and how to fix problems that arise.  I enjoy taking “young eagles” and other friends flying in her, meeting those who flew and maintained the Birddog, and keeping the history alive.  And, along the way, the Birddog has become one of my “top 10” aircraft.

O-1 N4848M in Oshkosh Airshow (c) Bob Stoney
N4848M Landing (c) the late, great Bob Hafford

Filed Under: 101-125, Airplane SE Piston, Complete

Extra 300/330

November 3, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Extra Flugzeughbau. Model: EA300/330. Nickname: Extra
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane SE Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Single Engine Land
> Engine Description: Single Piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/5/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 3.2
> Number of Times Flown: 3
> Other Aircraft Models Associated:

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 189. (actually 110th–see note below)
> Date First Flown: 8/8/2022 (actually 4/9/2001; error)
> Location First Flown: NAS Patuxent River, MD
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: USNTPS Qual Eval

Recollections: [THIS POST IS IN ERROR IN THAT I SHOW IT AS MY 189th Type flown, but it actually came earlier and would be between my currect 109 and 110th flown; too hard to correct!].

The Extra 300/330 is an amazing airplane, FAA certified (aerobatic category).  If you want to do airshow acrobatics, this is one of the airplanes to consider.  It’s good for +/- 10g (way more than I can handle).

Qual Eval at USNTPS in 2001.  The Extra returned in 2002 after I left TPS as CO in 2001 and, unfortunately, there was a fatal mishap when a pair of Extra 300’s, doing an interval takeoff, collided when the first one aborted, and the second one–unaware of the abort–ran into the lead. 

Later, in 2022, I flew the Extra as part of an FAA course for Spin training.  The course, provided by Prevaillance Aero, was excellent and we performed multiple upright and inverted spins, with various abusive control inputs and recovery methods, all part of staying current in spins in the event a spin program for certification comes along.

Extra 330 N945PV, Prevaillance Aero (Stock photo);
(c) airport-data.com

Filed Under: 176+, Airplane SE Piston, Complete

Express Millennium

April 24, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Wheeler Technology. Model: Express. Nickname: Millennium
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Airplane SE Piston
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane SE land
> Engine Description: SE Piston

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 11/5/2024
> Number of Hours Flown: 1
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: EDI Express

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 106
> Date First Flown: 6/27/2000
> Location First Flown: Olympia Airport, Olympia, WA (KOLM)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: unknown

Express N511EA Qual Eval at Olympia, WA airport
(c) Bob Stoney

Recollections:
I flew this airplane as part of a USNTPS staff field trip.  Flew it the same day as the A-1D “Spad”.  I had no memory of this flight, just what is in my logbook but later I found a photo of me in the cockpit…the aircraft appears to be a homebuilt design and looks somewhat like a Columbia 400.  Anybody out there know anything more about it?

Express N511EA, Stock photo, (c) airport-data.com
Cockpit of N511EA from Qual Eval
(c) Bob Stoney

Filed Under: 101-125, Airplane SE Piston, Complete

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