And if you have clear skies in Ft. Worth or just west, you can probably spot the Google Balloon just after sunset.
Yeah....I looked a few minutes ago and there was STILL a line of T-6s headed north. I saw as many as 20 a few hours ago, down to about 6. The ramps at Chattanooga and Lexington are gonna be covered in T-6s.CharlieBrown17 said:
Saw an ADS-B post in the AMA plane spotters group and thought Canyon would like that, until I saw who had posted it
CanyonAg77 said:
Coulter Field crash was two parents and their daughter. Survivor was likely her boyfriend. I can't imagine the pain of the families.
In relationship to the runway, where did the PA24 crash?Tx Ag72 said:
I have lived across the road from Coulter since 1978. Have always been excited to see a couple of air shows and static displays when they were held. I can recall 3 incidents where live(s) were lost. One back in the 80's when and experimental went down with one on board, then the skydivers accident . The wreckage for that site was probably a couple of hundred yards further south than the accident that occurred yesterday. That being said, the traffic at Coulter is up. The hospitals keep some of the medical helos here and the larger twin turbos and the one or two jets that stay there are fun to watch. I saw Bush take his practice jump out here. Plus, no one is going to build across the street from me.
They're basically flying cell towers.Scud Runner said:
Google Balloon? Even the illusion of privacy is fading
Brazos Valley Flight Services at CLL has 2 or 3 172s for instruction.BwdAg said:
Anyone know a CFI in B/CS with a 172 who could help a student (20 hours) finish getting private pilot certificate? Student needs to finish quickly.
Thanks in advance.
Interesting. Were you wearing oxygen?Guppy said:
I've logged a lot of hours in a Comanche 250. Almost all my flight time in them came many years ago when I was flying as a weather modification pilot - cloud seeding. Flying 50 feet under t-storms hunting for updrafts so I could release a chemical into the thunder storms to try and help increase rainfall totals for ranchers out in west Texas.
Occasional the updrafts were so strong and severe you'd get sucked right up into the thunderstorm. You'd just drop the gear and let go of the controls and let the storm have her way with you. I would get tossed and rolled around along every axis in the most merciless manner. I'd get spit back out as high as 18,000+ ft and then asses the aircraft. That great aircraft, that absolutely phenomenal Comanche always held up great after the most violent rides and turbulence I've ever encountered bar none. Loved the job and even though I've moved on to much larger aircraft I often fondly remember those days and that plane.
Thanks for sharing that, what great memories in an outstanding airplane. I will remember what you wrote next time I get in some nail biting choppiness.Guppy said:
I've logged a lot of hours in a Comanche 250. Almost all my flight time in them came many years ago when I was flying as a weather modification pilot - cloud seeding. Flying 50 feet under t-storms hunting for updrafts so I could release a chemical into the thunder storms to try and help increase rainfall totals for ranchers out in west Texas.
Occasional the updrafts were so strong and severe you'd get sucked right up into the thunderstorm. You'd just drop the gear and let go of the controls and let the storm have her way with you. I would get tossed and rolled around along every axis in the most merciless manner. I'd get spit back out as high as 18,000+ ft and then asses the aircraft. That great aircraft, that absolutely phenomenal Comanche always held up great after the most violent rides and turbulence I've ever encountered bar none. Loved the job and even though I've moved on to much larger aircraft I often fondly remember those days and that plane.