Archive for April, 2010

Piper Warrior

Piper Warrior


Wwe: The Music 9


Wwe: The Music 9


$14.99


Deluxe edition includes limited edition bonus disc featuring the entrance themes of legends of WWE!
Special guests on Vol. 9 include Rev Theory frontman Rich Luzzi, who sings on the title track, “Voices,” the theme song for Raw Superstar Randy Orton; jazz composer Karl “Dice Raw” Jenkins (The Roots), who contributed Kung Fu Naki’s entrance theme, “Kung Fu San”; and Panjabi MC who is on The Great …

100% Rap Classics Vol. 2 (Cd Compilation, 16 Tracks)


100% Rap Classics Vol. 2 (Cd Compilation, 16 Tracks)



a tribe called quest – can i kick it /
jungle brothers – because i got it like that /
run dmc – peter piper /
del tha funkee homosapien – mistadobalina /
de la soul – eye know /
sir mix a lot baby got back /
dream warriors – my definition of a boombastic jazz style /
salt n pepa – shoop /
the goats – typical american etc….


WWF Collector's Edition: Best of WWF Steel Cage Matches


WWF Collector’s Edition: Best of WWF Steel Cage Matches



“In the ultimate test of skill and endurance, WWF superstars go head-to-head with escape from the 15 foot steel cage the only way to victory. See the Immortal Hulk Hogan scale Andre the Giant like a ladder. Watch Macho Man Randy Savage’s Championship bout with the Ultimate Warrior turn into a nine man free-for-all. Thrill to the spills of ‘Hot Rod’ Rowdy Roddy Piper and Ravishing Rick Rude. And ho…


WWF Wrestlemania XII [VHS]


WWF Wrestlemania XII [VHS]




Wrestlemania VI [VHS]


Wrestlemania VI [VHS]




Nymphoid Barbarian in Dinosaur Hell


Nymphoid Barbarian in Dinosaur Hell


$9.95



DROPKICK MURPHYS - Skeleton Piper - Forest Green T-shirt


DROPKICK MURPHYS – Skeleton Piper – Forest Green T-shirt



Brand New, never worn 100% cotton front and back print Authentic Forest Green DROPKICK MURPHYS T-shirt….


Trollblood: Kriel Warrior Standard Bearer & Piper


Trollblood: Kriel Warrior Standard Bearer & Piper


$13.29


Old traditions from the great trollkin uprisings, warriors carrying recognizable standards and pipers keeping time and spirits high have returned to lead the kriels to war. The standard’s burning brazier moves warriors to fight beyond endurance, and the skirl of bagpipes both inspires the trollkin and conveys orders to them over the ceaseless din of battle. The Kriel Warrior Standard Bearer & Pipe…

WWF Hasbro Doink the Clown Wrestling Action Figure WWE WCW ECW


WWF Hasbro Doink the Clown Wrestling Action Figure WWE WCW ECW


$99.99


WWF/WWE’s Doink the Clown on Purple Card with “Big Top Clobber” move. Fully poseable detailed wrestling action figure….

WWF Hasbro Rowdy Roddy Piper Wrestling Action Figure WWE WCW ECW


WWF Hasbro Rowdy Roddy Piper Wrestling Action Figure WWE WCW ECW



Poseable WWF Action Figure by Hasbro. Rowdy Roddy Piper with ” Piper Punch ” move….


Piper Warrior

The North American B-25 Mitchell

Driving down New Highway, which skirts the perimeter of Farmingdale, Long Island’s, Republic Airport, on the still-warm, crystal-blue Labor Day morning in 2006, and glimpsing the tails of the World War II B-24 Liberator, B-17 Flying Fortress, and B-25 Mitchell bombers, I had once again realized that the Collings Foundation’s annual Wings of Freedom fleet rotation, more than any other year, had transformed the general aviation field into an early-1940s pocket of time, a hub of medium and heavy bomber operations.

The aircraft intended for my mission, the North American B-25 Mitchell registered 130669 “Tondelayo” and wearing its drab olive-green livery, had been the third parked on the ramp of the American Airpower Museum, both an historical and symbolic position relative to the two heavier, longer-range aircraft which had been preceded it.

Resulting from a 1938 Air Corps requirement for a twin-engined, medium-range bomber which could fulfill niche roles its larger, quad-engined counterparts had been unable to, and tracing its lineage to the B-10, the B-12, the B-18, and the B-23, the B-25 itself, named after the US Army Air Corps Officer General Billy Mitchell, had been infused life as a self-funded project by North American Aviation in the form of the NA-40-1.  The 19,500-pound prototype, featuring a narrow fuselage with a green house cockpit; a straight mid-wing; two, 1,100-horsepower R-1830 piston engines; an angular, twin vertical tail; and a tricycle undercarriage of single wheels, had first flown in January of 1939, but a power deficiency had necessitated the retrofit of 1,350-horsepower R-2600s.  Although the modified version, designated NA-40-2, had offered superior performance, it crashed after a two-week test program.

Its NA-62 successor, which had been extensively modified, featured a wider fuselage which in turn increased the now lower-mounted, constant root-to-tip dihedral mid-wing span, 1,700-horsepower R-2600-9 engines, square-geometry vertical tails, and a 27,000-pound gross weight.  Approved in September of 1939, this version, designated the XB-25, first flew in prototype form on August 19 of the following year.

Initially delivered to the Army Air Corps, the aircraft demonstrated directional stability deficiencies, resulting in the outer wing mounting redesign with the tenth aircraft off the production  line, which reduced the engine-to-wing tip dihedral and gave it its characteristic gull-wing profile.

The B-25 Mitchell, in production form, appeared with an aluminum alloy, semi-monocoque fuselage, constructed of four longerons, which produced a 53.6-foot overall length.  The cantilever, all-metal, mid-mounted wings, comprised of a two-spar, fuselage-integral center section housing integral fuel tanks and two outer, single-spar sections with detachable wing tips, featured sealed ailerons with both fixed and controllable trimming tabs and dual-section, hydraulically-operated, trailing edge slotted flaps divided by the engine nacelles.  Spanning 67.7 feet, they sported a 609.8-square-foot area.  Powered by two 1,700-horsepower, Wright-Cyclone two-row, 14-cylinder, air-cooled R-2600 piston engines housed in aerodynamic nacelles which traversed the wing chord and turned three-bladed, constant-speed, 12.7-foot, full-feathering, anti-icing Hamilton Standard propellers, the aircraft could climb to 15,000 feet in 11.3 minutes and attain a maximum speed of 303 mph at 13,000 feet.  The cantilever twin vertical fins and rudders, fitted with fixed and controllable trimming tabs, had been modified with rounded tops and yielded a 16.5-foot aircraft height.  The tricycle, single-wheeled, hydraulically-actuated, aft-retracting undercarriage, the first such configuration employed by a US bomber, featured aerodynamic door covers over all three wheel wells in both the extended and retracted positions, while the main wheels were equipped with hydraulic brakes.  The aircraft, with a 21,100-pound empty weight, had a maximum gross weight of 33,500 pounds.

Several versions had been produced.  The first of these, the B-25A, incorporated pilot armor and self-sealing fuel tanks, while its successor, the B-25B, introduced two electrically-operated Bendix turrets, each of which replaced the midship and tail guns and featured two .50 caliber machine guns.  Entering service in 1941 with the 17th Bomb Group at McChord Field near Tacoma, Washington, the aircraft, whose production run totaled 120, also featured a separate photographic station between the upper turret and the tail and a shortened, 54.1-foot length.

Powered by two 1,700-horsepower Wright R-2600-13 engines, the B-25C, the third version, introduced an autopilot system and external racks which could carry eight 250-pound bombs, and a later fuel capacity increase to 1,100 gallons.  Of the 3,909 build, 1,619 had been produced in Inglewood, California, while 2,290 had been assembled in Kansas City, Kansas, under the B-25D designation.

The singular B-25E and –F variants were intended as test vehicles of wing and tail anti-icing systems, while the B-25G replaced the glazed nose with an armored one, the latter containing two .50 caliber machine guns and one 9.6-foot-long, 900-pound, cradle-mounted, M-4 cannon capable of firing 23-inch, 15-pound shells.  Although its armament had otherwise adhered to the B-25C standard, its bomb bay could accommodate an aircraft torpedo.  The variant, operated by a crew of four and featuring a 50.10-foot overall length, enjoyed a 405-unit production run.

The B-25H, with significantly increased armament, featured four .50 caliber machine guns in the metallic, armored nose, and a further four on the side, arranged in pairs; a repositioned top turret, now located in the roof of the navigator’s compartment; the removal of the ventral turret; enlarged, aft-wing, .50 caliber machine gun waist positions; and a tail gun station with two further .50 caliber machine guns.  As World War II’s most extensively armed design, it could attain 293-mph speeds at 13,000 feet and had a 23,800-foot service ceiling.

The B-25J, the definitive and numerically most popular version, had been intended for precision bombing.  The aircraft, introducing a bombardier who increased the crew complement to six, reincorporated the glazed nose which had now been provisioned with one fixed and one flexible .50 caliber machine gun.  The largest single Mitchell order, for 4,318 B-25s, had been placed on April 14, 1943, and the aircraft, attaining 292-mph speeds at 14,500 feet, could cruise at service ceilings of 25,500 feet.

Between 1941 and 1945, the Army Air Corps took delivery of 9,816 B-25s, 3,218 of which had been produced in Inglewood, California, until 1943, and the remaining 6,608 of which had been produced in Kansas City.

The B-25 Mitchell had several post-war applications.  Demilitarized, and designated TB-25, the type, based upon the B-25J, had been converted into a trainer with the installation of an observer’s seat in the nose, ahead and below the cockpit; two student seats behind the standard two pilot-instructor positions; and up to five seats in the aft cabin.  Of the 400 converted aircraft operated by the US Air Force during the 1950s, the last active-duty staff transport had not been retired until May 21, 1960, although it had continued to be operated by the air forces of Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Holland, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

A photographic reconnaissance variant, the F-10, had featured a nose-installed tri-metrogon camera along with other aerial photography equipment, while other non-military roles had included those of executive transport, freighter, and fire bomber.

The aircraft operating my Labor Day flight, a B-25J registered 44-28932, had been produced in August of 1944 by North American Aviation in Kansas City, Kansas.  Accepted by the United States Army Air Corps on August 3 of that year, it had served in the US in the AAF Flying Training Command Program, serving 12 different air bases until January of 1959, at which time it had been declared surplus and had been deleted from the US Air Force inventory.  Converted into a fire bomber, it had combated forest fires for another 25 years.

Acquired by the Collings Foundation in 1984, and restored by Tom Reilly Vintage Aircraft over a two-year period, the B-25J, the first World War II bomber in the collection, had been flown n air shows in the Boston area for a decade, whereafter it had been ferried to Chino, California, in late 2001, for a secondary restoration by Carl Scholl of Aero Trader, Inc.  Subsequently repositioned to Midland, Texas, it was painted by AVSource West in its current Tondelayo livery after the B-25 which had been operated by the Air Apache 345th BG of the 5th Air Force in the Pacific Theater against targets in New Guinea, the 500th BS of the 5th Air Force itself having been the fourth squadron of the 345th BG to have attacked shipping in Vunapope near Rabaul on October 18, 1943.  The Tondelayo name had been inspired by Hedy Lamarr’s character in the 1943 movie White Cargo and given by the crew of Lieutenant Ralph Wallace.  The three-aircraft formation, comprised of the B-25 “Snafu” and flown by Captain Lyle Anacker, the “Tondelayo” flown by Lieutenant Wallace himself, and the “Sorry Satchul” flown by Lieutenant Paterson, had claimed three ships, but avenging fighters had attacked “Sorry Satchul,” hitting its port engine and forcing it to ditch, and “Tondelayo,” damaging its right engine.  Shut down and feathered, it had almost wrenched itself from its mountings because of severe vibration.

Flying over Cape Gazelle toward base, the B-25 duo, maintaining tight formation, had been targeted by some 50 Japanese fighters, “Sorry Satchul” so badly damaged that it had been forced to head for shore and ditch and “Tondelayo,” despite its own critical wounds, hovering only 30 feet above the water where it had managed to shoot down five additional enemy aircraft.  Limping into base at Kiriwina, the aircraft had subsequently been repaired and patched, receiving a new right wing, engine, propeller blades, and radio equipment.  Its crew had been awarded the Silver Star.

Squatting under the forward fuselage and climbing the short ladder into the cockpit section on that Labor Day in 2006, I took the right of the two observer’s seats located a foot below, and behind, the cockpit, while the four other passengers entered the aft section, located behind the bomb bay, through the ventral hatch, which had been configured with an aft-facing, three-person bench seat and three individual seats.  With the ladder now raised and the dual panel folded across it to form a portion of the integral floor, the B-25J had been secured for engine start.

The two-person cockpit, sporting bow tie control yokes, featured a throttle quadrant with the two engine throttles angled toward the pilot, two propeller-pitch throttles, and two fuel-mixture throttles angled toward the copilot.

Engine start, commencing with the right, number 2 powerplant, entailed turning the master ignition switch and right booster pump on, at which point the Wright R-2600 powerplant rotated and the interior became saturated with deep, vibrating, Hamilton Standard propeller-created noise.  Priming and stabilizing them with the throttle to create between 800 and 1,000 revolutions per minute, the captain applied a full-rich mixture, causing them to settle into a throaty, 1,200-rpm idle. The process was repeated with the left, number 1 engine.

Contacting Republic Ground on 121.6 for taxi clearance, and armed with the latest automatic terminal information service data, the twin-finned bomber released its brakes at 0845, the thrust created by its engines, even at idle settings, sufficient to move it forward over the American Airpower ramp and away from the World War II bomber trio.  Taxiing parallel to the active runway, 32, the B-25J periodically jolted in response to brake applications, turning on to the run-up area by means of differential power, its slipstream-bombarded twin rudders aerodynamically inducing ground turns.  Extending its slotted, trailing edge flaps and advancing its throttles, the medium-capacity bomber, assuredly a giant in comparison to the currently landing Piper Warrior, moved on to the runway’s threshold, just as the B-17 had commenced its own taxi roll from the ramp.

Moving into take off position and aligning its nose wheel with the centerline, aircraft 130669 received take off clearance from Republic Tower on 125.2, slowly advancing its two throttles in order to establish initial directional control.  Firmly maintaining a straight acceleration roll, the 1,500-horsepower twin-row radials powering the Collings Foundation aircraft exploded with cabin-saturating noise as smooth, steady throttle advancements pinnacled them into their METO settings of 2,600 revolutions-per-minute and 40 inches of manifold pressure.  Counteracting wind-induced directional variations with subtle rudder deflections, the captain began applying control column back pressure at 75 knots indicated air speed, the now ground-separated nose wheel producing a lift-generating angle-of-attack.  The air speed-created pressure differential, bathing the huge, outstretched, upper wing surfaces in a steady stream of accelerated air, removed all ground restraints and allowed them to peel the gravity-defying aircraft to which they had been attached off the ground at 115 knots.  Retracting its tricycle undercarriage at the aircraft’s VMC-determined 145-knot speed, and trimming itself into its initial climb, the twin-engined bomber, encased in engine slipstream, rolled into a right bank over Route 110, headed toward Long Island’s south shore.

Maintaining a 150-degree heading, the now-graceful flying bird reduced its engine rpm to 2300 and its manifold pressure to 30, moving abreast of the metallic, erector set-appearing Captree Bridge at 1,000 feet, which stretched across the deep blue surface of the Great South Bay from the island to Jones Beach and its signature lighthouse.  The azure of the water, seamlessly merging with that of the sky, melded into a surreal dimension, as viewed from the 270-degree-encompassing Plexiglas nose.

The power-to-weight ratio, coupled to its aerodynamic design, had been the key to the highly-maneuverable, medium mission bomber.  Unlike its long-range, high-altitude, heavy B-17 and B-24 counterparts, the B-25, at half their acquisition costs, had been intended for interdiction purposes, delivering tactical blows to enemy targets closer to the front.  Because of its maneuverability, it had been able to fly low-level, tree-top strafing sorties, where it had remained virtually hidden, and had then dropped parachute-retarding bombs, which had enabled it to escape before detonation.  Although it had operated extensively in the Pacific, targeting Japanese air fields from treetop altitudes and skip-bombing enemy ships, it had been used in all theaters of operation, and had been flown by the Australians, the British, the Chinese, and the Dutch.  It had been the first bomber to have been lend-leased to Russia.

The most famous B-25 mission, led by Lieutenant Colonel James H. Doolittle and occurring on April 18, 1942, had entailed the launch of 16 aircraft from the aircraft carrier USS Hornet.  Of the four candidate aircraft, inclusive of the B-18, the B-23, the B-26, and the B-25 itself, the latter had been chosen because of its performance.  The aircraft, B-25Bs modified at the Northwest Airlines maintenance facility in Minnesota to increase their fuel tankage from 694 to 1,141 US gallons, had featured dorsal and ventral power turrets, but had been devoid of tail armament.  Loaded on the USS Hornet for the sea journey to Japan, 16 aircraft, each at 31,000-pound gross weights, would take off from the 467-foot deck at a 450-mile distance, close enough to permit them to bomb targets in Tokyo, Yokahama, Kobe, and Nagoya, yet retain sufficient fuel supplies to continue the 1,200 miles to China.

Encountering a Japanese picket boat during the morning of April 18, and fearing imminent attack, Doolittle made the decision to launch the B-25 fleet at an 800-mile distance, or 350 miles further, from land, the first take off occurring at 8:18 a.m., which had been less than an hour after the boat had been sighted.  Using strong headwinds and the deck’s sea swell-created inclination, the bombers had just been able to accomplish the precarious feat, with the last taking off at 9:21 a.m.

After some four hours of flying, the lead aircraft, flown by Doolittle himself, dropped the first bomb over Tokyo, shortly after which it had been joined by the remaining 15.  Although all safely departed Japanese air space, insufficient fuel, caused by the earlier launching, and deteriorating weather, resulted in the crash-landing or abandonment of 15 B-25s in China, while the 16th landed in Vladivostock, where its crew had been captured.

Nevertheless, the mission had been both a technological and operational success, and had elevated troop morale and garnered tremendous notoriety for the aircraft.

Banking left to a 240-degree heading, aircraft 1306669 Tondelayo was carried back over Captree Bridge by its gull, variable-dihedral wings and its three-bladed propellers, crossing over Long Island’s south shore.  The B-17 Flying Fortress, appearing particularly graceful over the blue surface of the Great South Bay, flexed off of the port cockpit windows.  World War II skies had somehow been resurrected that morning.

Fuel burn depended on engine setting: at 180 mph, with the engines turning at 1,700 revolutions per minute and feeding off of 27 inches of manifold pressure, the aircraft burned 120 gallons per hour, while a ten-mph cruise speed increase, attained with a 1,800-rpm/28-inch setting, resulted in a 130-gallon per hour consumption.

Recontacting Republic Tower, aircraft 130699 advised its intention of “inbound for landing” and reduced power, now gravity-induced into its descent profile.  Maintaining a 180-mph speed and a 320-degree heading, it extended its trailing edge flaps, which provided air speed control, by means of progressive drag production.  Flap settings equally depended on flight phase: 1/4 for take off, 1/2 and 3/4 for descent, and full for landing.

The aircraft’s clean stalling speed had been 95 mph, which decreased to 83 mph at maximum gross weight with full flaps and undercarriage at 26,000 feet.

Extending its drag-producing landing gear into the slipstream, the aircraft inched toward Runway 32’s threshold, as its altimeter unwound: 600 feet…500…300…100…

Passing over the fence at 115 mph, the olive-green, twin-engined, twin-finned medium bomber sank toward the blurred concrete in a full back-pressure control yoke-induced flare, screeching on the ground with its left main wheel at 80 mph, at which time the friction sufficiently reduced its air speed to permit the remaining two bogies to settle earthward. 

Completing its deceleration roll and taxiing on to the American Airpower Museum ramp, the B-25J Mitchell, as the medium mission bomber, had appropriately been the first to return to base, the B-17 and the B-24 still plying the skies.  If World War II had still been raging, the sequence would have been exactly the same.

About the Author

A graduate of Long Island University-C.W. Post Campus with a summa-cum-laude BA Degree in Comparative Languages and Journalism, I have subsequently earned the Continuing Community Education Teaching Certificate from the Nassau Association for Continuing Community Education (NACCE) at Molloy College, the Travel Career Development Certificate from the Institute of Certified Travel Agents (ICTA) at LIU, and the AAS Degree in Aerospace Technology at the State University of New York – College of Technology at Farmingdale. Having amassed almost three decades in the airline industry, I managed the New York-JFK and Washington-Dulles stations at Austrian Airlines, created the North American Station Training Program, served as an Aviation Advisor to Farmingdale State University of New York, and created and taught the Airline Management Certificate Program at the Long Island Educational Opportunity Center. A freelance author, I have written some 70 books of the short story, novel, nonfiction, essay, poetry, article, log, curriculum, training manual, and textbook genre in English, German, and Spanish, having principally focused on aviation and travel, and I have been published in book, magazine, newsletter, and electronic Web site form. I am a writer for Cole Palen’s Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in New York.

eBay Logo  

1981 Piper Warrior PA28-161


1981 Piper Warrior PA28-161


$20,100.00


Piper Cherokee Warrior - 10% share, $72/month + $23/hr


Piper Cherokee Warrior – 10% share, $72/month + $23/hr


$144.00


Piper Cherokee Warrior PA28-151 for rent  $65/hr


Piper Cherokee Warrior PA28-151 for rent $65/hr


$65.00


1976 Piper Warrior II


1976 Piper Warrior II


$32,900.00


Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Cowl Mods Garmin

Cowl Mods Garmin


Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Aircraft Home

Aircraft Home


F-14 Tomcat Motivational Poster Top Gun Inspirational Art Print


F-14 Tomcat Motivational Poster Top Gun Inspirational Art Print


$4.25


Strength F14 Jet Motivational Posters. “THE PROCESS OF DIRECTING ONE’S SCATTERED FORCES INTO ONE POWERFUL CHANNEL.” The print measures 22×28 inches.We take great pride in making sure your INSPIRATIONAL POSTER arrives to your doorstep in pristine shape. Once the package arrives, there are steps you can take to preserve the quality of the piece. Make sure you wash your hands before opening the tube …

New Maxsa Innovations 8 LED Solar-Power Motion-Activated LED Security Light Time Motion Sensitivity


New Maxsa Innovations 8 LED Solar-Power Motion-Activated LED Security Light Time Motion Sensitivity


$59.95


When charged in full sunlight, light can activate up to 300 times when on for 1 minute at a time. Detects motion up to 25 feet away within a 180 degree area. Includes three AA rechargeable batteries. Time, motion sensitivity, and Lux (daylight sensitivity) adjustments. 9 Foot cable allows ideal location for solar panel and lets you mount the light inside, if desired….

Aircrafts Nursery/Kids Room Peel & Stick Removable Home Wall Art Sticker Decals for Boys


Aircrafts Nursery/Kids Room Peel & Stick Removable Home Wall Art Sticker Decals for Boys


$14.49


Better than wallpaper, wall stickers are a perfect way to decorate your room and express yourself. They are a fun, easy and removable decor solution. These stickers are pre-cut and will only take you several minutes to apply on any surface – walls, doors, windows, and more. When you want to reposition the stickers, simply peel them off and reapply to wherever you want and they won’t damage your pa…

Aircraft Home

Travel by Private Aircraft: Executive Perk or Valid Business Tool

As of late, the private jets of the auto makers have been in the news and presented in not such a good light. Perhaps there is good reason: when you come begging for money from the government, items that stand out as luxuries should be reviewed. Whatever you think about the particular companies involved, there must have been some business justification for the initial purchase of these planes. Are private aircraft really business tools? Can you really justify them? The answer is a yes, but qualified. Are they a good fit for a small business – that just depends.

Since September, 11 2001 the experience of airline travel has gone from mildly unpleasant to downright bad. This horrible tragedy forced onerous security requirements upon the traveling public, decreasing the utility while increasing the hassle factor and time required to travel. Then, with rising fuel costs airlines have made a desperate attempt to remain profitable by cutting service and schedules, increasing fairs, and charging extra for baggage.

When I earned my pilots license in 2002, I was planning on using small planes for personal travel. However, it became apparent quickly what incredible business tool this type of travel can be. How you ask? Simple, I have three clients in three different cities: Shreveport, Oklahoma City, and Little Rock. I am located central to all of them in a northern suburb of Dallas. In order to drive to see all of them, it would take me about 14 hours and 30 minutes to drive the round trip, not counting meetings and meals – impossible to do in one day. Want to take the airlines? Well, you will make the first meeting Oklahoma City at 11:00am, but you won’t reach Little Rock until 4:40pm, and then your arrival in Shreveport is at 10:10pm. You cannot get a flight back to Dallas that late, but of course that doesn’t matter since you aren’t likely to get a client meeting at 10:30pm anyway! With my 4 seat Piper, I can leave my house at 6:30am, spend an hour with each of my three clients, and be home in time to have dinner with my family at 6:00pm. Talk about a business enabler! Yes, a 12 hour day is long, but with no hotels, no security checks, and no waiting for baggage the experience is much lower stress.

How about cost? Everyone has seen the multimillion dollar jets, but I managed to accomplish the above trip with a $55,000 airplane – not much more than a nice SUV. If your company is willing to spend more, trips like the sample one will be quicker and longer trips will become feasible. Of course, acquisition price is only part of the equation – my aircraft has a fully loaded cost of $60 per hour to operate based on 100 hours per year total (the more you fly, the lower the per hour cost). So the example trip would cost me $405 regardless of whether I planned it 1 day advance or a month in advance. The same trip on the airlines with 1 day notice will set you back $1,427 plus 3 rental cars, and a hotel room.

Is this mode of travel right for you? That’s a question only you can answer, but instead of dismissing the idea out of hand, the scenario above should make you really think about it. Major corporations own business jets because they are a valid tool in certain situations. There are tens of thousands of private aircraft being flown daily for business, maybe your company would benefit by being there too

About the Author

Michael is the owner and principle consultant at Horizons Aloft, a consultancy that assists small and medium businesses to evaluate the value of integrating private aircraft into their operations and navigating all the requirements of flight training, purchasing and maintaining a business aircraft.

If an Australian pitcher threw a baseball and a boomerang, which one would travel faster across home plate?

Both are of equal weight. Pitcher is equally skilled at both.
I’m designing a Helium assisted fixed wing aircraft. Would you like to help me design it?
See my questions in Aircraft.

the boomerang.
it has slightly less air resistance, but that’s pretty much immaterial.
however, it has a longer throwing arm length, thus more speed will be imparted to it.

it has something like the effect of the atlatl.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlatl

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Prop

Prop


Twilight New Moon Dream Catcher Prop Replica


Twilight New Moon Dream Catcher Prop Replica


$29.98


Twilight New Moon “Dream Catcher” Prop Replica with Suede Pouch. For Ages 14 and Up….

Halloween decoration - GIANT Creepy Cloth SPIDER - extends 4 feet!


Halloween decoration – GIANT Creepy Cloth SPIDER – extends 4 feet!


$19.87


Giant Creepy cloth spider

This foam spider is shrouded in creepy cloth!

Hang this decoration outdoors to scare trick-or-treaters or indoors to creep out haunted house guests!

This eight-legged creature is sure to add fright to your Halloween night! Includes hanger.

4 ft….


White Director's Clapboard


White Director’s Clapboard


$16.99


Dry Erase Director’s Clapboard with moving clapstick and comes with a dry erase marker . Made of plastic. Measures 9.75″ x 11.”…

Get Shorty [VHS]


Get Shorty [VHS]


$0.74


John Travolta is the standout in this somewhat cartoonish adaptation of Elmore Leonard’s novel about a smalltime Miami enforcer (Travolta) who decides to get into the movie business in L.A. The cast sparkles–Gene Hackman as a failing cut-rate-movie producer, Rene Russo as a failed actress, Danny DeVito as a vain thespian, Delroy Lindo as a mobster who wants a cut of Travolta’s film action–and th…

How to Use Yoga Props - Blocks, Mats, Straps, with Workout [VHS]


How to Use Yoga Props – Blocks, Mats, Straps, with Workout [VHS]


$0.01


If you’re someone who wants to get into yoga but are so stiff that even touching your toes is a struggle, then this tape will help. Unlike its companion tape, How to Use Props: Bolsters, Blankets, Pillows, which focuses on the passive, “restorative” yoga style, this one employs props with a variety of more active poses, using them specifically to promote correct alignment and support and thus…

Prop

Home Staging Props Made Easy: Use Magazines

Copyright (c) 2009 Alice Chan

Would you believe it if I told you that I actually had over 50 different subscriptions to various magazines at one point? My poor mail person! I had subscriptions to every fashion, home, and design magazine you can think of. It was absolutely insane and out of control.

As you could guess I obviously couldn’t keep up with the subscriptions. I never had time to read them so finally one day, I made a list of every magazine I was receiving and started cancelling them as the subscriptions expired. I can proudly say I’m a recovering magazine subscriber and only have two active subscriptions.

So, what did I do with all these publications? I actually used a lot of them for staging. Some of the higher end ones like Architectural Digest, Town & Country, and San Francisco were used as coffee table displays or in offices, and Wine Spectator was sometimes used in the kitchen, dining or bar areas.

We actually used quite a few of the magazines as art to stage bedrooms. Let me describe some examples.

You can easily tear fashion magazine covers off and place them in a frame and voila…instant art for the bedroom! Your selection can be tailored to showcase either a male or female room.

We also occasionally purchased magazines specifically for staging purposes like Cosmo Girl and Teen People to create custom frames in a teen-age girl’s room but bedrooms are by no means the only rooms you can use magazines as professional staging props.

A yoga room may be shown to advantage by using a Women’s Health magazine attractively displayed in a basket with rolled towels and a small spray of artificial flowers or there are more specific yoga magazines available for use also.

However, just as you can use a cookbook in a kitchen to build a theme, you can also create an excellent visual staging prop using a home style or gourmet cooking magazine. I can personally attest to the wide range available.

BONUS TIP: If you need to find a photo to place in a picture frame for a bedside table, desk or bookcase, flip through magazines for prop wedding, kids or pet photos. This way, you preserve your own privacy by not having to use personal photos for this purpose.

You just never know where you can find inspiration – take a look around, there are a lot of inexpensive options available.

About the Author

Alice T. Chan, Home Buyer Attraction Expert helps Real Estate Professionals and Home Sellers create market ready homes that SELL. Alice’s “Do-It-Yourself Home Buyer Attraction System” empowers home sellers to stage their own homes so they STAND OUT from the crowd and make buyers STOP and TAKE NOTICE! For FREE Home Staging tips and your free e-course “8 Steps to Creating an Irresistible, Market Ready Home That SELLS” http://www.AliceTChan.com

Question for liberals: Why are people protesting Prop 8 in front of white churches?

In fact, Prop 8 was defeated by church-going blacks and Latinos. Why aren’t the people from West Hollywood and Santa Monica going into Watts, South Central and the barrios to protest?

GREAT point, but I think we all know the answer.

White Christians are a “punching bag” in today’s society meaning, you can’t go wrong by protesting anything they do. There’s no political fall from it. Blacks, on the other hand, are not so easily “protestable.” If people were to protest outside of black churches, they might easily be branded as racists. Therefore, despite the fact that these spineless protestors KNOW that the black churches were instrumental in defeating the gay marriage initiative in California, they are taking the politically correct, weasel way out and protesting in from of predominantly white churches.

How utterly gutless…

eBay Logo  

1960s Stits Playboy Project Airplane w/  Engine & Prop


1960s Stits Playboy Project Airplane w/ Engine & Prop


$8,500.00



Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Condition Aircraft

Condition Aircraft Reviews

Condition Aircraft


Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions Artists Photographic Poster Print by Ralph Morse, 30x40


Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions Artists Photographic Poster Print by Ralph Morse, 30×40


$129.99


Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions is digitally printed on archival photographic paper resulting in vivid, pure color and exceptional detail that is suitable for any museum or gallery display. Finding that perfect piece to match your interest and style is easy and within your budget!…

Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions Photographic Poster Print


Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions Photographic Poster Print



Technician Warming Hands While Working on Aircraft Parts in Subzero Conditions is digitally printed on archival photographic paper resulting in vivid, pure color and exceptional detail that is suitable for any museum or gallery display. Finding that perfect piece to match your interest and style is easy and within your budget!…


Street Art Series #2 Propper Chopper #950 Condition Mattel Hot Wheels


Street Art Series #2 Propper Chopper #950 Condition Mattel Hot Wheels


$2.22


Street Art Series #2 Propper Chopper #950 Condition Mattel Hot Wheels…

ZVEZDA/THE STAR Assembly Model: Russian Cargo Truck 3iC-5B [Assembly model. The set contains: model, glue, paint, a brush, and instructions for assembly. Working with the assembly model develops a childs intellectual and instrumental capabilities, diligence, imagination, and constructive thinking. With the help of the given set, you will assemble a model of the automobile 3iC-5B cargo truck. SiC-5B debuted in June 1942, and became the authentic workhorse of the Red Army. It worked excellently at any time of year, in any weather and road conditions; it was modest in the amount of benzene it used and was low maintenance. It had a strong motor and could carry up to 3.5 tons of cargo. Many special features were built into the base of this automobile: sanitation, repair, anti-aircraft and more. In the period between 1942 and 1945, 83,000 automobiles were made]


ZVEZDA/THE STAR Assembly Model: Russian Cargo Truck 3iC-5B [Assembly model. The set contains: model, glue, paint, a brush, and instructions for assembly. Working with the assembly model develops a childs intellectual and instrumental capabilities, diligence, imagination, and constructive thinking. With the help of the given set, you will assemble a model of the automobile 3iC-5B cargo truck. SiC-5B debuted in June 1942, and became the authentic workhorse of the Red Army. It worked excellently at any time of year, in any weather and road conditions; it was modest in the amount of benzene it used and was low maintenance. It had a strong motor and could carry up to 3.5 tons of cargo. Many special features were built into the base of this automobile: sanitation, repair, anti-aircraft and more. In the period between 1942 and 1945, 83,000 automobiles were made]



Assembly model. The set contains: model, glue, paint, a brush, and instructions for assembly. Working with the assembly model develops a childs intellectual and instrumental capabilities, diligence, imagination, and constructive thinking. With the help of the given set, you will assemble a model of the automobile 3iC-5B cargo truck. SiC-5B debuted in June 1942, and became the authentic workhorse o…


Eurow Complete Car Care Kit with Red Wash Bucket (24 Pieces)


Eurow Complete Car Care Kit with Red Wash Bucket (24 Pieces)


$95.00


Professional RED Wash Bucket – Heavy duty, molded plastic wash bucket generously holds 6 gallons of soapy water. Perfect christmas gift for moms and dads.
Bottom grill keeps your wash mitt and brushes from collecting dirt and grime. Snap tight lid to store wash supplies and the form-fitting handle.
(1) Liquid Speed Applicator. Use with any liquid wax. With a slight amount of pressure, the Liquid S…

Pilot Guide: Flight In Icing Conditions


Pilot Guide: Flight In Icing Conditions


$2.99


This advisory circular (AC) contains updated and additional information for the pilots of airplanes under parts 91, 121, 125, and 135 of Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14 CFR). The purpose of this AC is to provide pilots with a convenient reference on the principal factors related to flight in icing conditions and the location of additional information in related publications. This A…

Aviation Photography


Aviation Photography


$10.99


A revised and expanded edition of A Guide to Aviation Photography, with new images and updated text that takes into account the latest advances in camera technology and changes in the aviation world. With this richly illustrated guide, amateur shutterbugs and airplane buffs can capture every thrilling shot they’ve ever dreamed of. It explains everything about equipment, the right techniques …

Flying in Adverse Conditions (Practical Flying Series)


Flying in Adverse Conditions (Practical Flying Series)


$22.95


Be prepared for the unexpected — sudden weather changes, bird strikes, turbulence, and other hazards — with this complete guide to handling hazardous conditions and emerging safely….

Condition Aircraft

Air Conditioning And The Environmental Impact

When you think of air conditioning, do you ever wonder who made it, the history behind it, maybe different applications involved or even environmental concerns? Well, if so, then you have come to the right place. We will not only go over each of these but you will find that a Sub-Heading for ease of use marks each section.

The Air Conditioner was first introduced in 1820 by Michael Faraday a British Scientist and Inventor. He discovered that by compressing liquefied ammonia you could cause the rooms are temperature to cool down. Dr. John Gorrie who used this technology to make ice for his patients later followed this up. Once the Doctor had proven that using the ice helped his patients he then received a grant to do more studies. However this was not meant to be and it was another 50 years before the first air condition was made in 1902.

An air conditioner is a machine designed to create cool air using a refrigeration system.

THE HISTORY OF THE AIR CONDITIONER

The Air Conditioner or its uses and methods can be traced back to Medieval Persia, where they used large open pools to hold water while using wind towers using tunnel like pipes to catch the wind and push it into another direction. This caused the collected water to evaporate and cool the buildings during the hot seasons.

While the modern air conditioner was first introduced in 1902 for factories, the first home and car air conditioner was not brought in until 1950.

First is the Comfort Application, which is designed to keep indoors comfortable for both mankind and our animals. There are different types of this application and are used in such places as Residential Homes and Buildings, Commercial Properties, Schools and other Institutions. This application is also used for personal Aircraft, Ships, Spacecraft, Trains, and Vehicles.

Then we have the Process Application, which is geared for the place it is located such as Operating Rooms, Static Clean or Data Rooms, Breeding Facilities, Airplanes, Factories, Testing Facilities, Greenhouses, Mines, Kitchens, and Nuclear Plants. Each of these areas has to maintain a center degree and this application provides that safely.

Many people forget that we have to be careful of what we do and how we use such conveniences as the Air Conditioner, but as the Earths health slowly declines and we have more and more health related issues in today’s society we have to take care. When you don’t take care of your air conditioner properly you set the stage for the outbreak of Microorganisms that contribute to anything from the common everyday cold to pneumonia, or even asthma. Which if you have ever had an allergy reaction or worse an asthmatic attack then you know how life threatening this can be.

Not to mention the fact an air conditioner, if maintained properly, can save on your heating and electric bill, as well as cut down on the electricity that, in turn, cuts down on the emissions from both the AC unit and your local power plant.

About the Author

http://www.kimpton.ltd.uk/index2.html have a breadth of experience that spans every aspect of the
construction industry including air con hire.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace