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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 8:00 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

New to YAKS as well. Have been training in YAK 52 in preparation for cross country flight. Purchased 52 and plan to pick it up in Vermont (coming out of annual) and fly it back to Calif. Plan on 1.5 hr legs. Have an air adapter with schrader valve. Plan on stopping at medium size airports. Any recommendations on other "must have" items would be very appreciated, thanks, Bill.

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randmyak52(at)bellsouth.n
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:40 am    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Have a small air bottle with you! You can get perhaps three starts from
that. If you are not familiar with starting a YAK, have someone who is go
over that procedure with you. Remember to turn off the air, remember turn
off the air & remember to turn off the air. The three most important things.
If this A/C has a oil heater installed, try to get it plugged in over night,
makes starting easier. The 52 is really easy to start by hand, however this
should only be attempted if you have Two experienced people involved. Good
luck on your trip, you will love the 52.
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ByronMFox(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:47 am    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Welcome, Bill. Are you coming to Northern or Southern California? If coming to Norcal, just fly
I-80 all the way.

In addition to a pony scuba tank, it's a good idea to have a couple of spare spark plugs, valve cover gaskets and gear indicator bulbs. I'd also carry a spare main gear tire inner tube.

Because you'll be landing every 1+30, and can check in with your wife, girl friend or mom, having a "SPOT" gps tracker (http://www.findmespot.com/Home.aspx) isn't necessary. It's fun, though, for those who want to watch your progress online across the county. Also, it's great belt and suspenders.

Oh, don't forget the Advil for your sore butt and aching knees. ...Blitz

Byron M. Fox
CEO,COO,CFO, Sales Associate, Receptionist & Janitor
Red Star Pilots Association Online Store
80 Milland Drive
Mill Valley, CA 94941
415-307-2405
http://www.flyredstar.org/cart/catalog/

**************
Play online games for FREE at Games.com! All of your favorites, no registration required and great graphics â0689022/aol?redir= http://www.games.com?ncid=emlcntusgame00000001) [quote][b]


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Bill1200



Joined: 19 Oct 2008
Posts: 111
Location: medford oregon

PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 12:54 pm    Post subject: Re: New to forum Reply with quote

Flying back to Redding, northern Calif. Thanks for the suggestions. Space is obviously limited. Will the pony bottle fit in the standard "baggage" area? I live off Advil and coffee now so got that covered Laughing

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viperdoc(at)mindspring.co
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:33 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

YEP.
Doc

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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:59 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

The whole idea of having the pony tank is to make sure you don't have to
prop the aircraft... Without brakes... And by yourself. On the same
token, learn where the air starter solenoid is located, see if it still
has the manually operated tab sticking out, and learn how to access that
with your big left toe, or in the worst case, with some shroud line that
you always carry a piece of.

Get the right tools and personally check that your exhaust flange
fittings and intake flange fittings are TIGHT and properly safety wired.
Inspect your exhaust tube coupling assemblies for bent or corroded bolts
and fittings, and look for evidence of leaks. Make sure you whole
exhaust system is leak free and not ready to come unglued.

If you have an intake drain kit, check to make sure it uses flexible
lines and not solid aluminum lines. The solid lines break. ALWAYS.
Many were put on with those solid lines.

Make sure your air system is set correctly and holds pressure between
50-55 atmospheres. More than that and it is really dangerous, less than
that, and you will be really low on air after you land and use your
brakes quite a bit.

Make a habit of putting your gear down EARLY. Allow your compressor to
pump the air bottle up FULLY before you land and idle in. If necessary
run the engine at 60% for awhile to get it back to a high value. Either
that, or plan on using your pony tank more often than you expect.

Spare light bulbs has already been mentioned. Second that motion.

Buy a few bottle of Marvel Mystery Oil and use it. I use 1/2 of a large
bottle for every fall tank. More than is recommended, but it works
wonders for me.

Recommend Phillips 20-60W Radial Engine Oil. Use 20-50 or so, and you
will consume more oil.

Don't do aerobatics during the flight. If you fill your oil to 15
liters before the Cross Country legs, and then you do acro enroute, you
will quickly blow oil out until it gets to 9 liters or so.

I'd carry a spark plug tool and a few spare plugs AND a cheap Sears IR
gun so you can determine quickly which cylinder is not firing should
that happen. As soon as you have the time and money, convert to
American plugs/wires using Dennis's kit.

Have fun! I did almost the same flight, but to lower California in a
YAK-50 and still remember it! Had a ball!

Mark Bitterlich\


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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 2:19 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Those who hate firearms, please do not read. DELETE NOW!

Doc, should we recommend that he carry a handgun? Smile That opened a
HUGE argument LAST time!

On that note, I just got a neat new handgun that is perfect for carry
during LONG cross countries. It is called "The Judge" and is built by
Taurus. About the same size and heft as a S&W 65/66 .357 this one
fires the .45 Colt, OR.... A 2 1/2" standard .410 shotgun round! Fires
5 rounds, so you can go from 000 buck, to birdshot, and then a few .45
Colt rounds for serious stuff. Kills snakes to birds... All in one
handgun. Their new model handles 3" .410 magnums.

Mark Bitterlich


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byronmfox(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 2:30 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Wow!!  http://www.taurususa.com/video/taurus-theJudge-video.cfm

On Oct 27, 2008, at 3:19:16 PM, "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil> wrote:
[quote]From:">"Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil>Subject:RE: Re: New to forumDate:October 27, 2008 3:19:16 PM PDTTo:yak-list(at)matronics.com
--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil>

Those who hate firearms, please do not read. DELETE NOW! 

Doc, should we recommend that he carry a handgun? Smile That opened a
HUGE argument LAST time! 

On that note, I just got a neat new handgun that is perfect for carry
during LONG cross countries. It is called "The Judge" and is built by
Taurus. About the same size and heft as a S&W 65/66 .357 this one
fires the .45 Colt, OR.... A 2 1/2" standard .410 shotgun round! Fires
5 rounds, so you can go from 000 buck, to birdshot, and then a few .45
Colt rounds for serious stuff. Kills snakes to birds... All in one
handgun. Their new model handles 3" .410 magnums. 

Mark Bitterlich


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flushjohnson(at)charter.n
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:02 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Here we go again, HA HA . Should have bought a CJ6, with a large baggage
area.
---


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tswift(at)res-eng.com
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:12 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

What if the guy has plans to fly only one cross-country, this one, to bring
his yak-52 to NorCal and then fly Aerobatics every week and weekend?

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viperdoc(at)mindspring.co
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 7:20 pm    Post subject: New to forum Reply with quote

Copy! I have the 3" version. You are absolutely correct. At 25 ft with #4
shot (.410), it leaves a paper plate size hole in the target! Load #4 (.410)
alternating with .45 and you can stop any varmint quadruped or biped that
wish to do harm to your rosy pink. Since I have a pistol permit from my home
state with reciprocisity between 32 other states, I would take the pistol
with me. If I were making an extended cross country, "the Judge" would be
making the trip fitted nicely in the .38 holster on my survival vest along
with my sarsat gps personal elt, my ICOM hand held UHF radio (I have a PRC
90 also so it would be a tossup as to which one I take), locator flares,
personal strobe, survival mirror, fire starter kit, thermal blanket, Iodine
water purification pills, collapsible water pouch, a couple of 1 pint water
flask in the leg pocket of my flight suit or the helmet bag (can't take it
over the side if you have pickle the A/C in the helmet bag though), compass,
and survival knife. That is my personal survival gear. I would also carry
the tools previously mentioned and spare air in a pony tank along with the
hose/ fittings to recharge the system.
My two cents...Hell yes I would travel across the boonies armed.
Doc

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