Return-Path: Sender: (Marvin Kaye) To: lml Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 00:38:14 -0400 Message-ID: X-Original-Return-Path: Received: from mail.indian-creek.net ([209.176.40.9] verified) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 4.0b6) with ESMTP id 1688960 for lml@lancaironline.net; Thu, 15 Aug 2002 22:07:42 -0400 Received: from 78055.com ([209.176.40.1]) by mail.indian-creek.net with SMTP (IOA-IPAD 3.0) id 5040800; Thu, 15 Aug 2002 21:07:40 -0500 X-Original-Sender: toucan@78055.com From: "toucan" Reply-to: toucan@78055.com X-Original-To: (Lancair Mailing List) Subject: First flight congrats & misc. X-Mailer: WebMAIL to Mail Gateway v2.0q X-Original-Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2002 20:59:53 -0500 X-Original-Message-id: <3d5c5c99.97.41@78055.com> Congratulations, Skip! Great to have another ES flying. As some others have pointed out, you never seem to get finished with the work. My son and I are on a roundabout cross-country, helping him build hours toward a commercial ticket. N143ES has accumulated about 40 hours in the past week, including a Grand Canyon fly-over. We're in Wichita tonight, where Kelly Mfg. swapped out my electric DG for me after it's third failure in about 40 hours. Coupla days ago we had a climb-out from North Las Vegas, where ground temp was +44C and the dewpoint was -4C (no, that's not a mistake -- it is a dry heat!). On a long climb for a high MEA route to the NE, we had oil temps getting above 230 and CHT's climbing toward 400. Even reducing climb rate to minimum and cutting power back some, it was a little tense. Temps at altitude were pretty high, too. We've been running the boost pump on low at anything over 10,000', and even lower when temps are above standard. I'm in the LOP camp, and we've found that the engine runs much more smoothly at altitude with the boost on. Crossing Nebraska today (BFF direct AAO), we had smooth air at 11,500, ground speed of 206+KIAS (nice tailwind), and a Randy Travis CD on the stereo. Life is good. Jim Cameron, N143ES