Posts tagged with “Bang Phra” and “Flying”
I'm Going Slightly Mad 2010-02-28
I am back from a flying trip to Thailand; and preparing for another one.
On the last trip flying HSAWS, an AC11, I logged:
- 6 hrs
- 4 instrument hours
- 2 IMC; a mixture of Cu, SC, and haze.
- 2 Hood
- 5 instrument approaches
- 2 ILS; VTUQ, VTBU
- 1 LOC; VTBU
- 2 VOR DME; VTUQ, VTBU
- 2 hold entries; VTUQ, VTBU
- 4 holds; VTUQ, VTBU
- 6 landings; Bang Phra twice, Best Ocean Airpark, VTUQ, VTBU.
- 3 go arounds; VTUQ twice, VTBU
- 4 instrument hours
The political situation in Thailand is a little unstable now so I may have to change my plans at short notice.
I am reading The Tender Carnivore & the Sacred Game by Paul Shepard. The book lacks references but sometimes Paul weaves external material into the work stating the Author and the Source. He has a passion for the subject of us regaining our humanity and makes good arguments. I can see that his writing is dated in some respects (first published 1973): hints of Freud, and incomplete nutrition knowledge. Often prophetic, he provides explanations for some of our social ills: e.g. adolescent gang culture. I recommend the book to those looking for how our cultures went wrong and how we might live.
I have my course notes for a Cessna Citation Part 141 Type Rating Course so I am again in study mode.
This week I have discovered:
- TaskPaper
- Notational Velocity
- WriteRoom
- Dropbox
- TextMate
- Markdown
- Simplenote
- QuickCursor
- Liquid Tension Experiment on CD
I will use some of these to aid my study. Notational Velocity is particularly useful. I sync it to Simplenote and keep individual text files in a Dropbox folder. I keep my main TaskPaper file in the SimpleText folder. I access my data with TaskPaper, Notational Velocity, SimpleText and SimpleNote on my iPod Touch, or any other computer, anywhere in the world, forever! FX [manic laughter]
This week I have discovered that sadly:
- The Canon Scanner Drivers for my MP996 Do Not Work! Strange. The printer works just fine and I can scan from Print & Fax provided the Canon IJ Network Scanner Selector is running. It worked in 10.5.
- PCCW never calls back.
- The ATMD has an unlimited supply of badly written, unnecessary, and ineffective Operational Instructions.
- Tacky CNY decorations are still up and people are still happy to have their pictures taken with the crappy glitter in the background.
- Alcohol has similar effects on the body as the poison Fructose; my halo slipped! View the presentation about the toxicity of Fructose by Rober H. Lustig, MD. Now when I look at a glass of Red wine I think can of Coke. Woe, woe!
- My apartment is surrounded by Schnauzer manifestations that yap, howl, and cry all day.
I was using Textile but I will give Markdown a go to see how I get on.
02:01 PM | Tags: Notational Velocity, TaskPaper, Dropbox, Paul Shepard, Bang Phra, Flying, Books, Deep Ecology, TextMate, MarkdownA trip to Buri Ram 2009-09-15
This trip progressed a little differently than normal. We only flew on one day rather than two.
On the first day we went to Buri Ram (VTUO) in HSAWS: my first trip there. We went up at 7,500 ft, picked up W1 at KRT, and turned left at RAMEI toward BRM. I completed two holds on arrival at BRM 216/6.8 and flew the 04 ILS. I struggled with the glidepath a little with an increasing tailwind in the last mile or so. I had the needles crossed again at the Decision Altitude. OSCAR has poor radio coverage in that area. On the way back I could not contact OSCAR so I reverted to 123.6 (combined Approach for the civil airfields in the Korat area). This worked well. Buri Ram Approach handed us to Bangkok Control on 133.1 who passed us to Bangkok Approach on 122.35.
We did not fly on the second day. I slept in (long overdue) and took R & R in Pattaya: got some walking exercise, visited a few shops of interest, finished a book, etc.
Today I flew back to Hong Kong and a Typhoon grazing Hong Kong. I ran up the Dauntless Software FAA Test Program and studied Fundamentals of Instruction. I had plenty of time: two holds at CORAL and one at BAKER.
01:55 PM | Tags: AC11, Bang Phra, Flyinglife in the fast lane 2009-08-26
Dave and I flew HSAWS up to Chaing Mai from "Bang Phra":http://www.thaiflyingclub.com earlier this week. This was my first flight without Tony in the right-hand seat. The Thailand DCA issued an amendment to the 5 year permit for HSAWS allowing either Dave or I to fly solo PIC.
We went to and from VTCC IFR. I logged some actual instrument time, and some hood time with Dave as my safety pilot. The Cu contained some bumps and rain but we avoided the nasty stuff. I kept my head down concentrating on attitude and airspeed while Dave looked out. The worst shear was +- 20 Kt and I reduced speed to Va where prudent. The maximum unintended rate of climb was + 1,500 fpm.
I nailed the VTCC runway 36 ILS and arrived softly softly with the usual tailwind.
We encountered less actual IFR time on the return trip. I cancelled IFR over Chon Buri past the last Cu and with the Bang Phra Condos in sight. I kept my intended 85 Kt until past the trees on Runway 23 and eased off the power for a squeaky soft arrival. The Commander 114 arrives easily provided we treat it as a large aircraft and not a small Cessna or Piper. You will get an impressive sink rate if you allow the speed to come back to 1.3 Vso on final.
I make spur of the moment visits so it is hard to plan ahead to meet up with people I know there. I still managed to meet some "old":http://www.clickandtravelonline.com, and new friends in Chaing Mai.
Yet again I have had a great indeed inspirational trip: 6 hours logged, met (another) Ghost, found out so much about armchair flying. By Tuesday evening I was tired (totally shagged out as we brits say). I slept well on Tuesday night so I was good for the Pattaya to Suvarnabhumi highway fast lane, flight to Hong Kong, and with some regrets work on Wednesday.
05:52 PM | Tags: AC11, Bang Phra, Flying, Chaing MaiThailand 2009-08-24
I am back in Pattaya preparing to break the fast and then drive to Bang Phra.
My plan today is to meet with the other pilots of HSAWS and then for Dave and I to fly to Chaing Mai IFR.
08:18 AM | Tags: AC11, Flying, Bang Phraback in hong kong
I returned to Hong Kong and and work about two weeks ago.
In spite of some technical problems I managed to log more than 7 hours of flying Cessna 172M HSATE over two days in Thailand last week. I was fortunate again to do some interesting and worthwhile flying, and renew friendships.
The first day we (Papa Dave, Daniel, and I) discovered a new airfield down near the Cambodian border. Later we found out that Ko Kut airfield is not in fact new; only upgraded. It now has about 700 M of concrete strip, edge lights, and PAPIs. We may land there on another trip.
The second day I gained experience with high density altitude (over 4000 ft DA), soft, and obstructed landings and departures at Klang Dong airfield. My first landing at Klang Dong was a bit long. I reacted too slowly to the wind increasing as I descended below 100 ft. The adjacent ridge funnels the wind near the airfield. I did a circuit on departure and aced the second soft field landing with 40 degrees of flap. Both of my departures were good but the second was the better of the two. Practice makes perfect! My advice is to treat Klang Dong with great respect and file with Pattaya Air Park: they eat airplanes!
The technical problems with HSATE were avionics related: as usual. The new intercom did not work on the first day so we used a portable intercom. The next day ground staff fitted a second radio and wired it to the new intercom. After about 5 minutes into our flight to Klang Dong the receiver failed and I got to practice the Thailand Radio Failure Procedures again. The ground staff fitted a new radio and we took off again after an hour and a half. The transponder only operates mode A intermittently.Time to Spare? Go by air!
04:04 PM | Tags: C172, Flying, Bang Phra, Klang Dong