KFfan

Contributing Member
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Everything posted by KFfan

  1. KFfan added a post in a topic Lets talk elevator trim   

    'Simple' trim tab setup on a KF1
     

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  2. KFfan added a post in a topic 532 parts?   

    Aren't these ALL go-karts with wings?
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  3. KFfan added a post in a topic STOL wing ribs   

    Speaking of Kayaks...
    Anyone have any ideas about mounting a 10' rotomold craft under a tail wheel KF2 with a 582?
     
    Just thinkin'...
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  4. KFfan added a post in a topic West Circuit flying   


    My wife said this will work...
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  5. KFfan added a post in a topic Avid Flyer on Floats   

    Good thoughts. Perhaps that is the reason it is for sale.
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  6. KFfan added a post in a topic Trim system and header tank   

    Please excuse my ignorance;
    Is that looking forward from the rear of the stabalizer & leading edge of the elevator?
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  7. KFfan added a post in a topic Trade Avid B airframe nice   

    Will your law firm work on contract?
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  8. KFfan added a post in a topic Kitfox As Art?   

    From Wikipidia;
     
    Signer gives a humorous twist to the concept of cause and effect and to the traditional scientific method of experimentation and discovery, taking on the self-evidence of scientific logic as an artistic challenge. As well as working in his studio, which he calls his lab, Signer often takes off to the Swiss mountains to conduct larger experiments. A recent example of his installation work was "Accident as sculpture" (Unfall als Skulptur)(2008) in which Signer had a three-wheeled delivery car, loaded with water barrels, roll down an 11 m high ramp and up the other side. At the apex, the vehicle overturned and crashed to the ground. The resulting chaotic arrangement constituted the exhibition at Kunstraum Dornbirn.  Another example, the video 56 Small Helicopters (56 Kleine Helikopter) (2008) shows a squadron of 56 remote-controlled toy helicopters as they rise into the air, collide with each other, carom off the ceiling and walls, and finally die in mechanical spasms on the floor.
     
    Perhaps he has been to Colorado, Washington, Alaska?
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  9. KFfan added a post in a topic Kitfox As Art?   

    It reminded me of "Art" from the 60's.
    Sometimes beauty is in the eye of the artist...
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  10. KFfan added a topic in For Sale and wanted, you got it, I want it   

    Avid Flyer on Floats
    I happened to find this a few minutes ago. Located in the Buchanan MI area.
     
    https://swmi.craigslist.org/for/4918113772.html
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  11. KFfan added a post in a topic Kitfox As Art?   

    You are "literate" enough to do posting. That's what counts...
     
    Not sufficiently fluent to haggle the price for overnight? I assumed that was a requirement for all U.S. servicemen overseas...
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  12. KFfan added a post in a topic Kitfox As Art?   

    Did you increase the volume for your amplifier?
    Unless you understand  a certain European language, you did not miss anything by not having audio... 
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  13. KFfan added a topic in KitFox General Forum   

    Kitfox As Art?

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  14. KFfan added a post in a topic Craigslist   

    I just read in the "other" forum that 2 guys went to look at it. The report was "the guy said he had bad vibes and wouldn't show it". Things that seem too good usually have a catch to them.
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  15. KFfan added a post in a topic SURVIVED THE CRASHES, and CRASHES, and CRASHES!   

    Then it can only get better.....
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  16. KFfan added a post in a topic Starting my kitfox 1 build pictures here   

    I think mine took 3 weeks with all the s dotted and Ts crossed
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  17. KFfan added a post in a topic Crosswind   

    Runway?
    Taxiways are fair game also...
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  18. KFfan added a post in a topic Check out my knob   

    I was afraid to look.
    But then, it was just like a train wreck...just had to!
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  19. KFfan added a post in a topic Fun day on the East Circuit   

    4th photo. Is that an Eagle's nest in the tree on the right?
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  20. KFfan added a post in a topic WW II B-17 STORY   

    Thanks for additional investigative work...
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  21. KFfan added a post in a topic WW II B-17 STORY   

    Numbers? What numbers? LOL
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  22. KFfan added a post in a topic plastic leading edge   

    Uhhh, those look more like floats  
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  23. KFfan added a post in a topic Seat Back Ferry Tank   

    I had thought of something similar when/if I do a longer cross country. My thought was to put it up front on the right side of my KF to lessen the aft CG effect.
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  24. KFfan added a post in a topic WW II B-17 STORY   

    Thanks for the visual aids for the story!
     
    I've been thinking about the crew and how they worked together to create the best enviroment they could, using what they had, to make the best possible outcome.
     
    We had one really close call on the submarine I rode. Again, it was a group effort and quick rational thinking of the crew members isolated in the effected compartment that averted disaster. Of course the skipper getting us on the surface quickly and safely helped too   
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  25. KFfan added a topic in Close Call's and dumb stunts   

    WW II B-17 STORY
    A friend sent this to me.
    Never heard this amazing story:
     
    B-17 "All American" (414th Squadron, 97BG)
     
    Crew:

    Pilot- Ken Bragg Jr.
    Copilot- G. Boyd Jr.
    Navigator- Harry C. Nuessle
    Bombardier- Ralph Burbridge
    Engineer- Joe C. James
    Radio Operator- Paul A. Galloway
    Ball Turret Gunner- Elton Conda
    Waist Gunner- Michael Zuk
    Tail Gunner- Sam T. Sarpolus
    Ground Crew Chief- Hank Hyland

    In 1943 a mid-air collision on February 1, 1943, between a B-17 and a German fighter over the 
    Tunis dock area, became the subject of one of the most famous photographs of WW II. An enemy fighter attacking a 97th Bomb Group formation went out of control, probably with a wounded pilot, then continued its crashing descent into the rear of the fuselage of a Fortress named "All American", piloted by Lt. Kendrick R. Bragg, of the 414th Bomb Squadron. When it struck, the fighter broke apart, but left some pieces in the B-17. The left horizontal stabilizer of the Fortress and left elevator were completely torn away. The two right engines were out and one on the left had a serious oil pump leak. The vertical fin and the rudder had been damaged, the fuselage had been cut almost completely through connected only at two small parts of the frame, and the radios, electrical and oxygen systems were damaged. There was also a hole in the top that was over 16 feet long and 4 feet wide at its widest;
    the split in the fuselage went all the way to the top gunner's turret.

    Although the tail actually bounced and swayed in the wind and twisted when the plane turned and all the control cables were severed, except one single elevator cable still worked, and the aircraft miraculously still flew!

    The tail gunner was trapped because there was no floor connecting the tail to the rest of the plane. The waist and tail gunners used parts of the German fighter and their own parachute harnesses in an attempt to keep the tail from ripping off and the two sides of the fuselage from splitting apart. 

    While the crew was trying to keep the bomber from coming apart, the pilot continued on his bomb run and released his bombs over the target.

    When the bomb bay doors were opened, the wind turbulence was so great that it blew one of the waist gunners into the broken tail section. It took several minutes and four crew members to pass him ropes from parachutes and haul him back into the forward part of the plane. When they tried to do the same for the tail gunner, the tail began flapping so hard that it began to break off. The weight of the gunner was adding some stability to the tail section, so he went back to his position. The turn back toward England had to be very slow to keep the tail from twisting off. They actually covered almost 70 miles to make the turn home. The bomber was so badly damaged that it was losing altitude and speed and was soon alone in the sky. 

    For a brief time, two more Me-109 German fighters attacked the All American. Despite the extensive damage, all of the machine gunners were able to respond to these attacks and soon drove off the fighters. The two waist gunners stood up with their heads sticking out through the hole in the top of the fuselage to aim and fire their machine guns. The tail gunner had to shoot in short bursts because the recoil was actually causing the plane to turn. 

    Allied P-51 fighters intercepted the All American as it crossed over the Channel and took one of the pictures shown. They also radioed to the base describing that the appendage was waving like a fish tail and that the plane would not make it and to send out boats to rescue the crew when they bailed out. 

    The fighters stayed with the Fortress, taking hand signals from Lt. Bragg and relaying them to the base. Lt. Bragg signalled that 5 parachutes and the spare had been "used" so five of the crew could not bail out. He made the decision that if they could not bail out safely, then he would stay with the plane to land it. 

    Two and a half hours after being hit, the aircraft made its final turn to line up with the runway while it was still over 40 miles away. It descended into an emergency landing and a normal roll-out on its landing gear.

     
    When the ambulance pulled alongside, it was waved off because not a single member of the crew had been injured. No one could believe that the aircraft could still fly in such a condition. The Fortress sat placidly until the crew all exited through the door in the fuselage and the tail gunner had climbed down a ladder, at which time the entire rear section of the aircraft collapsed. 

    This old bird had done its job and brought the entire crew home uninjured.
     
    My father flew in B-24s in the pacific. Many fond memories of the stories. I am named after his best friend who died in a post takeoff crash. What an honor...
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