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Cox Engine of The Month
'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
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'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Still recovering from a couple back-to-back Fun-Fly events some 800 miles apart. After a great time with the wild bunch in the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In down in Little Rock, came home long enough to mow the yard, do some laundry, launch some monthly checks, and swap out some models, before me and my wonderful little travel trailer headed to Montezuma, Iowa for the annual Sig Fly-In.
Where S.M.A.L.L. was under constant threat from storm clouds right up to clearing on Sunday, the Sig Fly-In was severe clear, with 90 degree temps and winds hanging steady in the high teens. As with S.M.A.L.L., the weather was STILL defied by the 'I-Came-To-Fly' disciples through the day, though the main flying usually cut loose early in the evening as the winds smoothed a bit.
The Traveling Hangar.
Hazel Sig's original clip-wing Cub is restored and flown on a regular basis.
Mud Dabber makes a reconnaissance run late on Thursday.
Kept waiting for the Flying Cow to fly, figuring it's owner was concerned about the wind, only to find that it was internally lighted for night flying.
A Focke Wulf 190 in British markings.
On Saturday, a 2:30 am storm played some havoc with any awning that had it's canopy left on it's frame.
Joe mourns his yard-darted Somethin' Xtra...a fatality of Saturdays eight-plane 'Somthin' Xtra Rat Race'.
Late Saturday, and the surviving awnings.
Sunday, and a lot of folks are leaving, but still got some hanging in.
Big Red spies on a couple of guys as they take a combat wing around it's circle at the far end of the model runway.
Just like with the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In, got a bunch more stuff to soft through...
Where S.M.A.L.L. was under constant threat from storm clouds right up to clearing on Sunday, the Sig Fly-In was severe clear, with 90 degree temps and winds hanging steady in the high teens. As with S.M.A.L.L., the weather was STILL defied by the 'I-Came-To-Fly' disciples through the day, though the main flying usually cut loose early in the evening as the winds smoothed a bit.
The Traveling Hangar.
Hazel Sig's original clip-wing Cub is restored and flown on a regular basis.
Mud Dabber makes a reconnaissance run late on Thursday.
Kept waiting for the Flying Cow to fly, figuring it's owner was concerned about the wind, only to find that it was internally lighted for night flying.
A Focke Wulf 190 in British markings.
On Saturday, a 2:30 am storm played some havoc with any awning that had it's canopy left on it's frame.
Joe mourns his yard-darted Somethin' Xtra...a fatality of Saturdays eight-plane 'Somthin' Xtra Rat Race'.
Late Saturday, and the surviving awnings.
Sunday, and a lot of folks are leaving, but still got some hanging in.
Big Red spies on a couple of guys as they take a combat wing around it's circle at the far end of the model runway.
Just like with the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In, got a bunch more stuff to soft through...
Last edited by Kim on Tue Jun 14, 2016 1:18 pm; edited 1 time in total
Kim- Top Poster
-
Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Loving living vicariously through the lens of Kim
very sad that I failed to get to meet you at S.M.A.L.L (what a PITA to type)
did you meet any other CEFers there? I assume Xplane guy but anyone else show up
very sad that I failed to get to meet you at S.M.A.L.L (what a PITA to type)
did you meet any other CEFers there? I assume Xplane guy but anyone else show up
fredvon4- Top Poster
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Posts : 4012
Join date : 2011-08-26
Age : 69
Location : Lampasas Texas
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
fredvon4 wrote:Loving living vicariously through the lens of Kim
very sad that I failed to get to meet you at S.M.A.L.L (what a PITA to type)
did you meet any other CEFers there? I assume Xplane guy but anyone else show up
Hey Fred! I was gonna shoot you a note...was hoping you were OK. Nope...this time, it was just me and Tony representing C.E.F. (to my knowledge). However, Tony did his best to account for several members by flying pretty much at every opportunity!
Hope you're doing good man!
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Hi Kim, I really like your road crusin set up. I think I got a glimpse of the whole rig in this photo? That rig must really be something barreling down the open road, pretty cool!!
I just started SS a few months ago and my wife will soon follow and a rig like that is what we will cruse the good ol USA with.
Sept maybe the van will be a large pickup.
PS That cub is a real beauty! Thanks for sharing your adventures!!
I just started SS a few months ago and my wife will soon follow and a rig like that is what we will cruse the good ol USA with.
Sept maybe the van will be a large pickup.
PS That cub is a real beauty! Thanks for sharing your adventures!!
crankbndr- Top Poster
- Posts : 3109
Join date : 2011-12-10
Location : Homestead FL
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Cool pictures Kim....thanks for sharing! We sure had a good time at SMALL.
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
crankbndr wrote:Hi Kim, I really like your road crusin set up. I think I got a glimpse of the whole rig in this photo? That rig must really be something barreling down the open road, pretty cool!!
I just started SS a few months ago and my wife will soon follow and a rig like that is what we will cruse the good ol USA with.
Sept maybe the van will be a large pickup.
PS That cub is a real beauty! Thanks for sharing your adventures!!
Thanks man...I appreciate it! Yeah, this is the whole rig, and I'm liking it!
It's great to leave the gear in the van and just go to bed when I feel like it...and of course...that peaceful cup of coffee first thing in the morning to make me feel like dealing with the day!
Let me know when you two hit the road...maybe we'll close in on Rusty or Ron or some other victim this Fall !!!!
Last edited by Kim on Wed Jun 15, 2016 8:00 am; edited 3 times in total
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
More photos...mostly self-explanatory...
Last edited by Kim on Thu Jun 16, 2016 4:39 pm; edited 1 time in total
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Cool Looking Planes , appears there where a few crash ups also , the fly by night cow is a most different approach but Nice // What are the orange looking cone things set up for ? Thanks Kim for you sharing us you adventures and your traveling camp any where air show at hand van set up is SOOO nice ! Eric
getback- Top Poster
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Posts : 10437
Join date : 2013-01-18
Age : 67
Location : julian , NC
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
getback wrote:Cool Looking Planes , appears there where a few crash ups also , the fly by night cow is a most different approach but Nice // What are the orange looking cone things set up for ? Thanks Kim for you sharing us you adventures and your traveling camp any where air show at hand van set up is SOOO nice ! Eric
Thanks Eric!
The yellow cones are runway markers...the fly-in is held at a grass strip airport in Hazel Sig's back yard! They seem to be 'airplane magnets' as, I saw a couple 'clips', and one 'dead-on head-on'!
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
andrew wrote:Great pics, Kim. Thanks for posting.
Andrew Dude! Just now stumbled over your post! Thank You AND hope you're well !!!!
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
More wrecks??
Kim wrote:More photos...mostly self-explanatory...
All too familiar scenes. I get a monthly newsletter emailed from a local RC club, with some members regularly encouraging me to get involved & take up RC rather than "flying in circles".
Well, every month they have 2-3 pages dedicated to the past month's wrecks. Most of them are blamed on simple, but catastrophic, mistakes, but mostly on radio equipment failure. (or the failure of the pilot to take responsibility for his own inadequacies.)
Anyway, why would I spend a heap of money and time I can't afford to get one, maybe two flights in each month before having to re-kit or replace. Why would I risk a technical inadequacy making me responsible for property or personal damage? Time, patience and money don't allow it. While I love watching Kim's flying footage, it's not for me.
Flying in circles? Well, I can see, hear, feel and smell my planes, just like when you pilot the real thing. I'll keep thinking inside the circle (as opposed to the "square").
Rod.
Oldenginerod- Top Poster
- Posts : 4018
Join date : 2012-06-15
Age : 62
Location : Drouin, Victoria
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
I don't why know for sure but it is called the
"Sig Fly In"
Where you can:
Fly in the sky up
Or fly into the ground
Fly straight in or upside down
Fly into another plane
Or land in a tree
Fly 'em till their wings fly off
Andn flutter to the ground
Crash'em and smash 'em
Back into balsa bits
Sig is the place
where you can buy your new kits!!
I think RC flying must be like Racing....you don't go to watch the races but to watch the crashes.
"Sig Fly In"
Where you can:
Fly in the sky up
Or fly into the ground
Fly straight in or upside down
Fly into another plane
Or land in a tree
Fly 'em till their wings fly off
Andn flutter to the ground
Crash'em and smash 'em
Back into balsa bits
Sig is the place
where you can buy your new kits!!
I think RC flying must be like Racing....you don't go to watch the races but to watch the crashes.
Marleysky- Top Poster
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Posts : 3618
Join date : 2014-09-28
Age : 72
Location : Grand Rapids, MI
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
I didn't mean to turn the thread into a 'downer' with the crash photos, though it is all part of the deal. To be fair, though it looked like a lot of wreckage, the immense volume of planes that flew during the Fly-In kinda levels it out.
My own Kadet 'Mud Dabber' has been flying since the early 1980's (yes, with two or three rebuilds along the way), so R/C's CAN be long-lived...mostly at the discretion of the owner.
Control Line guys have historically taken a lot of grief from the R/C crowd, often with some blazing ignorance/indifference about the C/L hobby. I got a foot in both boats, but don't much go evangelist in either direction. Working in the hobby store I DID occasionally venture a couple times to explain that 'them models that fly on strings with no throttle' don't necessarily fall from the sky 'when their motors quit'. Didn't make any headway there...most of these guys just want to tell their story without actually learning anything new. So, I now just smile and respond, "No kidding?"
The two are different of course, but similar in that it's up to the hobbyist as to how deep ($$$) they go into either. I enjoy watching some of the monster flying machines, and admire the discipline it takes to get them in the air, but could never relax and just enjoy flying something that costs as much as my bike.
For me, the draw of the Sig Fly-In is much like the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In, seeing the stuff AND visiting with great people...and there are a bunch at either.
My own Kadet 'Mud Dabber' has been flying since the early 1980's (yes, with two or three rebuilds along the way), so R/C's CAN be long-lived...mostly at the discretion of the owner.
Control Line guys have historically taken a lot of grief from the R/C crowd, often with some blazing ignorance/indifference about the C/L hobby. I got a foot in both boats, but don't much go evangelist in either direction. Working in the hobby store I DID occasionally venture a couple times to explain that 'them models that fly on strings with no throttle' don't necessarily fall from the sky 'when their motors quit'. Didn't make any headway there...most of these guys just want to tell their story without actually learning anything new. So, I now just smile and respond, "No kidding?"
The two are different of course, but similar in that it's up to the hobbyist as to how deep ($$$) they go into either. I enjoy watching some of the monster flying machines, and admire the discipline it takes to get them in the air, but could never relax and just enjoy flying something that costs as much as my bike.
For me, the draw of the Sig Fly-In is much like the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In, seeing the stuff AND visiting with great people...and there are a bunch at either.
Kim- Top Poster
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Posts : 8625
Join date : 2011-09-06
Location : South East Missouri
Re: 'Back Home Again'...from the Sig Fly-In
Downer, smnowner, those pictures are worth a thousand words! I live vicariously thru other proples adventures and your pictures are a big part of that! I can't find them right now, but we had a "new year day" first fly of the year, I took pictures of one members
Meticulously built Taube, fantastic looking model. Out for its maiden flight, It re kitted it self right in front of the owner, about 15 seconds after take off. Boy, was he surprised...."guess I should have balanced her a little better". Back to the building
board. I, like Oldenginerod, like to have strings attached to my flying models! So I know I can find the parts after a rough landing.
Thanks for the pictures, Kim.
Meticulously built Taube, fantastic looking model. Out for its maiden flight, It re kitted it self right in front of the owner, about 15 seconds after take off. Boy, was he surprised...."guess I should have balanced her a little better". Back to the building
board. I, like Oldenginerod, like to have strings attached to my flying models! So I know I can find the parts after a rough landing.
Thanks for the pictures, Kim.
Marleysky- Top Poster
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Posts : 3618
Join date : 2014-09-28
Age : 72
Location : Grand Rapids, MI
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