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Flying the AA-1

This is our ride, tied down at Paine Field in Everett. Well, I’m back in North Dakota again after a relaxing winter break – and some awful travel experiences with Northwest. All I’ll say on that topic is to avoid booking regional legs of your flights on equipment operated by Pinnacle. New Years in Seattle is always fun, and I managed to catch up with just about everyone while I was in town. As for the family’s new silver American AA-1A Yankee, it’s great fun. For an inexpensive (really; we spent quite a bit less than $25,000 all told) aircraft that just puts a huge grin on your face, look no further. It’s extremely responsive in roll and pitch, almost aerobatic, but it’s still a nice steady cross-country cruiser.

I got checked out by a local Grumman instructor, doing a couple stalls and some steep turns before heading to Arlington Municipal for landings. Stalls were identifiable far in advance, and the buffet was followed by only slight wing drop. I can honestly say I’ve never flown a plane this rock-solid in steep turns; I snapped it to around 45°, added some back pressure, and it whipped through the turn like it was on rails. No altitude wandering, no change in airspeed – just a nice, steady 360° turn.

There's really nothing like flying in the Pacific Northwest - that's Mount Rainier to the southwest on a beautiful winter day. If there’s one negative thing to be said about the Yankee, it’s that it needs to go fast. There’s really no such thing as slow flight (stall is 60 mph with flaps down, 63 with them up), so it requires careful management of power and airspeed to avoid getting caught on the backside of the power curve. Still, landings were uneventful – it acts a lot like a small Piper, though it weathervanes a bit more in crosswinds due to very light weight. It took a couple laps around the pattern to get my head back into the landing-from-the-left-seat groove after a semester of instructing from the right.

Eric (the CFI checking me out – we’re everywhere in aviation) had me run through a power-off approach from pattern altitude, and it worked surprisingly well for an airplane that sinks like a brick. If you’ve ever tried to stick a power-off accuracy 180° approach and landing in a Piper Arrow, for example, this is quite a bit easier provided airspeed is kept at 85 mph the whole way around.

Heading over to the restaurant for our $100 hamburgers. My dad and I took a few brief $100 hamburger trips as my break wrapped up, heading first over to the Spruce Goose Cafe at Jeffco (the Washington one, not the Colorado) and a little breakfast place in Friday Harbor. On the whole, the Yankee handles delightfully, and should be a lot of fun for me and my dad over the next few years. And, of course, if you’re in the Seattle area and are interested in seeing what the world of flying is like, don’t hesitate to contact me for information or about getting a ride.

Read these comments

Ah, the $100 hamburger. AviatorDave and I did a lot of those trips. I landed a contract today, and the first thing I’m going to do is get into the next intake for ground school. Actually, that’s the second thing. The first thing I’m doing is flying to Vancouver next weekend. If I was there any longer, I’d be driving to Seattle and bugging your dad for a $100 hamburger trip!

That’s great news! I’m sure you’ll have fun with it (and the YVR trip). How far do you plan to go with your training?

The best part about the Grumman is that what would normally be a $100 hamburger winds up being at most a $40 hamburger – only burning 5 gallons an hour is a wonderful thing!

Five gallons an hour! That’s impressive. Fuel economy can make such a difference, especially with the cost of avgas being what it is.

I haven’t made any long-term goals for the flight training because I’ve bitten off quite a bit to chew with the contracted job. (Totally new field.) With that and other commitments, it will take me a while to get my private pilot’s license. But if I can keep a few toes in aviation while I get my feet wet in my current job, it will be a good work/life balance. You can bet I’ll be circulating while in flight school to see if I can find any pilots willing to take passengers!

I now live in the Toronto harbourfront area and I can see the Toronto City Centre airstrip from my apartment. It’s a busy little island airport and Porter Airlines began using it last October. It’s not quite the same as living in Vancouver and watching seaplanes take off and land in Coal Harbour from my office, but I’ll take it…

‘tis a cute plane. I still need to get Dad to bring his AA-5b up here so I can impress Jen and our friends. :-D

I didn’t realize you needed to impress Jen now that you were married, Chris. ;)

Gail, yeah, the fuel economy is a huge bonus. It’s running an O-235, the same engine that’s in a Cessna 152, and it actually has the autogas conversion, which would put gas at around $15/hr. Only problem there is that basically all the pumps in the Seattle area have ethanol.

I wish my apartment in North Dakota had a view anything like yours, though – I get to look at a freeway and hundreds of miles of flat land! Good luck tracking down some rides during the ground school.

Jen must always be impressed.

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