The Pilot’s Lounge #7:
Flying Antique and Classic Airplanes

Sooner or later, every pilot gets the chance to fly an antique or older airplane. And, just as inevitably, problems arise. In The Pilot Lounge, AVweb's Rick Durden explores the many considerations a successful transition to one of these older aircraft can require. Step into the Lounge for more on making your transition a successful one.

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The Pilots LoungeWell start this month’s activities at the virtual airport with a classic jet trivia question: Boeing Aircraft Company numbered all of its jetliners with the figure “7” at the beginning and end of a three-digit number. With the purchase of McDonnell Douglas, Boeing is now reusing its designator “717” for what historically was the DC-9/MD-8X series of jets. What airplane was originally designated as the Boeing 717 and is still in widespread use today? The answer appears at the end of the column.


Old Versus New

We are lucky here at the virtualairport because, as with many moderate-size airports, we have an interesting cross sectionof older airplanes. We have noticed that as the pilot base evolves, more and more pilotswho trained on contemporary or “modern” airplanes (built in the late 50sor later) are buying or at least having the opportunity to fly older airplanes. JohnDeakin discussed the need for warbird pilots in his column. Here at the lounge, we see theother end of the spectrum; the little old airplanes are changing hands and being flown bya younger generation of pilots. We think that is a pretty good thing, because theseantiques and classics have a certain panache to them and are literally flying pieces ofhistory. What we are also seeing is that pilots trained on modern airplanes do not realizehow relatively easy the new airplanes are to fly and they experience some culture shockwhen they discover that older airplanes require some work to fly. A few get discouragedand quit while a few bend airplanes.

One evening, some of the instructors got together to talk about procedures to helppilots used to flying modern airplanes make the transition to the fascinating world ofolder airplanes. They came up with several points a pilot should keep in mind when gettingready to fly older airplanes and I copied down as much as I could. Interestingly, the mostrepeated theme was that old airplanes have quirks, behaviors and systems that simply donot exist in modern airplanes. The worst thing a modern airplane pilot can do is try andjump into an old airplane and fly without spending some time with an instructor who knowsthe machine.

Legalities

Well get those out of the way up front. It is a simple fact that a pilot may haveto have flight instruction and receive a logbook endorsement before acting as pilot incommand of an older airplane. This little requirement is too often overlooked, until theramp check. Thats when I get a new client. For your peace of mind, make sure youjump through the legal hoops with older airplanes.

A Citabria
Flying a tailwheel airplane like this Citabria may require a logbook endorsement.

Does the airplane have a tailwheel? Under FAR 61.31(i) the pilot must have a checkoutfrom a flight instructor that includes specific pilot operations and get a logbookendorsement unless he or she has flown as PIC of a tailwheel airplane prior to April 15,1991.

The World War II primary trainers such as the Boeing Stearman or Waco UPF-7 were builtto teach people how to fly, were pretty forgiving and cruised at less than their cockpitdecibel level but still have a minimum of 220 horsepower up front. That means the pilotmust have a high-performance checkout under FAR 61.31(f) or have flown as PIC of anairplane with more than 200 horsepower prior to August 4, 1997. (The grandfather date fortailwheel is not the same as for high-performance or complex aircraft.)

A technicality? I wonder whether your insurance will cover you should you have anaccident when you were not legal to fly the airplane as PIC. Few policies penalize minorFAR violations anymore; however, not meeting FARs to be PIC might cause some claimshandler to raise his eyebrows at you.

The complex aircraft checkout requirement of FAR 61.31(e) may affect you if you havenot flown as PIC of an aircraft with retractable landing gear, flaps and a constant-speedpropeller prior to August 4, 1997. You may need some dual and an endorsement.

What about recent experience to act as PIC? If the airplane has a tailwheel, thelandings in the previous 90 days must be to a full stop per 61.57(c), not thetouch-and-goes allowed for nosewheel airplanes.

Tailwheels

A large proportion of classic and antique aircraft have tailwheels. It was cheaper tobuild the airplane that way and it allowed operations from unimproved fields. As a result,tailwheel airplanes are the ones with “conventional” landing gear. Some of theconsiderations involved with flying these machines were addressed in “ThePilot’s Lounge #2: Why Not Fly Tailwheel?.”

Get A Checkout From An Instructor Who Knows The Airplane

Okay. Recommending a good checkout does not exactly require deep thought. It is alsoignored far too often and the accident rate for pilots new to a type of airplane,particularly an old one, is painfully high. It is more than a matter of switch placement.Many older airplanes are difficult to fly, have “quirks” which may bedistinctive to the type, and may have performance peculiarities that can kill you if youwalk into a corner of the envelope ignorant of their existence. For example, on any numberof older airplanes, attempting to use the ailerons to pick up a low wing at close to stallspeed may result in aileron reversal. That is, applying left aileron will cause theairplane to roll right. Sometimes vigorously. The reason is the simple lack of aerodynamicknowledge at the time the airplane was built and the descending aileron stalls thatsection of the wing. Not being aware of that fact can result in an attention-grabbingevent for the pilot new to old airplanes.

Points To Ponder

Aircraft Systems

A Curtiss P-40, ready to go.
Anyone attempting to fly this P-40 should first get a thorough checkout on its systems and quirks.

Older airplanes do not follow modern certification rules on switch positions oroperation of their systems. For example, fuel systems can be incredibly complex on evensmall, single-engine airplanes. Flying without first doing ones homework and fullyunderstanding the airplane’s systems is too often fatal. Even a devoted warbird pilot suchas Jeff Ethell apparently made his final error with a fuel system of the P-38, running atank dry under conditions in which he could not restart the engine. [EDITOR’SNOTE: AVweb includes the NTSB’s finalreport on the Jeff Ethell P-38 crash.] Before you get in, know how to get at all thefuel in the airplane, where any return fuel from a fuel-injected engine goes so youdont overfill a tank (early Bonanzas return fuel to the left tank, Cessna 310sreturn fuel to the mains only), and how to shut off all of the fuel to the engine(s)should you desire. Does the fuel selector handle function by pointing the long or shortend at the detent? Is the electrical system 12- or 24-volt? Does it matter? Why? How doesit work in an emergency? How much oil does the engine hold? What is the minimum amount?

The older the airplane, the more likely the systems are to have a design philosophywhich is unfamiliar and probably counterintuitive to you. It is wise to have a goodworking knowledge of the systems when something goes south in flight rather than to tryand puzzle things out under stress.

Stick Versus Wheel

Have you ever flown an airplane equipped with a stick? You will find you are now usingyour left hand on the throttle rather than your right. It is not a big change, but itstill takes from 30 minutes to three hours to become comfortable. This is not one of thebig challenges in transition; however, it does add to the workload and must be consideredwhen checking out in that lovely old Super Cruiser you just bought.

Draining Water From The Tanks

Figure out how to go about it. The most common cause of water in the fuel is leakingfuel caps (not condensation in the tanks, as that is so minor as to be almost completelyignored). If the airplane is parked outside and it does not have “umbrella”style fuel caps or caps that do not seal well, every rainy day is doing your fuel qualitya disservice. Make sure it is possible to drain the low point of your fuel tanks. All ofthem. If there is a tank you cannot drain completely, keep that in mind when deciding toselect it. Pick a portion of flight where you have the altitude to deal with a balkyengine should that tank have a slug of water in it. If you have any doubt about being ableto get the water out of a tank, get a mechanic involved before flying the airplane.

Rudder Effectiveness

A number of the airplanes built in the 20s and 30s had very small ruddersand vertical stabilizers. The idea was to reduce drag as much as possible. Take a look ata picture of a Fokker Trimotor and the tiny rudder available. Manufacturers could get awaywith the practice because very few airports had runways, simply being open fields, sotakeoffs and landings were made into the wind. The airplane did not have to handlecrosswinds. It also made many of the airplanes neutrally stable in yaw. While flying alongthe pilot can push a rudder pedal until the ball is completely to one side of the race. Onletting go of the rudder, the airplane will continue to fly sideways, making no effort tostraighten itself out. The concept that the pilot must take action to keep the tail behindthe rest of the airplane in flight takes a degree of adjustment. It also means thatcrosswind landings can be more than a little exciting.

Poor Control Harmony

While the principles of lift, thrust, drag and gravity were figured out fairly early,the idea that the controls could be harmonized took more advanced aerodynamics than manyof the designers could muster. The Beech Staggerwing was one of the first airplanes to getrudder, aileron and elevator harmonized reasonably well. Before that, the rudders wereoften terribly light, the ailerons heavy, and the elevators somewhere in the middle, withcontrol effectiveness varying in some other fashion. Of the light aircraft, the AeroncaC-2 and C-3 were the first to have something approaching decent control harmony. Theelevator and rudders are quite nice, but those airplanes set the stage for the Champs andCitabrias to have terribly heavy, relatively ineffective ailerons. For the pilot who getsto fly a C-3, keep in mind that this airplane – which does not fit between the covers ofany “Joy of Flying” book – was still far better than those that preceded it.

After Richard Bach flew some of the World War I airplanes for a movie, he wrote that hewas honored to fly the historic aircraft but he had to keep reminding himself of the honorbecause they were such awful pigs to fly.

Brakes

Find out what kind of brakes the airplane has and what level of effectiveness toexpect. Early airplane brakes were spotty at best. They would heat up and fade when youmost needed them, particularly if you had to taxi any distance in a crosswind. Some wouldseemingly do nothing during much of the pedal travel, then suddenly grab and risk tippingthe airplane up on its nose. Part of your checkout involves asking the person who knowsthe airplane about using the brakes. Part of the joys of owning some of these airplanes,such as the Boeing Stearman, are endless brake problems.

Heel brakes

As I first wrote that phrase it came out “Hell brakes.” Freudian slip. (Ok, aFreudian slip is where you say one thing but mean your mother.) Heel brakes areapproximately one inch square each and are found beneath their respective rudder pedals.For the first-time pilot they shrink to one millimeter square. They take some getting usedto. Do not wear hard dress shoes, high heels or cowboy boots when flying heel brakes.Appropriate footwear means being able to feel those little pedals and apply pressure tothem, so sneakers or deck shoes are best. Heel brakes also vary widely in effectivenessfrom almost nonexistent to stop on a dime, tip the airplane up on the nose and shatter apropeller.

Ground Visibility In Three-Point Attitude

While working summers at an airport during my high school years, a friend of minetaxied a Grumman Ag-Cat into a pickup truck. He was moving slowly up a narrow taxiway onwhich someone had parked the truck. He couldnt see anything directly forward and hecouldnt “S” turn to assist the process, plus he was busy just trying tokeep the airplane on the pavement. He realized something was amiss when the engine beganto run more slowly and developed a peculiar roughness. Shortly after that someone canrunning around a wing tip frantically signaling him to shut down. He had torn thebejabbers out of the truck bed, but only caused relatively minor damage to the prop. Theproblem was being unable to see around the large radial engine on the front of theCat.

An Aeronca
Forward visibility from this Aeronca while on the ground is much better than with other taildraggers.

Visibility on the ground varies widely on older tailwheel airplanes. The Champ, whichis soloed from the front seat, is great. The Boeing Stearman, soloed from the rear seat,and sporting a radial engine, is quite blind forward. In fact, the fuselage has begun totaper toward the tail at the point where the pilot sits, so there are no lines on the sideof the airplane which can be kept parallel to runway edges when seeking visual referencepoints to try and determine what direction the airplane is traveling. The solution? Spendsome time sitting in the airplane while it is parked and get a sight picture. Park it on ataxiway, directly on the center line, then get in and see what you can see and what youcan use for references. Pilots have flown airplanes that were completely blind straightahead such as the Spirit of St. Louis and the Gee Bee Racers, so you can as well. Justtake some time to sit in the airplane before you go.

While taxiing, it is perfectly acceptable – expected, in fact – to weave along thetaxi route so you can see what is in front of you. Before takeoff, position the airplaneso you can see down the runway before lining up. If you have any doubt about what is infront of you, take action to allow yourself to see. After one landing during his flighttraining, my father realized he didnt trust the guy in the airplane ahead of him toturn off the runway, so he popped the tail up so he could see ahead. He was right. A cadetahead had turned his Cub around on the runway and was blissfully, and blindly, taxiingback. By looking, Dad was able to take some evasive action and reduce the ensuing crashfrom very serious to one where he just lost his upper teeth. On takeoff, if you cantsee ahead, position the airplane at an angle so you can look over the area before liningup, then, once rolling, get the tail up so you can see. On landing, touch down as slowlyas possible, then get the speed down to where you can start to “S” turn and seewhat is out in front.

Hand-Propping

Many older airplanes, particularly the smaller ones, do not have electrical systems andtherefore lack “self-commencers.” Someone has to use the Armstrong startermethod to spin the propeller. Physically, it is not difficult. However, there are so manythings that can go wrong that a good bit of instruction from someone who knows what to doand what to watch for is essential. Its wise to be hesitant to take such instructionfrom a guy justifiably named “Stumpy.”

  1. Make sure the airplane isnt going anywhere. That almost always means having two people for the process so that one can hold the brakes. Yes, there are EXTREMELY rare circumstances where only one person will be involved in this process. There is never, ever, under any circumstances any reason why this process is done solo without the tail of the airplane being tied down and the main wheels chocked in some fashion. Every year, someone props his airplane by himself and it roars away to hit him or other airplanes or actually takes off. In the last two years, Ive been aware of one meathead who did this. His airplane went down a taxiway between two rows of parked airplanes and destroyed a Glassair with less than 10 hours on it since construction had finished.
  2. Make sure you and the other person have a working agreement as to how the process will go and that you understand each other clearly on terminology. If you are swinging the prop and the pilot wants you to pull it through a few times with the switch off, have the pilot put the keys (if it has keys) on top of the panel where you can see them. Even then, assume the mag switch is bad and the engine is going to start. When you are ready to move the prop, call for brakes. Make sure the pilot clearly says the brakes are applied. Then, push on the prop to see if the airplane will move. If it does, you need to have a serious discussion with the pilot. Either the brakes dont work or he doesnt. If the brakes work, I suggest you decline the pleasure of swinging his prop because you cant trust him.
  3. Make sure you have a good place to stand. The ground should not be in any condition that causes you to question your footing.
  4. Do not wrap your fingertips around the back of the blade. If the engine kicks back its going to hurt like crazy and you risk losing the ends of your fingers.
  5. If you want to kick a leg up and then use its leverage as it drops to help spin the prop, fine. Just make sure that your motion is away from the airplane when the propeller is moving. A good wrist snap will help get the prop through at least one compression stroke. (There are some airplanes that require that you swing the propeller very, very slowly, so get a briefing from someone knowledgeable.) Continue moving away from the airplane until the prop stops turning. If it didnt start you can start moving back into position only after the prop stops. If it starts, you are moving away, which is good. Continue doing so. If the engine is balky, avoid the mind-set that it isnt going to start as you could come walking back, hands reaching for a blade, when the engine decides it is in a reciprocating mood.
  6. Once it is running, if you are going to get in, walk around the wing and approach the door from behind. Give the propeller a very wide berth, since it is much more resistant to impact than you.

Fuel Gauges

A large number of older airplanes with multiple fuel tanks do not have a gauge for eachone. Often a gauge only reads the quantity of fuel in the tank selected. This means thatyou need to know how (if it is possible) to get a fuel quantity reading for tanks that arenot in use. Many times, this means moving a toggle switch or actually changing tanks.Changing into an empty tank causes that loud silence we pilots love so much, so a carefulpreflight should include figuring out how much fuel is in each tank.Of course, keepingtrack of what has been burned from where in flight is a must.

If the FAA were to enforce the regulations that are on the books, we would spend afortune trying to make fuel gauges work (if it is in the airplane it is supposed to work).In real life, we dont generally trust the gauges, which is wise. With olderairplanes, pilots who have survived, look in the tanks before takeoff to see how much fuelis really there. They also know that if a gauge starts moving rapidly toward empty duringflight, it does not mean the gauge is faulty, but that they are losing fuel from thattank, and they act accordingly.

Part of learning the systems on the airplane is figuring out how to use the fuel gaugesso that you can keep track of where the fuel is and how much you have.

Crashworthiness

The ability of older airplanes to withstand a crash varies greatly. Shoulder harnessesare the single most effective add-on you can make to them. If you chose to fly airplanesthat have the fuel tank directly behind the engine, do not wear nylon clothing. Thepost-crash risk of fire is high on those airplanes. Being in or near fire in nylonclothing means your clothes will melt onto your body and greatly exacerbate any burns youreceive. Look over the airplane from the standpoint of how it can be expected to withstandimpact and plan accordingly.

Shoulder Harnesses

If you are buying an older airplane, one of the biggest safety favors you can do foryourself and family is to install shoulder harnesses. Research the parts catalogue foryour airplane to see if they were offered as an option. Few people seem to be aware thatCessna offered shoulder harnesses as an option for all seats (not just the front) forvirtually all of its single-engine airplanes from about 1946 on. It sells the kits forinstallation of the harnesses at cost, with no markup. I watched rear seat shoulderharnesses being installed in a Cardinal. It took about 15 minutes, since the hardpointswere already in the aircraft structure when it left the factory.

Instrument Locations

An older Cessna 172
The panel layout of this early 172 may differ greatly from the latest versions.

The standard “T” instrument panel arrangement we are accustomed to – withthe airspeed indicator in the upper left-hand corner and the attitude indicator in thecenter of the top row – did not come about until 1968. Before then, instrumentinstallation seemed almost random. This creates problems, particularly on takeoff, whenyou try to glance at the airspeed indicator and you cant find it. It also means morehead-down time in the cockpit in airplanes which may have poor in-flight visibility,something you dont need.

The solution is to go back to a technique that was used when these airplanes were new:Sit in the cockpit with your eyes closed and make sure you can touch each switch, knob,lever and instrument from memory before you fly the airplane. It works, it doesntcost anything and it will make your flight much more enjoyable.

Glide Ratios

Some older airplanes are drag incarnate. With flying and landing wires, struts, braces,a flat frontal area and other delights, they come down like greased sewer covers when anengine quits. This means additional work in your checkout to get a feel for how theybehave after an engine failure. It also means you may need to get used to lowering thenose very abruptly if the engine quits in a climb, otherwise the airplane will stall.

The published best angle of climb speed for older airplanes is quite accurate. It isoften also so slow that if the engine quits below 50 feet above the ground, it isphysically impossible to get the nose down and flare without breaking the landing gear.Newer airplanes allow for this and have a published Vx that allows for a successfullanding if the engine quits. You may want to add 5 mph or so to Vx to give you a littleextra margin of safety on your short field takeoff practice.

Quirks

Ask a lot of questions about any older airplane you are going to fly. For example, theCessna 195 has a long-period phugoid (nose up and down) oscillation in level flight whichyou cannot damp and will drive you nuts if you do not expect it. Also, the Ercoupe willnot stall because the elevator cannot be deflected up enough to reach the critical angleof attack. This means the airplane has a “minimum speed.” At idle power and fullaft elevator, that is the slowest the airplane will fly. It is usually around 60 mph. Ifyou come down final at minimum speed, power off, you simply cannot flare the airplane. Youwill do serious damage to it unless you add power or, if altitude permits, accelerate. Afinal example: The Seabee has some of the loveliest manners on the water of any flyingboat, but it is allergic to boat wakes. In addition, any side load on a sponson will takeit off the airplane right Johnny now.

So, ask about the quirks. Learn the systems and you can have a ball flying somedelightful older airplanes and even drawing a crowd at the next fly-in breakfast. If youknow the systems and respect the airplane, the crowd you draw will be the admiring kind.If you just jump in and go, the crowd may be drawn to your wreckage.

Trivia

Ill close with the answer to the classic airplane trivia question. In addition toreferring to the DC-9 series, the Boeing 717 is the KC-135. The KC-135 was not the same asthe Boeing 707. The fuselages are different sizes (the 717 has the original width fuselagewhich the airlines rejected as too narrow because it could not accept six seats and acenter aisle. It was widened for the 707). The 717 and 707 have a number of otherdifferences primarily in the engine pylons and wing-to-fuselage juncture.

Jeez, Im getting old – the 707 and 717 now qualify as classic aircraft.

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