Category Archives: CAF

Wings Over Camarillo 2015 (Day Two)

It was another great day at the airshow – the weather stayed wonderful, the crowd was excited, and somehow it was an even longer day than yesterday. Fourteen hour days with about 90%+ of it on your feet and dashing around isn’t necessarily an old man’s game. Not that I’m old, mind you…

Yesterday I had lots of pictures of our CAF planes participating in the show. Tomorrow I’ll probably have more pictures that are focused on the other planes (and helicopters, and skydivers) in the show. But for today I want to look at the people attending the show. It occurred to me yesterday that while I’m often watching the planes flying (when I’m not working the show and dashing about), everyone else around me is doing the same. But we rarely look at each other.

So today I went looking for people watching the planes and taking their own pictures. In reviewing these photos to pick the ones to include here, I’m finding that I love the idea and will have to do it again at other airshows.

There are a lot of looks of wonder, joy, and amazement out there at an airshow. Everyone’s looking up!

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Wings Over Camarillo 2015 (Day One)

It was a great day at the airshow – a long, long, long day, but a great day nonetheless. The weather was really good, a bit hazy and muggy but only in the low 80s with a nice breeze. (Since last week it was in the mid 90s, this wasn’t bad.) The crowds were good, no one got hurt, no metal got bent, and a good time was had by all.

There were lots of planes, both on the ground and in the sky, but for tonight I’m just going to share the ones the CAF had flying and the star of the show, the Marine Osprey. As you might expect, despite working my little buns off all day, I still managed to take over 900 DSLR pictures, plus video, plus cellphone pictures… You might be seeing airshow pictures for a few days.

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Our PT-19. “PT” stands for “Primary Trainer,” which is what this aircraft was used for at the beginning of World War II.

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Our Spitfire, “chasing off” a “German attacker”. The attacker is actually a US “Texan” or “SNJ” trainer painted as a German Messerschmidt, and in this case the Spitfire was going a lot faster and actually passed his target, which would have made it the target instead. But let’s assume that before passing the target the Spitfire would have shot it down first.

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“Man O’ War,” our P-51 Mustang. Yes, it is going that fast and, YES!!, it is that cool to fly in her. (I can arrange that for a very reasonable fee, actually.)

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The belly of our Zero, turning away because someone was “chasing” her.

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Our F6F Hellcat. Might have been “chasing” a Zero.

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Our F8F Bearcat.

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Yeah, they’re still at it. That is the Hellcat chasing the Zero.

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The Marine V-22 “Osprey”. Those are freakishly huge propellers and this is a fantastic all-purpose aircraft, although that may not be obvious from this photo. Here it’s passing by at about 180 knots.

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Same aircraft, with a slight change in its configuration. Here it’s hovering at about 0 knots. Now we know why it’s got those honkin huge propellers.

Is it a slightly smaller-and-slower-than-average airplane or a monstrously huge helicopter? Yes, yes it is.

It also occurred to me late this afternoon that this, with the exception of the Osprey,  was just about the same lineup we had last year, so the pictures are very similar to the pictures I posted last year. I’m sure I’ll take more pictures tomorrow, but maybe I’ll look for a different “angle.”

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The Planes Are Gathering

Have I mentioned that there’s an airshow in Camarillo, CA this weekend?

Have I mentioned that the Southern California Wing of the Commemorative Air Force, where I’m the Finance Officer, is one of the key players in that airshow and will have all of our planes either on display or flying every afternoon?

Things were heating up and getting busy today as everyone goes through their final preparations and the planes based at other locations are starting to come in. Late this afternoon, turning a lot of fuel into noise, this Navy E2 Hawkeye arrived and taxied by the CAF ramp:

On both Saturday and Sunday, the gates open at 09:00. There will be plenty of static displays, planes of all types (as well as some classic hot rods, jeeps and other ground equipment, and so on) on the ground where you can get up close and personal. There will also be plenty of places to get something to drink (like our hangar with water, sodas, beer, and margaritas for sale) or eat (we’ll have some snacks for sale), or some souveneirs, shirts, hats, toys, models, pins, etc (like at our hangar where our entire PX will be available, including the new and exclusive “Wings Over Camarillo 2015” T-shirts and our new shirts and hats for the PBJ that’s almost ready to fly again).

Have I mentioned that I’m the Finance Officer?

The flying starts at noon and will go through 17:00. There will be acrobatic demonstrations, warbirds (many of which are ours), the Red Bull helicopter doing things that shouldn’t really be possible in a helicopter, parachute jumpers, and a demonstration of the MV-22 “Osprey” which you have to see to believe.

If you can make it out to join us, stop by the CAF ramp (we’re the furthest point to the west you can go as an airshow visitor) to say hello. You can’t miss us, we’ve got a ginormous construction site with the two new hangars going up. (The steel framework looked like it was about 90% in as of this afternoon.) You’ll find me running around doing finance stuff, generally helping out wherever I can, and maybe getting to help move some planes around during the show.

It’s going to be fun!

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Steel Rising

Yesterday morning they started raising the steel superstructure for our two new hangars at the CAF SoCal in Camarillo.

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In addition, today was Media Day at the hangar in preparation for the “Wings Over Camarillo 2015” airshow, next weekend, August 22nd and 23rd.

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If you’re looking for a great place to spend a day with planes on the ground and planes in the sky, come out and join us. If you swing by the CAF hangar, say hello!

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Okay, Yes, It’s My Fault!

Some people think that they can make it rain the following day by washing their car. They’ve got nothing on me!

  1. Southern California is in the worst drought in recorded history.
  2. The most rain ever recorded for the entire month of July in Los Angeles is 2.54 inches, in 1921.
  3. Average rainfall for the entire month of July in Los Angeles is 0.01 inches.
  4. Rainfall so far today at Camarillo Airport is 0.41 inches.
  5. Rainfall so far today at the measuring station nearest our house is 0.75 inches.
  6. Rainfall so far today in Cheesboro Canyon (about eight miles away) is 1.32 inches.
  7. There’s a 50% chance of more heavy thunderstorms tomorrow. (There are two tropical storms off of Baja, but instead of heading off to Hawaii they’re coming north towards SoCal. First time in my 40 years here that I can remember it happening.)
  8. There’s a 40% chance of more heavy thunderstorms on Monday.

I take the blame.

After over nine months with our lawn sprinklers completely off (trying to be good citizens during that whole “4-year long historically catastrophic drought” thing) and our lawn going brown and dead, yesterday evening I turned them on again. (Our trees are dying, I’m trying to save them before it’s too late.)

Today, this:

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Image: National Weather Service

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Click for full-sized image.

“With great power comes great responsibility.” Words of wisdom, indeed.

But we desperately need the rain, so I’m leaving the sprinklers on, street flooding be damned!

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Cloudy, Gloomy Day On The Ramp

I spent this Saturday as I spend almost all of my other Saturdays when I’m not travelling – at the CAF SoCal hangers in Camarillo. Today it was grey and gloomy, borderline chilly, despite the fact that at home, thirty miles away, it was sunny and pushing 90°F. That’s what you get when you’re just a couple miles from the coast during “June gloom.”

We were setting up for a wedding in the museum hangar (renting it out for events is a big source of revenue for us) and we had the EAA holding their monthly meeting in our maintenance hangar (we’re building two more hangars, a portion of which they’ll lease from us, but for now we’re sharing) so almost all of the planes were out on the ramp. Also out there were five or six of the small general aviation aircraft belonging to the flight school that leases tie-down space on our ramp.

All in all, gloomy or not, there were a lot of aircraft sitting around. What better time to take a couple of panoramic pictures?

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On the west side of the ramp I was between two of the flight school aircraft. Out in the middle, from left to right are one of our SNJ’s (blue with white tail), our PT-19 (blue with yellow wings), our C-46 “China Doll” (the honkin’ big one in the back), our A-2 trainer, our F8F Bearcat (dark blue, hiding behind the P-51), our P-51 Mustang (red nose & tail), and our other SNJ (yellow).

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Over on the other side and looking back, from left to right are “China Doll,” one of the flight school planes, the F8F Bearcat, the A-2 in front of the P-51 Mustang and the yellow SNJ, our F6F Hellcat (dark blue with the wings folded back), our Navion trainer (white on top, blue on bottom, yellow stripes),  the PT-19, and the blue SNJ. Over behind all of the planes, running from the far hangar out to the taxiway on the right, you can see a chain-link fence covered with green tarps. On the other side is where the grading is going on for our new hangars.

Not the best day for flying, but a good day to get a lot of catch-up work done on the accounting and paperwork. You take what you can get.

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NASA Social For LEAPTech At NASA Armstrong (Part Three)

I had the honor and the privilege of attending my fifth NASA Social last Tuesday. The presentations we saw regarding the LEAPTech project were done at the NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center. Friday I wrote about what LEAPTech (“Leading Edge Asynchronous Propeller Technology”) is and what the project is trying to discover and develop. Yesterday I wrote about our trip out onto the Rogers Dry Lake to see the HEIST experimental rig and two trips to collect LEAPTech data.

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In addition to the social media attendees at the Social, there were members of the more conventional media there. Here we see Mark Moore, the Principal Investigator for the LEAPTech project, being interviewed out on the lake bed by a reporter and cameraman from one of the local television stations.

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Photo by NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center

Before we went back to the conference center and main NASA Armstrong Center, all of the NASA Social attendees, the LEAPTech engineers and scientists, the NASA Armstrong staff, and everyone else got together in front of the HEIST for a group photo. (I’m standing, three or four folks to the right of center, in a light tan shirt, blue jeans, and my goofy “adventure” hat.)

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The surface of Rogers Dry Lake is bentonite, a rock-hard clay layer thousands of feet thick, left after these lakes dried up around 10,000 years ago. The surface is incredibly flat, varying less than eighteen inches over a distance of 30,000 feet. There are 44 acres of it on Rogers Dry Lake, and another 22 acres at the nearby Rosamond Dry Lake.

The Antelope Valley is a desert (as is Los Angeles, but that’s a different rant) so it’s almost always dry here. “Almost” is the key word. When it does rain for a couple of days, the water coming from much of the Antelope Valley pools on the lake bed, closing the “drawn” runways (the ones on the clay surface) temporarily, while the main concrete runway is always open.

If a significant portion of the lake stays under water for more than seven days, a local species of brine shrimp starts to hatch. That in turn brings huge flocks of birds in, including seagulls from the Pacific Ocean about seventy miles away. Those birds are in turn can be a major hazard to flight operations, since bird strikes on high speed aircraft are extremely fatal to the bird and dangerous to the plane and pilot. Next, the birds can cover everything in the area with droppings, another mess for planes and facilities. Finally, when the lake starts to dry up again, the shrimp lay their eggs to become dormant for the next rainy season — then the shrimp die, start to rot in the heat, and we’re told that the stench can be most powerful.

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Here you can see how the runways and other markings are “drawn” on the clay surface. It looks like some kind of tar or rubbery compound, and the lines are several feet wide. Not only are the runway lines drawn this way, but Edwards contains the world’s largest compass rose, which has been declared to be a National Historic Landmark.

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After lunch and some more Q&A with the LEAPTech scientists and engineers, we headed out to see some of the other activities at the NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center.

This is the entrance to the main building, and it might look vaguely familiar to anyone who grew up on 1960’s television. This building entrance was used by the “I Dream Of Jeanie” show as NASA Headquarters whenever they needed an establishing shot.

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There are legendary research aircraft all over the site, many of them in or near the parking lot, up on sticks. This is the Bell X-1E, the big brother of the Bell X-1 which Chuck Yeager used to break the sound barrier in 1947. The X-1 is on display in the main hall of the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum in Washington, along with Lindbergh’s “Spirit Of St Louis,” Spaceship One from Scaled Composites and Virgin Galactic, John Glenn’s Freedom 7 Mercury spacecraft, the Gemini IV spacecraft used for the first US spacewalk, and the Apollo 11 Command Module.

The X-1E flew from 1955 to 1958, piloted first by legendary USAF test pilot Joe Walker and later by NACA test pilot John McKay. Its maximum known speed was Mach 2.24, but it was chasing Mach 3 near the end of 1958. Its maximum known altitude reached was 73,000 feet, but again, it was chasing 90,000 feet.

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First stop on the Center Tour was the F-15 hangar. This is one of the newer aircraft, an F-15D. It will be flying for many years to come in support of NASA missions since there are hundreds of this model F-15 still flying. Most of them fly for other countries, but they’re still supported with spare parts and the information needed by the mechanics to keep them running safely.

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On the other hand, this F-15B model is older and has many fewer flying today, so parts are getting harder and more expensive to find. This is the oldest F-15 in NASA’s fleet, handed down from the Air Force when they stopped flying the F-15Bs. This is how NASA gets most of its aircraft of this nature – hand-me-downs from the military. On the other hand, it saves the taxpayers millions and avoids throwing away millions on a perfectly good plane that the military doesn’t want.

Because of the age and increasing difficulty in finding parts, this plane will likely be retired from NASA soon. I offered to see if the CAF could take it off their hands as a donation when the time comes – I got a blank stare. Seriously, guys, when the time comes, give me a call, let my people talk to your people. This would look GREAT flying out of Camarillo with our P-51, Spitfire, Zero, Bearcat, PBJ, and Hellcat! (Seriously!) It would be so much a better fate than putting it up on a stick in a parking lot!

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The business end of the F-15B. This probe sticks out about ten feet in front of the aircraft to get air data in still air, prior to the air being roiled up by this honkin’ huge plane flying through it at Mach something-or-the-other. All of those fluorescent orange and red pennants are connected to safety locks and plugs in or covering openings. Those locks, plugs, and covers keep the aircraft safe when it’s on the ground an not being used for long periods — but they MUST be removed before the plane can go fly again. That’s why all of the pennants say “Remove Before Flight!” (Even little planes use them.)

These F-15s are used for collecting data for instruments designed by others as well as flying NASA missions as chase planes for other experimental aircraft. For example, when the early Space Shuttle “free flight” drop tests were performed at Edwards, as well as the first Shuttle landings from orbit, planes such as these would fly alongside to watch for problems and radio information to the pilots. Today these planes (along with others in the NASA fleet) are used to monitor other test flights and experimental aircraft.

As far as collecting data goes, other groups working with NASA (such as universities or corporate partners) design instruments to collect their data, with their experiments sized to fit into the F-15 or under the wings. NASA pilots will fly the pre-arranged mission to wherever the data needs to be collected, depending on the needs of the researchers.

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Finally, this was a point of considerable interest and fascination to several Social attendees. Yes, this picture is oriented correctly, that is an exit door forty or fifty feet up in the air.

This hangar has a single, huge door that swings up out of the way to let planes in or out, or to let roaming packs of NASA Social attendees peer in at the planes. When the huge hangar doors are closed, there are exit doors built into what is now a huge fourth wall of the hangar. When the doors open up, the exit door just dangles up there like a low-tech predecessor to a “Portal” door. (Even at NASA, the cake is still a lie. But we did have doughnuts and cookies.)

Tomorrow, more stops on the tour of the NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center.

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Yet More Weird, Weird Weather

The LEAPTech NASA Social pictures and articles are coming. 295 pictures (plus more than an hour of video) are being whittled down to about three dozen images, to be combined with the story behind them all, probably in a four-part report. That’s not quite done yet.

This week’s Flash Fiction from Chuck Wendig, which I’ve missed for about a month now? Yeah, right. Maybe that’s not happening again this week either.


 

At risk of simply “talking about the weather” — Jeeze Louise, did you see the rain coming down today in SoCal?!

If you haven’t spent a few years in the region, you can’t really grasp just how unusual it is to get rain here at this time of year. It’s not quite “sign of the impending Apocalypse” unusual, but it’s definitely “holy crap what’s going on here” unusual. Especially while we’re in this four-year drought and getting about 1% of the rain we normally get in the “rainy season.”

Today I was out at the CAF hangar, playing catch up. The rain out in Camarillo was significant, and being that I was in a huge, mostly empty, metal echo chamber, the noise was impressive as well. I was involved with my accounting stuff and really hadn’t noticed that everyone else had left, so when the next wave of really heavy showers hit, I was surprised to find myself alone.

It’s a little hard to hear, but at about the 12-second point the noise went from really loud to really, REALLY loud. (And doesn’t that Spitfire look gorgeous? I love that plane, I really do.) After the dash through the ops office to get a view outside, you can also see a small plane on short final off in the distance. It looked like a Cessna 150 or 172, and in that weather he had to really have his hands full. I saw him taxi by a little later so he got down OK, but the pilot might need a change of pants.

An hour or so later, after it had tailed off a bit, I made my dash to the car. The Camarillo area was in a relatively calm spot, but there were awesome and ominous clouds all around. To the north, toward the coastal mountains…

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…and toward the south and the ocean about five miles away.

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Finally, I made it home (through scattered showers) just to have it start to absolutely pour again just as I was turning into the driveway. (Timing is everything!) In addition, soon after we got an hour or so of lightning and thunder, always a favorite of mine. (Really — not being snarky.)

For those of you where this kind of weather is known as “Thursday,” I hope you’ll forgive the “gee whiz” factor here. I grew up with “normal” weather and loved it when it got a little bit active. After more than forty years in SoCal, with its extremely muted climate, this is great stuff.

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April Was One Great Month!

A month ago I was happy to have survived March. March this year had some really good times (“Fifi” visiting us at CAF SoCal, my chance to fly in her, my birthday, CAF SoCal website launch, CAF audit, tax returns, daughter coming home from South America) but was generally lived at about 100 miles an hour with no rest stops.

It occurred to me today when I noticed that post that April had been just as busy, if not more so. But where March felt like hard work, April felt like the whole month was spent at Disneyland. (The good Disneyland, i.e. the fantasy one in the commercials, not the real Disneyland, with long waits for every ride and crowds like the Tokyo subways at rush hour.)

April started with a total lunar eclipse, the third one in less than two years!

There were two week-long trips to the East Coast, with all of the fun & games of commercial air travel. That included our first set of lost luggage in quite a while, some delays due to weather and mechanical issues that led to some very tight connections, and enough jet lag to keep my head spinning like a top.

North Carolina had weather & thunder boomers! Duke Gardens! The Durham Museum of Live & Science! Artsy-trendy-weird hotel-restaurant-bar-museum place! Durham Bulls Stadium! North Carolina Museum of Natural Science! North Carolina State Capitol Building!

I got an invite and went to my fourth NASA Social, this one in Washington for Hubble’s 25th Anniversary! The Smithsonian Air & Space Museum! The Capitol, White House, Washington, Lincoln, & Jefferson Memorials! The World War II and Vietnam War Memorials! A game at Nationals Park! Meeting up with my sister-in-law and getting to see my niece perform in an epic belly dance performance!

Whew!

After a good & busy March, I celebrated with fireworks pictures from Dodger Stadium. That resulted in a great & busy April. How ’bout we post more pictures from that set and see if we can go for a fantastic & busy May? (Let’s keep it going, I’ve got a whole thesaurus of superlatives to use.)

Sympathetic magic from a die-hard physics major? Whatever works, baby, whatever works.

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Spitfire Sunset

With the Washington trip coming up, a lot of loose ends need to be tied up at the hangar, especially since I was gone for six days last week. When all was said and done, I got more involved than I expected and was thus caught by surprise when I came out to find the setting sun peeking through the slightly open hanger doors, beautifully silhouetting our Spitfire.

The Spitfire has been a favorite plane of mine since 1969 when “The Battle of Britain” was released. I loved the story, but most of all I loved the Spitfires. Not surprisingly, when I started putting together models about that time as a teen, one of the first was a Spitfire.

Something about the scene tonight made me feel like I was back there at the Battle of Britain, seventy-five years ago. The blood red sun hanging on the horizon, the unique outline of the Spitfire and its prop, the panels pulled off to give the mechanics access to the huge engine.

One thing I couldn’t decide — which exposure did I like more?

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The dark and moody picture, highlighting the huge five-blade prop and shark-like nose against the bright setting sun?

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Or the bright and detailed picture, the setting sun overexposed but the aircraft now revealed in its deadly, mechanical glory?

Of course, the Universe had the last word. About the time I took these pictures, we were joined in the office by a bagpiper. Please understand that we don’t normally have a bagpiper lurking about the office. However, tonight the other hanger was being rented out for an event by some Navy squadron and they had hired the bagpiper for some ceremony. He needed the privacy of our office as a place to tune up.

Who knew that bagpipes need tuning? And how do you tell whether it’s in tune or out?

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