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Ed McCauley just made me feel better. For my 320, I went to NAPA and bought
the narrowest red automotive striping tape they had just so I could remove it
if I made a mistake. Then, went back to the hangar and put the flaps full
down. On the vertical surface of the inboard side of the left aileron, while
in its neutral position, I traced a pencil mark using the fully extended flap
as straight edge and applied the first strip of tape. Viola! 100% flaps.
That took care of short final. Divided the distance with another piece of
tape. Looked like 50% flaps to me. So much for the base leg. Didn't bother
with a takeoff setting. Figured I could just approximate 10-15 degrees on
the ground before takeoff.
Why all this eyeballing? Because that's the way Orrin taught me fly the
factory 360 went I went for a duel checkout. Their aircraft has no flap
position indicator of any type. After about the fifth time I asked if my
flap setting was correct and got in return a "yeh, yeh that's good enough.
Just don't overspeed the flaps", I decided airspeed in the pattern was more
important than precise flap settings. You know - -head out of the cockpit and
all that stuff.
Oh, I've been using the red stripes for 6 months. Working fine. No sign of
pealing. Save your money for Bose headsets.
Byron Fox
N3144C
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LML homepage: http://www.olsusa.com/Users/Mkaye/maillist.html
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