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May 2013 VOLUME 13 • NUMBER 5<br />

BPPP LIVE in Camarillo, California<br />

June 8…<strong>page</strong> <strong>45</strong><br />

The Official PublicaTiOn fOr bOnanza, DebOnair, barOn & Travel air OPeraTOrs anD enThusiasTs


Call today 1-800-259-4ABS<br />

or go to http://falcon.villagepress.<br />

com/promo/signup to get your<br />

free insurance quote. When you do,<br />

we’ll make a $5 donation<br />

to ABS’s Air Safety Foundation.<br />

“I have been a member of ABS for thirty five years and a Falcon<br />

Insurance Agency client for thirty, or more, years. My wife and I are<br />

proud members of ABS, an outstanding organization dedicated to<br />

advancing safety, owner proficiency, aircraft air worthiness, fellowship<br />

and so much more.<br />

Falcon is an active and generous supporter and advocate of ABS.<br />

The agency reliably canvasses the aviation insurance market and<br />

offers competitive prices every year. I rely on the professionals at<br />

Falcon to provide my insurance and recommend the Falcon Insurance<br />

Agency to all current and new Beechcraft owners.”<br />

John Ericsson, Past President, Southeastern <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong><br />

Falcon is fluent in aviation –<br />

our agents understand your insurance needs and<br />

tailor your coverage to meet those needs.<br />

Falcon Insurance Agency<br />

is the Insurance Program Manager<br />

for the ABS Insurance Program<br />

Falcon Insurance Agency • P.O. Box 291388, Kerrville, TX 78029 • www.falconinsurance.com • Phone: 1-800-259-4227


May 2013 VOLUME 13 • NUMBER 5<br />

The Official PublicaTiOn fOr bOnanza, DebOnair, barOn & Travel air OPeraTOrs anD enThusiasTs<br />

Contents<br />

ABS<br />

3 President’s Comments<br />

by Keith Kohout<br />

4 2012 Financial Report<br />

BPPP LIVE in Camarillo, CA<br />

June 8…<strong>page</strong> 2<br />

6 Operations<br />

by J. Whitney Hickman<br />

and Thomas P. Turner<br />

May 2013 • Volume 13 • Number 5<br />

ABS Executive Director<br />

J. Whitney Hickman<br />

ABS-ASF Executive Director & Editor<br />

Thomas P. Turner<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Jillian LaCross<br />

Technical Review Committee<br />

Tom Rosen, Stuart Spindel, Bob Butt<br />

and the ABS Technical Advisors<br />

Graphic Design<br />

Joe McGurn and Ellen Weeks<br />

Printer<br />

Village Press<br />

Traverse City, Michigan<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> magazine (ISSN<br />

1538-9960) is published monthly by the<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> (ABS), 1922 Midfield<br />

Road, Wichita, KS 67209. The price of a yearly<br />

subscription is included in the annual dues of<br />

<strong>Society</strong> members. Periodicals postage paid at<br />

Wichita, Kansas, and at additional mailing offices.<br />

No part of this publication may be reprinted or<br />

duplicated without the written permission of the<br />

Executive Director.<br />

The <strong>Society</strong> and Publisher cannot accept<br />

responsibility for the correctness or accuracy<br />

of the matters printed herein or for any opinions<br />

expressed. Opinions of the Editor or contributors<br />

do not necessarily represent the position of the<br />

<strong>Society</strong>. Articles or other materials by and about<br />

organizations other than ABS are printed in<br />

the <strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> magazine as a<br />

courtesy and member service. Except as expressly<br />

stated, their appearance in this magazine does<br />

not constitute an endorsement by ABS of the<br />

products, services or events of such organization.<br />

Publisher reserves the right to reject any material<br />

submitted for publication.<br />

Annual Membership Dues:<br />

• Domestic (US/Canada/Mexico)— $65 (US)<br />

• Two Year Domestic (US/Canada/Mexico)— $124 (US)<br />

• International — $103 (US)<br />

• International (online magazine only) — $65 (US)<br />

• Two Year International<br />

(online magazine only) — $124 (US)<br />

• Additional Family Members — $27 each<br />

• Life membership — $1200<br />

Contact ABS Headquarters for details.<br />

Postmaster: Send address changes to <strong>American</strong><br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> magazine, P.O. Box 12888,<br />

Wichita, KS 67277-2888. © Copyright 2012.<br />

Send Articles/Letters To: <strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

<strong>Society</strong> Magazine Publication Office, P.O. Box<br />

12888, Wichita, KS 67277, Tel: 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700,<br />

Fax: 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1710, E-mail: absmail@bonanza.org,<br />

Website: http://www.bonanza.org. Please note:<br />

Copy & photos submitted for publication become<br />

the property of the <strong>Society</strong> and shall not be<br />

returned. Articles submitted with pictures receive<br />

publication preference.<br />

flying<br />

36 Turbos and Low Altitude Ops<br />

by Bill Compton<br />

42 Safety Pilot: The Airshow Pass<br />

by Thomas P. Turner<br />

48 BPPP: Obstacle Avoidance Below MDA<br />

by Mike Friel<br />

52 Mexico, Close and Easy<br />

by Jim Herd<br />

66 ABS at Sun ’n Fun<br />

ownership/ Maintenance<br />

16 On the Cover: 1975 V35B, N4089S<br />

by Dwight Mulch<br />

22 Currents: LOP with an E225<br />

by Lew Gage<br />

28 Beech on a Budget: Wax On, Wax Off:<br />

Low-Cost Cleaning Products and Tips<br />

by Mike Caban<br />

32 Insurance: Coverage for Your Hangar and Contents<br />

by John Allen<br />

departments<br />

8 New Life Membership<br />

20 New Airworthiness Issues<br />

58 Tech Tips<br />

68 New Airworthiness Issues<br />

68 Surly Bonds<br />

71 ABS Board<br />

73 Classified Ads<br />

79 Events Calendar<br />

80 ABS Contacts<br />

80 Display Advertising Index<br />

AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 1


2013 ABS Spring Fly-In<br />

Savannah, Georgia!<br />

Hilton Savannah DeSoto • May 16 – 18, 2013<br />

RegisteR now foR the fly-in!<br />

Go online to the ABS website, www.bonanza.org, and click on the Savannah<br />

Fly-In link at the top of the <strong>page</strong>. We have listed registration and hotel<br />

reservation information and links, a Schedule of Events, airport and ground<br />

transportation information, and links to other activities available in the<br />

Savannah area. You may also register with the Registration Form you received<br />

with this copy of your ABS Magazine.<br />

Sheltair KSAV, located at the Savannah Hilton Head International Airport (SAV)<br />

will be our host FBO.<br />

Savannah is a beautiful city with a unique blend of history, elegance, and<br />

charm. Our host hotel, the Hilton Savannah DeSoto, is located in the heart<br />

of the Historic District. Friday after the seminars finish around noon, we send<br />

you off “on your own” for the rest of the day. Take advantage of the scores<br />

of sightseeing opportunities and restaurants within easy walking distance!<br />

Visit the Optional Tour Link on the website for suggestions.<br />

CoMpanion Book CluB: Midnight in The Garden of Good and Evil<br />

Sylvia Vickrey will lead the discussion of this best-selling book that helped make<br />

Savannah famous. Written by John Berendt, the story, based on a true event<br />

loaded with colorful Savannah citizens, is intriguing, but the true star is the<br />

City of Savannah. Read it before the Fly-In and you’ll be ready to explore when<br />

you arrive! The book is available at amazon.com for reasonable prices, new or<br />

used. We are investigating an optional walking tour of some of the sights made<br />

famous by this novel and will post it on the website and in the ABS Magazine.<br />

SCHEDulE oF EVEnTS (Tentative)<br />

Thursday: BPPP Classroom Training 1 – 5 pm<br />

Tentative Optional “Midnight” Tour ($)<br />

Welcome Reception<br />

Friday: Breakfast<br />

BPPP Classroom Training 8:30 am – 12:30 pm<br />

Companion Book Club<br />

On your own (Visit the ABS website for Optional Tour Opportunities)<br />

Saturday: Breakfast with ABS Board & Staff<br />

Tour & Lunch – Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum<br />

Final Dinner and Awards<br />

Bppp ClaSSRooM TRaininG<br />

Your registration includes the Air<br />

Safety Foundation’s BPPP Classroom<br />

Training 1 – 5 pm Thursday and<br />

8:30 am – 12:30 pm Friday. Those<br />

who complete the entire classroom<br />

portion can finalize their BPPP<br />

training by scheduling the flying portion at a later<br />

date for a fee. This is an incredible opportunity to<br />

learn more about safely flying your Beechcraft at<br />

no additional cost other than your Savannah Fly-In<br />

registration. (For those who attended the BPPP in<br />

Daytona, be assured that these seminars will be<br />

different from those you enjoyed in January.<br />

MiGHTY EiGHTH aiR FoRCE MuSEuM<br />

SATURDAY: Join your<br />

ABS Board of Directors<br />

for breakfast and<br />

a brief update on<br />

ABS followed by a<br />

Q&A forum. We will then transfer to the Mighty<br />

Eighth Air Force Museum. With vintage aircraft,<br />

artifacts, photographs, and personal stories, this<br />

is considered one of the world’s most powerful<br />

museum experiences! After the tour, we will enjoy<br />

lunch in the Museum’s Art Gallery.<br />

aBS awaRDS<br />

During Saturday’s dinner, we will present several<br />

ABS awards. If you would like to nominate<br />

someone for the ABS Airmanship Award or the<br />

M.D. Cashion Award, click on the AWARDS link<br />

on the website or contact ABS (316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700) /<br />

ABSMail@bonanza.org.<br />

Register now for the aBS Spring Fly-in<br />

May 16-18 in Savannah, Ga!<br />

watch the aBS website www.bonanza.org and the<br />

aBS Hangar Flying E-newsletter for updates!


President’s Comments<br />

It’s A Small Thing<br />

Having just returned from Sun ’n Fun, I am reminded how<br />

important the work of many is in supporting ABS. I would like<br />

to express, on behalf of the ABS Board and staff, our gratitude for<br />

the volunteers, sponsors, and Beechcraft who helped make this year’s<br />

attendance at Sun ’n Fun a success.<br />

On the flight back to Cincinnati I saw<br />

the passenger next to me read ing ABS<br />

Magazine. I wondered if he noticed the<br />

additional <strong>page</strong>s and content added to<br />

the magazine. What did he think of the<br />

new BPPP on Online+Flight? Would he<br />

encourage his personal flight instructor<br />

to become a part of the Flight Instructor<br />

Academy? How long has he been a<br />

member? My curiosity got the best<br />

of me, so I asked the gentleman what<br />

he thought of the ABS Magazine. He<br />

paused and then answered with a<br />

strong sense of purpose how he has<br />

enjoyed being a member, and the articles<br />

in the magazine have provided<br />

some assistance with the owner ship<br />

of his airplane.<br />

We immediately struck up a<br />

conver sation about his Baron that<br />

had a persistent issue with stabilizer<br />

vibration leading to loosening of the<br />

trim tab and other tail components.<br />

I suggested he contact Mike Stanko<br />

at Gemco, who has done extensive<br />

work with Beechcraft in the Ohio<br />

area. Later I heard that Mike discovered<br />

a sheared off engine mount,<br />

but felt that the ultimate issue was<br />

buffeting from uneven prop wash.<br />

The owner of the Baron sent both<br />

props out for inspection and reseal,<br />

and found that the left prop had two<br />

of the three blades off by 3 degrees,<br />

confirming Mike’s suspicion. The<br />

owner had been chasing this problem<br />

for some time, and after the adjustments<br />

the Baron’s first cross-country<br />

flight was vibration free.<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

It’s a small thing, but knowing who<br />

to call or to refer is important. The<br />

contributions by our Beech family and<br />

the teams of people who support the<br />

operation and safety of flight are critical<br />

to the preservation of the Beechcraft<br />

fleet. Because of the knowledge bank<br />

at ABS I was able to help connect our<br />

member with the right person. I look<br />

forward to the day we have many<br />

ABS-trained mechanics and flight<br />

instructors across the country, so that<br />

ABS members have immediate and<br />

local access to the resources that make<br />

Beech ownership head and shoulders<br />

above the rest.<br />

In the daily operation of ABS,<br />

attention to the small things often is<br />

the difference between overwhelming<br />

success and just an average outcome.<br />

We can probably agree it’s always a<br />

series of adjustments that continually<br />

guide our course. Our Board and the<br />

ABS staff have worked hard to ensure<br />

we don’t miss the details, and we<br />

watch the affairs of ABS with great<br />

care. I hope you find the 2012 Financials<br />

as presented in this issue a<br />

testament to the diligence of the ABS<br />

staff. It is because of this attention<br />

we are able to provide services such<br />

as the Flight Instructors Academy,<br />

the Maintenance Academy, BPPP<br />

Online+Flight, Service Clinics, Technical<br />

Advi sory, and the continued repre<br />

sentation of our members’ changing<br />

needs in the General Aviation community.<br />

Thank you again to all of our<br />

members who continue to support<br />

and guide the future of the <strong>American</strong><br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

Blue Skies,<br />

Keith Kohout<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 3


2012 FINANCIAL<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, Inc.<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong><br />

Air Safety Foundation, Inc.<br />

and BPPP, Inc.<br />

The consolidating<br />

financial statements of<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

<strong>Society</strong>, Inc., <strong>American</strong><br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> Air<br />

Safety Foundation, Inc.,<br />

and BPPP, Inc. as of,<br />

and for the year ended,<br />

December 31, 2012,<br />

were audited by<br />

independent certified<br />

public accountants who<br />

rendered an unqualified<br />

opinion on the consolidating<br />

and consolidated<br />

financial statements.<br />

The accompanying<br />

condensed statements<br />

of financial position and<br />

activities are prepared<br />

from the audited<br />

financial statements,<br />

which are on file in our<br />

main office but, in the<br />

interest of brevity,<br />

do not contain a similar<br />

level of detail and are<br />

not accompanied by<br />

the required explanatory<br />

footnotes.<br />

SUMMARY<br />

CONSOLIDATING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS<br />

Year Ended December 31, 2012<br />

4 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


REPORT<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 5


www.bonanza.org<br />

ABS/ASF held its first of three<br />

Maintenance Academies in 2013 at<br />

the Beechcraft Heritage Museum<br />

March 8-10 in Tullahoma, Tennessee.<br />

Nineteen A&Ps from around the<br />

country participated. Bob Ripley, Chief<br />

Instructor and ABS Technical Advisor,<br />

and Curtis Boulware, ABS Technical<br />

Advisor, taught the weekend event.<br />

Students learned about maintaining<br />

our aircraft through classroom lectures<br />

and discussions, as well as handson<br />

learning with an A36 <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

provided by the museum.<br />

We know the need is great, as a<br />

common inquiry to ABS addresses this<br />

very issue: “It’s so hard to find good<br />

mechanics to work on my plane… can<br />

you recommend anyone in my region<br />

of the country?”<br />

This addresses one of ABS’s biggest<br />

goals – to educate mechanics and<br />

preserve our aging aircraft. Our fleet<br />

ABS Operations By J. Whitney Hickman<br />

ABS Holds Maintenance Academy<br />

at Beech Heritage Museum<br />

is getting older by the day and we have<br />

many planes in the registry over 50 or<br />

even 60 years old. Because Beechcraft<br />

is making a very small number of new<br />

planes a year it’s imperative that we<br />

take great care in the maintenance and<br />

handling of the ones in operation.<br />

Another major objective is to find<br />

mechanics who work on Beechcraft


www.bonanza.org<br />

and introduce them to the benefits of<br />

an ABS membership. We want your<br />

mechanics to be ABS members. This<br />

helps our owners and also benefits<br />

mechanics, who will receive ABS<br />

tech support five days a week – a<br />

service which often gets owners and<br />

mechanics out of several jams and can<br />

save hundreds of dollars for even one<br />

maintenance issue.<br />

“As a technical advisor for <strong>American</strong><br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, I was asked to design<br />

and teach a class to mechanics on the<br />

maintenance and care of the Beech<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> and Baron aircraft. I designed<br />

the program to cover the areas that I<br />

see as I complete the service clinic<br />

inspections program for ABS around<br />

the country, paying special attention<br />

to the inspection and rigging of the<br />

landing gear,” said Ripley.<br />

The first class was conducted<br />

in 2012 with great success, with<br />

20 mechanics selected from an<br />

extensive list of over 100 candidates.<br />

The addition of the second instructor<br />

enhanced the program even more<br />

by being able to deliver important<br />

information both inside and outside<br />

of the classroom setting. “Each time<br />

we hold the class we learn more<br />

ways to better our program.” Ripley<br />

said. “We will continue to employ the<br />

two-instructor concept in the June<br />

class in New Hampshire and the<br />

fall class in California. This program<br />

provides better trained and more<br />

quality maintenance to our members<br />

and also helps mechanics in the field<br />

be more versed in the systems and<br />

maintenance of Beech aircraft.” Here’s<br />

what others had to say:<br />

“In my opinion any mechanic<br />

would benefit from attending the ABS<br />

maintenance program. Learning from<br />

expert instructors that have real world<br />

experience that know the little tricks<br />

to set up a system properly and know<br />

the common and uncommon problems<br />

of Beech aircraft is priceless.”<br />

—Ken Harris<br />

Harris Aviation, Greeley, Colorado<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 7


www.bonanza.org<br />

“The Maintenance Academy gave<br />

me a lot of insight into problem areas<br />

unique to the <strong>Bonanza</strong>. The instructors<br />

went beyond just showing where the<br />

problem areas were, but also gave<br />

background into the end result if<br />

the problem is not corrected. They<br />

reinforced the reasoning behind WHY<br />

you do a repair. The academy was<br />

very beneficial in ‘tweaking’ seasoned<br />

mechanics like myself. It was also a<br />

great opportunity to meet mechanics<br />

and inspectors from all over the country<br />

and hearing their experiences with<br />

the <strong>Bonanza</strong>.”<br />

—Tom Malechuk, Guardian Aviation<br />

Services, Siler City, North Carolina<br />

ABS is very fortunate to have a<br />

sponsor for all three academies this<br />

year. Many thanks to Select Airparts<br />

and its team for on-site participation<br />

and financial support to this very<br />

deserving program. I thank all the<br />

students, applicants, instructors, the<br />

Beechcraft Heritage Museum, and<br />

ASF member donors for making this<br />

such a successful venture for our organization.<br />

None of this would be possible<br />

without the support of all involved.<br />

The next academies will be May 31<br />

– June 2 at Edmonds Aircraft Service<br />

in Newport, New Hampshire; and<br />

September 20-22 at Waypoint Aviation<br />

in Riverside, California. Applications<br />

for these events are located on the<br />

ABS website. There is still time to get<br />

your application in for the September<br />

maintenance academy. Deadline for<br />

application is August 5. I hope to see<br />

you there!<br />

J. Whitney Hickman<br />

Executive Director<br />

whit@bonanza.org<br />

New Life<br />

Membership<br />

ABS extends a warm welcome<br />

to these members who have recently<br />

become ABS Life Members.<br />

Gregory Baker<br />

Hilton Head Island<br />

South Carolina<br />

A member since 2007,<br />

he flies a 1988 F33A.<br />

Kenneth Scott<br />

Seattle<br />

Washington<br />

joined as a Life Member.<br />

He flies a 1954 E35.<br />

Ryan Samples<br />

Oklahoma City<br />

Oklahoma<br />

A member since 2011,<br />

he owns a 1966 V35.<br />

Robert Tollefson<br />

Crookston<br />

Minnesota<br />

A member since 2012,<br />

he flies a 1990 A36.<br />

Caleb Curtis<br />

Pittsfield<br />

Maine<br />

A member since 2006,<br />

he owns a 1977 Baron 58.<br />

8 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


ABS Air Safety<br />

Foundation<br />

By Thomas P. Turner<br />

ABS Averts<br />

New Circuit Breaker AD<br />

FAA has adopted ABS Air Safety Foundation’s recommendation<br />

and will not issue a new circuit breaker Airworthiness<br />

Directive. As ABS earlier proposed, FAA has<br />

released a Special Airworthiness Information Bulletin<br />

(SAIB) with a suggested (but not required) 2000 hours<br />

Time in Service (TIS) replacement schedule for switchtype<br />

circuit breakers, or 600 hours TIS for high-use<br />

training airplanes. The SAIB affects Beech airplanes<br />

and Cessna 400-series twins, and any other type certificated<br />

or Amateur-Built Aircraft with the same type<br />

of circuit breaker installed. You may view the SAIB in<br />

the Airworthiness Directives and Service Bulletins forum<br />

of ABS Hangar Flying at https://bonanza.org/forums/<br />

index.php?topic=100680.0.<br />

Earl Lawrence, manager of the FAA’s Small Airplane<br />

Directorate in Kansas City, told me he greatly appreciates<br />

ABS-ASF’s input into the circuit breaker issue, and he’s<br />

pleased to be able to adopt ABS’ recommendations.<br />

I believe the SAIB does everything we need to do in<br />

the interest of safety – it makes pilots and aircraft owners<br />

aware of the issue, and it recommends preemptive replace<br />

ment on a realistic schedule but does not require<br />

replacement if the breakers are in good working order.<br />

Using the 2008 circuit breaker AD as a guide, this<br />

saves most ABS members airplane down-time and<br />

between $2000 and $4000 apiece in circuit breaker<br />

replace ment, including labor, if a new AD had been<br />

issued requiring replacement.<br />

ABS Board member and Technical Committee chairman<br />

Tom Rosen writes:<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

The ABS Flight Instructor Academy is<br />

now live! This new program, brought to<br />

you through the generosity of members<br />

who have donated to the ABS Air Safety<br />

Foundation, is an industry-changing effort<br />

to improve all Beech pilots’ performance,<br />

confidence and safety. Our goal is nothing<br />

less than to assure all ABS members have<br />

access to safe, type-knowledgeable flight<br />

instructors for local training as well as<br />

BPPP Online+Flight and BPPP LIVE.<br />

ABS<br />

Flight<br />

Instructor<br />

Academy<br />

Are you an experienced flight instructor wanting to<br />

become even better at teaching in Beecchraft <strong>Bonanza</strong>s,<br />

Debonairs, Barons, and Travel Airs? Do you want to learn<br />

how to safely and effectively teach in Beech airplanes,<br />

but don’t yet have experience in type? Would you like to<br />

become an instructor in ABS’s Beechcraft Pilot Proficiency<br />

Program? Do you want to increase your business as a<br />

full- or part-time flight instructor? Then the ABS Flight<br />

Instructor Academy is for you. Do you know a superb<br />

flight instructor who will be even better with the benefit<br />

of ABS’ type-specific experience? Invite your CFI to enroll<br />

in the ABS Flight Instructor Academy. Or enroll him/her<br />

yourself as a reward for excellence.<br />

Over 50 years<br />

Beech experience<br />

This is a prime example of one of the things that<br />

ABS does for its members, and that probably would<br />

not have happened otherwise. BeechTalk, AOPA and<br />

other entities would not have been able to accomplish<br />

this. It is why I became a member of ABS many years<br />

ago, and why all <strong>Bonanza</strong> and Baron owners should<br />

belong. This one accomplishment will save many<br />

members an amount greater than the cost of an ABS<br />

Life Membership.<br />

This is but one example of the unique power of ABS<br />

to improve your Beechcraft ownership experience.<br />

Pre-Buy and Annual Inspections<br />

Now Offering AmSafe Seatbelt Airbag Installations<br />

Specializing in:<br />

• Custom Engine Installations<br />

• Altimeter and Transponder Certification<br />

• Tip Tank Installation<br />

Kalamazoo Aircraft Inc.<br />

Aircraft Maintenance – Inspection & Repair<br />

2729 E. Milham Rd., Kalamazoo, MI 49002 • 269-381-0790<br />

www.kalamazooaircraft.com / Repair Station K9AR289N<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 11


www.bonanza.org<br />

How to Teach Beech<br />

The ABS Flight Instructor Academy teaches certificated<br />

flight instructors the techniques and procedures<br />

devel oped by ABS’s contracted instructors in over three<br />

decades of teaching in Beech aircraft. The Academy<br />

serves hree purposes:<br />

c 1 Educating and standardizing experienced Beechcraft<br />

instructors, to acquaint CFIs with the many variations<br />

of ABS-type airplane systems and operation, add new<br />

instructors to BPPP, and increase the training options<br />

available to ABS members;<br />

c 2 Educating and standardizing certificated flight instructors<br />

who do not yet have significant type-specific experience,<br />

to improve the safety and quality of the Beechcraft<br />

instruction they provide and support developing<br />

the next generation of BPPP instructors; and<br />

c 3 Providing a convenient, low cost and standardized<br />

method of renewing BPPP instructor accreditation as a<br />

biennial ABS/BPPP requirement.<br />

ABS’s goal with the ABS Flight Instructor Academy is<br />

to ensure that Beech pilots everywhere have convenient<br />

access to safe, informed and effective type-specific<br />

training, in or out of the BPPP system. This is a major effort<br />

in support of the mission of the ABS Air Safety Foundation<br />

to protect lives and preserve the Beechcraft fleet.<br />

Tuition for the 19-course online ABS Flight Instructor<br />

Academy is only $125.<br />

What the Instructor Gets<br />

Complete the entire ABS Flight Instructor Academy<br />

online course and your name, business name (as applicable),<br />

location, and contact information will be listed on<br />

the ABS website. Current and prospective ABS members<br />

will be able to see this referral list when looking for an<br />

instructor for transition and recurrent training, flight<br />

reviews and instrument proficiency checks.<br />

As an ABS Flight Instructor Academy graduate you<br />

may be eligible to become a contract instructor for<br />

the Beechcraft Pilot Proficiency Program (BPPP). As<br />

a BPPP CFI, you’ll be eligible to provide flight training<br />

resulting in award of a completion certificate in<br />

the BPPP Online+Flight and BPPP LIVE programs.<br />

BPPP completion certifi cates result in substantial aircraft<br />

insurance discounts for aircraft owners, so your<br />

services will be in great demand. Your name, location,<br />

and contact information will be added to the BPPP<br />

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12 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

Instructor list on the ABS website. You’ll earn $75 per<br />

hour (including briefing time) when providing BPPPsanctioned<br />

training. You will be covered as a flight<br />

instructor under ABS’ liability policy including aircraft<br />

physical damage coverage while you instruct in<br />

Beech piston airplanes.<br />

What the ABS Member Gets<br />

You the ABS member get much more convenient<br />

access to type-knowledgeable flight instructors. You<br />

have the opportunity to help educate the great CFI you<br />

already use so he or she can teach you even better, or<br />

help you when you transition into another model of<br />

Beech airplane. You help develop the next generation<br />

of BPPP instructors, to provide continuity and continued<br />

excellent in this premier ABS member service. And by<br />

improving the overall quality of Beechcraft instruction<br />

for other pilots, you help maintain the numerical strength<br />

of the Beechcraft fleet, preserving the supportability and<br />

value of your Beech airplane.<br />

Find more information, and enroll yourself or your<br />

CFI in the ABS Flight Instructor Academy, through the<br />

“Instructor Training” link in the menu on the left at<br />

www.bonanza.org.<br />

Become a BPPP Instructor … or<br />

nominate your CFI to become one<br />

Here’s the process by which new instruc tors<br />

will be brought into the BPPP instructor cadre:<br />

c 1 An instructor is nominated (or nominates<br />

him/herself) as a candidate to become a BPPP instructor.<br />

c 2 The candidate submits an instructional résumé to ABS<br />

HQ. He or she also submits letters of recommendation<br />

from at least two ABS members he or she has instructed<br />

in the past three years.<br />

c 3 The minimum BPPP instructor experience requirements<br />

remain in effect:<br />

a. Combined left seat time in <strong>Bonanza</strong>s, Barons, and/or<br />

Travel Airs: 100 hours<br />

b. Dual Given (all aircraft): 500 hours<br />

c. Dual given in <strong>Bonanza</strong>s: 50 hours<br />

d. Dual given in last 12 months in <strong>Bonanza</strong>s, Barons, or<br />

Travel Airs: 15 hours<br />

e. For multi-engine instruction (not required) Dual<br />

given in Barons or Travel Airs: 50 hours<br />

f. Minimum requirements may be waived on a case-bycase<br />

basis on the strength of other experience<br />

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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 13


c 4 The candidate completes the online ABS Flight Instructor<br />

Academy program.<br />

c 5 The candidate completes a telephone or in-person interview<br />

with the ABS/ASF Executive Director and/or<br />

his designated representative. Evaluation of the candidate<br />

will emphasize:<br />

a. Safety and instructional/member service attitude<br />

b. Communication ability<br />

c. Enthusiasm for teaching in Beech aircraft<br />

d. Knowledge of and enthusiasm for ABS, its products,<br />

and member services<br />

c 6 The ABS/ASF Executive Director informs the candidate<br />

whether he/she has passed the interview and is eligible<br />

for standardization training.<br />

c 7 The ABS/ASF Executive Director informs the BPPP<br />

Standardization Check Pilots that the candidate is eligible<br />

for standardization training.<br />

c 8 The candidate contacts a BPPP Standardization Check<br />

Pilot from the online list and schedules his/her check<br />

flight.<br />

a. The candidate is responsible for supplying a satisfactory<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>, Debonair, Baron or Travel Air aircraft.<br />

i. ABS will develop and post a list of available Beech<br />

airplanes.<br />

ii. ABS/ASF will poll ABS members for their willingness<br />

to provide airplanes for BPPP standardization<br />

flights, and add any contacts to the list.<br />

iii. Candidates may have success asking one of the<br />

ABS members who endorsed the candidate to<br />

permit use of his/her aircraft.<br />

iv. BPPP Standardization Check Pilots who wish to<br />

permit use of a personal aircraft for instructor<br />

check flights may do by individual agreement<br />

with the candidate.<br />

b. All BPPP instructional flight procedures, including<br />

insurance requirements and hold harmless agreements,<br />

apply to standardization check flights.<br />

c 9 The BPPP Standardization Check Pilot conducts the<br />

flight check using the BPPP Standardization Flight<br />

Checklist (incorporating required maneuvers, completion<br />

standards and BPPP limitations):<br />

a. The purpose is to evaluate the candidate’s ability to<br />

communicate, ensure a safe training environment,<br />

and permit the pilot receiving instruction hands-on<br />

experience in the flight maneuvers.<br />

b. Strong emphasis is placed on evaluating the candidate’s<br />

ability to quickly develop communications/<br />

rapport with the customer and to assess the customer’s<br />

level of experience, ability, anxiety and training<br />

needs. Instructors must be excellent judges of character<br />

and airmanship in order to deliver BPPP training<br />

in the most effective manner in the short time we<br />

can spend with the customer.<br />

c. The candidate should clearly demonstrate enthusiasm<br />

for the Beechcraft product line, as well as a<br />

strong commitment to raise the customer’s flying to<br />

an increased level of safety and precision.<br />

d. This is as much a teaching event as it is a check. The<br />

BPPP Standardization Check Pilot’s job is to show<br />

how we do things in BPPP, and determine whether<br />

the candidate can provide the same quality of presentation<br />

with ABS members.<br />

e. All safety protocols and BPPP limitations apply.<br />

f. The BPPP Standardization Check Pilot will fly from<br />

the left seat and demonstrate the maneuvers. Per the<br />

checklist, some of the maneuvers are conducted and<br />

“taught” by the candidate from the right seat.<br />

g. Emphasis is on the maneuvers and techniques presented<br />

in visual flight, and the By the Numbers technique<br />

with at least one demonstrated instrument approach.<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

14 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

h. The flight should last approximately 2.5 to 3 hours, with<br />

approximately an hour of pre- and post-flight briefing.<br />

i. The BPPP Standardization Check Pilot may endorse<br />

the pilot for a Flight Review at his/her discretion. Completing<br />

all maneuvers required for an IPC is outside the<br />

scope of this flight.<br />

j. If there are any deficiencies found in the candidate’s<br />

flying and/or teaching ability by a pilot the BPPP Standardization<br />

Check Pilot otherwise feels is a good candidate,<br />

he/she may offer additional instruction (at the<br />

candidate’s expense). This is not meant to maximize<br />

the BPPP Standardization Check Pilot’s paid time, but<br />

rather remove pressure on the Check Pilot to approve<br />

someone who might need a little work but would otherwise<br />

be a good addition to the program.<br />

k. The flat fee for standardization is $300 (this is the BPPP<br />

CFI rate of $75/hour for up to four hours’ time). The candidate<br />

pays the BPPP Standardization Check Pilot directly.<br />

l. The candidate is responsible for any costs associated<br />

with the airplane.<br />

c 10 The BPPP Standardization Check Pilot informs the<br />

ABS/ASF Executive Director of whether the candidate<br />

successfully completed the check flight.<br />

c 11 The ABS/ASF Executive Director informs the candidate<br />

of the outcome of the check flight.<br />

c 12 If the candidate is successful, ABS HQ adds the pilot’s<br />

name and information to the BPPP Instructor list.<br />

Note: CFIs may also enroll in the online ABS Flight<br />

Instructor Academy program directly and complete the<br />

course in order to improve their ability to provide instruction<br />

outside the ABS/BPPP system. Those instructors<br />

who complete the online course but do not pursue BPPP<br />

credentials will be listed on the ABS website separately<br />

from the BPPP instructor list with a disclaimer that they<br />

have completed the online program but have not been<br />

interviewed or flight checked. They will not be eligible<br />

to provide instruction resulting in the award of a BPPP<br />

course completion certificate and will not be paid for<br />

their services as part<br />

of the BPPP or any<br />

other ABS program.<br />

Thomas P. Turner<br />

Executive Director<br />

asf@bonanza.org<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 15


www.bonanza.org<br />

On the Cover: Beechcraft of the Month<br />

1975 V35B<br />

N4089S<br />

By Dwight Mulch<br />

I<br />

am a latecomer to aviation. My first airplane ride<br />

was in 1978 at the age of 22 in a Lockheed 1011.<br />

My first general aviation flight was in a Cessna 190<br />

at age 27. Even with that I didn’t catch the aviation<br />

bug. What drove me to become a pilot was that my job<br />

often took me away from home, and I would miss my<br />

daughter’s activities while away on business. So to<br />

shorten my business travel time I learned to fly. This<br />

permitted me to build a business and still allowed<br />

time to be a father.<br />

I bought my first plane in 1985, a 1966 Cessna 150,<br />

N8040F, and received my private pilot’s license in that<br />

plane in 1986. While I flew the C150 for several years, I<br />

would occasionally rent a C172 or C182 for the experience<br />

of flying larger planes. My second airplane was a Cessna<br />

177 Cardinal, N344<strong>45</strong>, in which I earned my instrument<br />

ticket. I flew this aircraft 800 hours. In 2006 I stepped up<br />

to a retractable gear aircraft and bought a 1968 Piper<br />

Arrow. While this airplane gave RG experience, my business<br />

began to grow and I desired a faster, roomer, longerranging.<br />

I was strongly considering a Cessna 210 when<br />

one of my friends who owned a V-tail suggested I look at<br />

a <strong>Bonanza</strong>. It wasn’t long before I decided the flying<br />

qualities of the <strong>Bonanza</strong> were what I was looking for.<br />

That’s when I found N4089S , a 1975 V35B.<br />

N4089S had been located on my home field of KBRL<br />

(Burlington, Iowa) but had recently been moved to KPIA<br />

(Peoria, Illinois) by the broker. When I mentioned to my<br />

local FBO manager Daniel Wolford of Jet Air, Inc. that I<br />

wanted to purchase a <strong>Bonanza</strong>, he quickly sprang into<br />

action and put the deal together, trading my Piper Arrow<br />

and some cash for the V35B. Within a few weeks of leaving<br />

Burlington, N4089S returned in March of 2010.<br />

16 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


…so don’t be surprised<br />

if you see this beautiful<br />

plane at an airport<br />

near you.<br />

personal flying machine. As a bonus, I learned that my<br />

membership in ABS would allow me to share like interests<br />

with fellow <strong>Bonanza</strong> owners. I attended a BPPP class<br />

in Waukesha, Wisconsin, and quickly learned how much<br />

I didn’t know about flying a <strong>Bonanza</strong>. The information I<br />

received through BPPP was tremendous and the time<br />

spent in the air with my flight instructor Hank Canterbury<br />

was well worth the price of admission.<br />

Since purchasing N4089S I have overhauled the<br />

Continental IO-520 engine, replaced the main fuel bladders,<br />

repainted the aircraft with a more<br />

modern paint scheme, reupholstered<br />

the interior, replaced all the windows,<br />

and given it the TLC that had been<br />

missing for several years. Now I often<br />

receive comments about the beauty of<br />

the airplane. I still have plans for more<br />

upgrades, which includes avionics.<br />

N4089S provides me comfort for long flights and, with<br />

the option of 120 gallons of fuel, can stay in the air longer<br />

than I can. Most of my business flights are two to three<br />

hours with one or two people aboard, so knowing that we<br />

have six hours of fuel makes diverting around weather a<br />

workable option.<br />

When I started flying the <strong>Bonanza</strong> I got a sense that<br />

I had a solid aircraft in my hands. Its maneuverability<br />

and performance quickly grew on me. I decided this<br />

was an aircraft that I wanted to upgrade to make it my<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 17


When I started flying the <strong>Bonanza</strong> I got a sense that I<br />

had a solid aircraft in my hands. Its maneuverability<br />

and performance quickly grew on me.<br />

Equipment List<br />

Continental IO-520-BA, Overhauled in 2011<br />

by Central Cylinder, Omaha Nebraska<br />

McCauley 3 blade<br />

Garmin 430 WAAS<br />

Aspen EFD 1000PFD with Flight Director<br />

coupled to Century III Auto Pilot<br />

King KX170B<br />

Garmin GTX 320A Transponder<br />

Garmin 396 with XM weather<br />

JPI EDM 700 Engine analyzer<br />

Sigtronics SPA-400, 4-place intercom<br />

Davtron MB800 Chronometer<br />

J.L. Osborne 20-gallon tip tanks<br />

Ramaire Nose<br />

Vortex Generators<br />

Reiff Preheat System<br />

Long Tail Cone Modification<br />

Air Spectrum, Inc. Paint and<br />

Interior windows<br />

TTAF – 3500 hours<br />

18 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

I fly my <strong>Bonanza</strong> approximately 160-180 hours per<br />

year with the majority of that time business related. When<br />

I am not flying N4089S I have a CFII who takes over the<br />

responsibility of flying my employees to various clients<br />

throughout a 10- state area in the Midwest. However,<br />

N4089S isn’t all business and makes frequent trips with<br />

my wife, Sue, and me to visit our grandchildren Dawson<br />

and Gavin in the Chicago area, and to watch the Cardinals<br />

play baseball in downtown Saint Louis. There are also<br />

vacation destinations and other family members to visit<br />

throughout the USA, so don’t be sur prised if you see this<br />

beautiful plane at an airport near you.<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 19


www.bonanza.org<br />

New Airworthiness Issues<br />

Service information, bulletins, and Airworthiness Directives are time-sensitive<br />

safety information. Watch www.bonanza.org, ABS Hangar Flying, and ABS’s weekly<br />

e-publications for airworthiness issues as they arise.<br />

➤ ABS Averts New Circuit Breaker AD<br />

FAA has adopted ABS’s recommendation and will not issue a new<br />

circuit breaker Airworthiness Directive. As ABS proposed, FAA has<br />

released a Special Airworthiness Information Bulletin (SAIB) with a<br />

suggested (but not required) 2000 hours Time-in-Service (TIS) replacement<br />

schedule for switch-type circuit breakers, or 600 hours TIS for<br />

high-use training airplanes. The SAIB affects Beech airplanes and<br />

Cessna 400-series twins, and any other type certificated or Amateur-Built<br />

Aircraft with the same type of circuit breaker installed.<br />

Earl Lawrence, manager of the FAA’s Small Airplane Directorate in Kansas<br />

City, told ABS he greatly appreciates ABS’s input with the circuit breaker<br />

issue, and he’s pleased to be able to adopt ABS’s recommendations.<br />

Using the 2007 circuit breaker AD as a guide, this saves most ABS<br />

members airplane down-time and between $2000 and $4000 apiece<br />

in circuit breaker replacement, including labor, if a new AD had been<br />

issued requiring replacement.<br />

Engine Preoiler<br />

Get Oiled<br />

Before You Start!<br />

REDUCE ENGINE WEAR!<br />

Up to 70% of engine wear<br />

is caused by insufficient<br />

lubrication during start.<br />

Install a Preoiler and<br />

• Lubricate Bearings<br />

• Pressurize Lifters<br />

• Lubricate Cams<br />

• Lubricate Valves<br />

Certified on ALL Barons and <strong>Bonanza</strong>s.<br />

www.oilamatic.com<br />

FAA STC/PMA<br />

P.O. Box 5284, Englewood, CO 80155<br />

(303) 770-0175 • 1-800-343-7623 • FAX (303) 793-0493<br />

➤ MSB Affects G36 Rudder Hinges<br />

Beechcraft Corporation has issued Mandatory Service Bulletin (MSB)<br />

27-4122, calling for inspection of certain G36 middle and upper rudder<br />

hinge points. This Service Bulletin was issued “to address a quality<br />

escape regarding short screws” that “may not provide proper attach<br />

point tensile strength.” This MSB affects G36 <strong>Bonanza</strong>s serial numbers<br />

E-3964 through E-3986. For specific instructions see MSB 27-4122 at<br />

www.bonanza.org/images/pdf/msb27-4122g36.pdf.<br />

➤ Modifications to Type Certificated Airplanes<br />

The FAA has published a clarification to its 13-year-old Final Rule<br />

concerning modifications to type certificated airplanes. This update<br />

comes as a result of a December 2012 FAA request for comments after<br />

it determined there was confusion in the industry about engineering<br />

requirements for STC and other modifications to certificated aircraft.<br />

The clarification states:<br />

The revision require[s] applicant to apply the latest airworthiness<br />

standards in effect, to the extent practical, for the certification of significant<br />

design changes of aircraft, aircraft engines, and propellers. Before this<br />

final rule, many changes to aeronautical products were not required to<br />

show compliance with the latest airworthiness standards. This final rule<br />

was needed because incremental design approval changes accumulated<br />

into significant differences from the original product. Also, the final rule<br />

was intended to expand under what conditions the latest airworthiness<br />

amendments needed to be applied to changes to aeronautical products.<br />

The clarification is posted at www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-03-19/<br />

pdf/2013-06306.pdf.<br />

20 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Currents By Lew Gage<br />

LOP with an E225<br />

In the March 2013 ABS Magazine I wrote about installation of the new<br />

Insight G1 engine analyzer in place of the original GEM EGT instrument<br />

in my G35. I have run the airplane enough that I am able to offer some<br />

follow-on information on this comparatively superior system. There was<br />

no question in my mind in 1987 that the GEM system was a huge advance in<br />

aircraft engine monitoring. Over the years that original unit provided useful<br />

information and enhanced my operation of the airplane, resulting in about<br />

10 percent fuel savings and including a second readout of CHT.<br />

During the time I was using the<br />

old GEM system, there were many<br />

advances in the processing of information<br />

displayed to the pilot in<br />

these engine monitoring systems<br />

manufactured by Insight and other<br />

brands. Also during that time, our<br />

friends at GAMI started experimenting<br />

to improve engine operation and<br />

efficiency. They succeeded in doing<br />

so by obtaining STC authorization and<br />

PMA approval to manufacture and<br />

install balanced injector nozzles on<br />

the several fuel injected engine models<br />

they were working with. The net result<br />

were engines that ran cooler, burned<br />

less fuel, and probably had less wear<br />

and tear on the cylinders.<br />

I received many inquiries from<br />

ABS members about whether this<br />

really worked and could it be used<br />

on the E engine-powered V tails. My<br />

reply was yes, it would work in fuel<br />

injected engines if you had a set of<br />

the GAMI injector nozzles, studied<br />

the GAMI operation procedure, and<br />

understood it and faithfully followed<br />

those procedures while operating<br />

the airplane. However, with the<br />

PS-5C carbureted engines I did not<br />

recommend attempting lean of peak<br />

EGT (LOP) operation due to the uneven<br />

spread of mixture distribution among<br />

the cylinders. A high percentage of<br />

these old <strong>Bonanza</strong>s have no really<br />

accurate EGT/CHT instrumentation.<br />

The factory installed gauges were<br />

okay for very basic operation of the<br />

engine, but even with installation of<br />

the GEM or similar system there just<br />

was not a display of what was going<br />

on during the mixture control process<br />

that could monitor the result of pulling<br />

or pushing the “red knob” beyond<br />

the Flight Manual or Pilot’s Operating<br />

Handbook recommendations.<br />

I did find with the GEM system<br />

that the mixture distribution could<br />

be improved a considerable amount<br />

by a simple reduction of about 1/2 inch<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

22 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

of manifold pressure from WOT (wide<br />

open throttle). This equates to about<br />

3/4 inch of throttle knob movement<br />

aft of the full forward position. With<br />

the throttle full forward the two rear<br />

cylinders would be about where<br />

they should be, while the two front<br />

cylinders would be quite rich. The<br />

center cylinders would be somewhere<br />

in between. This simple 1/2 inch MP<br />

adjustment of the throttle and better<br />

mixture distribution made for about a<br />

10% reduction in trip fuel, or about a 1<br />

gallon per hour reduction in fuel burn,<br />

and cost nothing in trip time.<br />

Installation of an accurate fuel flow<br />

system and reducing the cruise RPM<br />

from 2300 to 2150 resulted in another<br />

7% to 8% reduction in trip fuel with<br />

only about two minutes per trip hour<br />

added to the total flight time. Above<br />

7500 feet MSL, I was seeing fuel flows<br />

around 9.5 GPH. All of this was done<br />

at 50°+/- F rich of peak EGT (ROP).<br />

CHT, measured at the bottom spark<br />

plug as prescribed by the E-engine<br />

overhaul manual, would run a maximum<br />

indication of about <strong>45</strong>0°F (that<br />

is 75°F below the listed redline of<br />

525°F at the spark plug). <strong>45</strong>0°F at the<br />

spark plug is approximately 410° to<br />

420°F at the threaded boss into which<br />

a bayonet sending unit is installed (as<br />

is standard in fuel injected engines).<br />

Those would be the maximum temperatures<br />

observed in climb. Level cruise<br />

flight runs about 30°F cooler.<br />

Then along came the G1. I began<br />

attempting to operate LOP<br />

above 6000 feet MSL. The most<br />

useless engine control Beech installed<br />

on the old <strong>Bonanza</strong>s is the vernier<br />

throttle, as I have written about in<br />

the past and in my book on <strong>page</strong> 13<br />

(Remember, all money from the book’s<br />

sale, $30 for 300+ <strong>page</strong>s, stays with the<br />

ABS/ASF). They put the good vernier<br />

in the throttle hole and a basic push/<br />

pull control in the mixture control<br />

hole. Should have been the other<br />

way around. With the PS-5C, or at<br />

least my PS-5C, I do not think LOP<br />

operation can be accomplished without<br />

a well-functioning vernier mixture<br />

control. When getting into the LOP area<br />

of operation there is a requirement<br />

to make extremely small changes in<br />

the mixture control movement. Perhaps<br />

some pilots might be able to<br />

accomplish this but the vernier-type<br />

knob makes this easy to do.<br />

The G1 installed in my airplane<br />

has the bayonet-type CHT sending<br />

units installed in the threaded boss<br />

and the display colors the individual<br />

cylinders CHT column green up to<br />

410°F. At 411°F the bar will turn yellow<br />

until the red line is reached. Below<br />

each CHT column there is a digital<br />

readout of both CHT and EGT in<br />

degrees Fahrenheit. In my <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

I also have a digital readout of all six<br />

cylinders measured at the spark plug.<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 23


www.bonanza.org<br />

This spark plug readout will either<br />

scan all six cylinders sequentially or<br />

will indicate whichever cylinder is<br />

the hottest. I have always advertised<br />

that the difference between those<br />

two points on the cylinder where<br />

temperature may be measured will<br />

have the spark plug temperature<br />

30°F to 40°F hotter than the threaded<br />

boss temperature. That turns out<br />

to be generally true during takeoff,<br />

climb, and ROP cruise. However, that<br />

relationship changes when operating<br />

LOP. The spread between those points<br />

may be as high as 30° but also may<br />

be only 10°. This G1 display opens up<br />

several windows of engine information<br />

but somewhat closes the airplane<br />

windows for the now busy pilot to<br />

look out of. In other words, there is<br />

a lot more time spent looking at the<br />

engine instrumentation than in the<br />

past, at least above the 6000 feet or so<br />

altitude when real LOP is begun. One<br />

advantage of the changing colors of<br />

the CHT columns is that only a quick<br />

glance is required to tell if everything<br />

is okay or if we’ve gotta do something<br />

about ole number 4.<br />

One note about the installation of<br />

the G1 that is important, or at least<br />

important in my installation: Because<br />

the G1 is a 2-1/4 inch instrument and<br />

there is a lot of displayed information<br />

on the rather small instrument face, the<br />

digital readouts are small. My engine<br />

instrument panel is at the far right of<br />

the airplane directly in front of the<br />

passenger’s seat. I mounted my G1,<br />

as all of the other engine instruments<br />

are mounted, at a <strong>45</strong>° angle and also<br />

angled up so I am looking straight into<br />

the G1 face with no parallax. Since this<br />

display is referred to often while flying,<br />

such mounting affords the quickest<br />

read time possible.<br />

On a recent breakfast trip from<br />

Reno/Stead, Nevada, to Petaluma,<br />

California I took some readings in<br />

level cruise flight. I think all of the<br />

instrument readouts are accurate to<br />

within a very small percentage:<br />

8500 MSL<br />

OAT +38°F<br />

Aircraft weight 2800 lbs<br />

The EGT was ranging from<br />

10 to 80° F LOP<br />

21.5 MP / 2150 RPM—<br />

148 MPH indicated airspeed<br />

at 8.6 GPH<br />

Bayonet CHTs<br />

380/ 375 / 361 / 382 / 326 / 298<br />

EGTs 14<strong>45</strong>/1494/1448/1481/1466/1470<br />

Oil pressure 46 PSI/Oil temp 175°F.<br />

I failed to take the exact numbers<br />

of the LOP during the readings but<br />

I recall that range being there. The<br />

engine has 1900 hours SMOH and 1100<br />

on the first-run Continental cylinders.<br />

Not bad for such an old beast.<br />

As stated above, there is a very fine<br />

line in the movement of the mixture<br />

control to keep the engine running<br />

smoothly and still staying on the lean<br />

side of peak. Without the vernier<br />

mixture control I doubt that satisfactory<br />

operation could be achieved. Maybe,<br />

but I doubt it. When the PS-5C, or<br />

at least my PS-5C, is adjusted to the<br />

correct point LOP, it is very close to<br />

beginning to shut the engine down. It<br />

will run rough if just another miliwinkle<br />

of movement toward lean is made. I do<br />

have an automatic warning system<br />

that a too-lean-of-peak area has been<br />

entered. That would be my beautiful<br />

wife Carmen giving me the “whadda<br />

you doin’” look.<br />

24 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 25


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26 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY


Beech on a Budget<br />

Safe • Legal • Low Cost<br />

By Mike Caban<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

Wax On, Wax Off:<br />

Low-Cost Cleaning<br />

Products and Tips<br />

Figure 2<br />

With May finally here and the cold wintry weather for many of<br />

us a memory, our Beechcraft airplanes are likely starting to<br />

get the exercise they deserve. For many of us, the beginning<br />

of the prime flying months is the time we also focus on<br />

cleaning up our birds. Even for our members in the Southern Hemisphere,<br />

cleaning and waxing are good things for preparing for the less active flying<br />

months. Whether you’re an old hand at this cleaning ritual or a new<br />

Beechcraft owner, you might appreciate some of my low-cost cleaning and<br />

waxing finds from over eight years of Beechcraft ownership.<br />

Figure 1<br />

Since taking delivery of my fresh ly<br />

painted B55 in 2004, I have always<br />

hand-washed. I use airport water<br />

pressure from a garden hose and a<br />

large cotton towel to loosen dust and<br />

dirt. For drying, I’ve used nothing more<br />

exotic than a genuine leather chamois<br />

cloth (Figure 1), usually available for<br />

under $20 in most auto supply outlets.<br />

The beauty of genuine leather chamois<br />

is that it has no abrasive properties<br />

and high absorption properties. It<br />

has become a favorite for many auto<br />

detailers who pride themselves on not<br />

scratching painted surfaces.<br />

I’ve avoided the expensive pressure<br />

washers, exotic soap systems,<br />

blade brushes, and water spot eliminator<br />

systems; and I have always<br />

been happy with the cleaning results<br />

of water, chamois, and good old<br />

fashioned elbow grease. In my mind,<br />

it doesn’t get any more “natural” than<br />

that, with a green bonus of no soap<br />

chemistry going into the water treatment<br />

system.<br />

When it comes to waxing, I’ll try to<br />

get two wax events in each year (but<br />

at least one). I won’t deny that waxing<br />

the airplane is a major undertaking<br />

in the application of time and elbow<br />

grease. For me it involves about two<br />

four-hour sessions to completely apply<br />

the wax and buff it off by hand. Large,<br />

old cotton bath towels are once<br />

again your friends. The wax products<br />

I’ve found easiest to apply and<br />

buff, while providing a long lasting<br />

beading surface and smooth-as-glass<br />

surface, are Marine-grade liquids from<br />

3M and West Marine (Figure 2), a<br />

quart of which is in the $20 range.<br />

These newly formulated waxes tout<br />

“nano” particle size technology that<br />

seals the surface and leaves a protective,<br />

smooth, high-gloss finish. Since<br />

air is a fluid, it will flow more effortlessly<br />

over your airframe – and we all<br />

know what that means.<br />

Another wax/polishing product that<br />

comes highly recommended is Protect<br />

All, an easy to apply spray liquid.<br />

It’s reportedly available in 14-ounce<br />

bottles for about $10 at Wal-Mart. Still<br />

yet another great value in a wax is Nu<br />

Finish (Figure 3), which applies and<br />

buffs off easily, and available for about<br />

$9 for 16 ounces.<br />

For those of us with less than Herculean<br />

arm endurance, mechanical<br />

help can be found in the form of<br />

a Cyclo orbi tal polisher (Figure 4).<br />

Figure 3<br />

Figure 4<br />

28 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Figure 5<br />

It produces an orbital rotation with<br />

an overlapping motion. The Cyclo’s<br />

pedigree is reported to go back to<br />

the mid-1950s when the government<br />

used it to polish aircraft and missiles!<br />

(Who knew they polished missiles?)<br />

They have a robust cast metal design<br />

with serviceable motor brushes. Good<br />

condition used units have been seen<br />

on eBay for under $200, while a new<br />

one will set you back about $300. Be<br />

careful with the Cyclo in that you do<br />

not apply too much pressure and burn<br />

through your paint.<br />

A lower cost, random orbiting single<br />

head unit that has gotten good Beech<br />

owner reviews is the Porter Cable<br />

Model #7424 (Figure 5), available<br />

at outlets like www.amazon.com for<br />

about $115.<br />

For the belly and some of the<br />

under wing areas, I’ve found that an<br />

automotive creeper with an adjustable<br />

angle back works very well.<br />

Are you tired yet? Well stay with<br />

me, because one of the overlooked<br />

benefits of hand-washing and waxing<br />

your airframe is that you are actually<br />

performing a very close inspection<br />

of every square inch of your airplane.<br />

Indeed, any scratch, crack, loose rivet,<br />

missing trim, or hardware anomaly is<br />

going to be revealed.<br />

Now that you’ve found some stone<br />

chips that need to be touched up,<br />

check out the folks at www.aero<br />

touchups.com who have 2-ounce kits<br />

of the ubiquitous Matterhorn White<br />

(Figure 6) and other popular aerocolors<br />

in two-part polyurethane systems<br />

(just like original airplane paint).<br />

For those difficult bug, exhaust,<br />

and oil stains I’m fond of Simple Green<br />

Figure 6 Figure 7<br />

Extreme (Figure 7), which is specifically<br />

designed for aviation aluminum<br />

and meets the Boeing Exterior &<br />

General Cleaners Spec # D6-17487<br />

Revision P (April 2003). Be sure to use<br />

this and not other versions of Simple<br />

Green. The recommended dilution rate<br />

is 50 percent with water, and I’ve heard<br />

some Beech owners report good results<br />

with a 70 percent water dilution. Simple<br />

Green Extreme can be found at Aircraft<br />

Spruce and all the other usual aviation<br />

sources for about $17 a gallon.<br />

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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 29


www.bonanza.org<br />

Figure 8<br />

The last cleaning tip I’ll leave you with is<br />

going to make up for all the effort you exerted in<br />

hand-washing and waxing your plane. Aluminum<br />

propeller spinners are some of the toughest things<br />

to keep shiny, and they can really be eye-catching<br />

when polished up just right. Mechanic Kent Felkins<br />

of Oklahoma offers this PIREP on the California<br />

Customs chrome cleaning system (Figure 8 & 9):<br />

“A couple of spinners hadn’t been touched in<br />

three to four years except for washing. I used<br />

the de-oxidizer then buffed with the polish. The<br />

de-oxidizer is the key. After the black residue<br />

came up while polishing, I used a third rag with<br />

corn starch (flour works just as well) and the<br />

shine glowed clean. I didn’t have to rub hard.<br />

It took less than ten minutes per spinner with<br />

rather great results. It took just a small part of<br />

the bottle.”<br />

Figure 10 shows the spinner before and<br />

Figure 11 shows the results after the California<br />

Customs chrome system. The oxidizer and polish<br />

can be purchased at http://www.california<br />

custom.com for a total of $28.<br />

Keep ’em looking pretty and proud because<br />

it’s a Beechcraft, the pride of the piston GA<br />

fleet !<br />

Figure 9 Figure 10 Figure 11<br />

30 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 31


Insurance<br />

By John Allen<br />

Coverage for Your Hangar<br />

and Contents<br />

We spend a good deal of time<br />

discussing aircraft insurance issues<br />

for <strong>Bonanza</strong> and Baron owners,<br />

but much less time with coverage<br />

questions for the structure that protects these valued<br />

possessions while they are not flying – the aircraft<br />

hangar. Fire, windstorm, vandalism, errant tugs,<br />

automobiles, animals, etc., you name it, and it can<br />

happen around an airport.<br />

When is it your responsibility to insure the hangar<br />

structure? This is an area that can get confusing due to<br />

the various requirements of municipalities and airport<br />

authorities. If you own the aircraft hangar and it is built on<br />

your owned or leased property on the airport, it should be<br />

clear that you have an insurable interest in the property.<br />

This means you can insure your property and collect the<br />

proceeds following a loss.<br />

However, if you are just leasing the hangar, you may<br />

not have an insurable interest in the hangar structure.<br />

In many cases the airport authority, the local FBO, or<br />

another owner owns the structure and you just have an<br />

insurable interest in your personal property that is stored<br />

32 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

Fire, windstorm, vandalism, errant tugs,<br />

automobiles, animals, etc., you name it,<br />

and it can happen around an airport.<br />

on the premises. But wait a moment! What happens if the<br />

hangar burns down and it is your negligence that caused<br />

the damage? For example, you left a space heater burning<br />

and it was the source of the fire. You may need to look to<br />

the requirements of your lease for that answer.<br />

The lessor (or sub-lessor in some cases) will require<br />

you to enter into a lease agreement. Leases outline the<br />

responsibilities of both parties. Whether you are leasing<br />

a building, an apartment, or a hangar space, a written<br />

agreement is normally required. Most leases include<br />

clauses that make you as the lessee responsible for<br />

your negligent acts arising out of the operation, use, or<br />

occupancy of your hangar. It is certainly reasonable<br />

to expect you to be responsible for your own negligent<br />

actions. However, with regard to property insurance, it<br />

is not possible for you to insure the hangar unless you<br />

have an insurable interest, either by ownership or contractually<br />

by a lease.<br />

It is important in these situations to send a copy of<br />

the lease to your attorney for advice. Request his or her<br />

assistance in negotiating a clause that will hold you<br />

harmless and give you a waiver of subrogation in the<br />

event of damage to the structure by your negligence. If<br />

this is done prior to a loss, it should not cost the landlord<br />

any additional premium on the property policy. You can<br />

then avoid a difficult and expensive subrogation lawsuit<br />

with the landlord’s insurance carrier after a hangar loss<br />

is paid to the owner of the hangar.<br />

An aircraft hangar is big financial investment and<br />

whether you built the hangar yourself or your lease<br />

states that you are required to purchase the cover age<br />

while you are leasing the hangar, it makes sense to understand<br />

what is included in the term “Property” insurance.<br />

The basic property policy will begin with a clause that<br />

goes like this: “We will pay for direct physical damage to<br />

Covered Property caused by or resulting from a Covered<br />

Cause of Loss.” This wording means that the “Covered<br />

Property” needs to be scheduled (listed) and described in<br />

the declarations section of the policy. Among other items,<br />

you must be sure the correct named insured is listed<br />

and the physical address and description of the insured<br />

hangar is shown properly, the correct value is shown, and<br />

any appurtenant structures (fences, gates, and signs) that<br />

are not covered automatically by the policy must be listed<br />

in order to be covered.<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 33


www.bonanza.org<br />

The term “Building” in the policy includes not only the<br />

designated building structure, but may also include other<br />

items such as:<br />

• Completed additions<br />

• Fixtures, including outdoor fixtures<br />

• Machinery and equipment permanently attached to the<br />

building<br />

• Personal property owned by you that is used to maintain<br />

or service the building or structure (see the policy<br />

for limitations)<br />

Contents<br />

In addition to the Building you probably have personal<br />

property or “contents” stored inside the hangar that need<br />

to be covered. The term for that in the policy is “Your Business<br />

Personal Property.” This normally covers contents<br />

located in or on the designated building or in the open (or<br />

in a vehicle) within 1000 feet of the described premises,<br />

consisting of the following:<br />

• Furniture and fixtures<br />

• Machinery and equipment<br />

• “Stock”<br />

• Personal property owned by you and used in your business<br />

• Your interest as tenant in the improvements and betterments<br />

of a hangar<br />

Even if you do not have coverage on the building,<br />

these items can be insured on a Contents Only policy<br />

that is written to cover the property of a tenant (you). You<br />

can also cover “Personal Property of Others,” “Personal<br />

Property at Undescribed Premises,” and “Personal Property<br />

in Transit.”<br />

It is very important to send a copy of any hangar<br />

lease to your ABS Falcon insurance representative for<br />

the review and approval of your aviation insurance<br />

underwriter. This will not only assure you don’t violate<br />

the insurance conditions of your aircraft policy, but<br />

will also allow your agent to review any additional<br />

insurance requirements in the lease. The ABS Falcon<br />

Insurance program has some great markets for your<br />

hangar insurance needs, so please do not hesitate to ask<br />

us for a quote.<br />

John Allen is president and owner of Falcon<br />

Insurance Agency, which he founded in 1979 in Austin,<br />

Texas. Falcon now has 12 offices across the country<br />

employing over 90 full-time aviation insurance<br />

professionals. Prior to entering the aviation insurance<br />

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the United States Air Force as a pilot.<br />

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34 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

Turbos and Low Altitude Ops<br />

by Bill Compton<br />

This article is about comparison of like airframes with various<br />

turbo setups and the advantages of turbocharged engines even<br />

if operat ing at 10,000 feet and below, both in performance and<br />

engine longevity. Close study of the data helps to appreciate the<br />

fine points. The 36 <strong>Bonanza</strong>s were left out of these comparisons to avoid the<br />

apples vs. oranges situation; they tend to be about 8 knots slower than the<br />

35 and 33. This will concentrate on the normally aspirated V35 (V35NA)<br />

versus its turbocharged (V35TC) and turbonormalized (V35TN) cousins<br />

with 520 engines.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>s are flown at night, on<br />

instruments, over all kinds of terrain.<br />

Operators can, and do, increase<br />

capabilities with avionics, anti-icing,<br />

radar, SFERICs, standby alternators,<br />

turbo-charging, but still hanging it all<br />

out on a single engine. Every effort<br />

might well be made to minimize the<br />

risk of engine failure. Engine monitors,<br />

tuned fuel injectors, oil analysis, borescoping,<br />

and science-based operating<br />

procedures from Advanced Pilot<br />

Seminars have been advances in that<br />

direction. The newer data does sometimes<br />

conflict with POH advice.<br />

Test cell research by Tornado<br />

Alley Turbo (TAT), a turbo system<br />

manufacturer and respected R&D<br />

firm, has shown that operators can<br />

extend engine life and reliability by<br />

avoiding the “Red Box,”, defined as<br />

EGTs between 40° lean of peak (LOP)<br />

and 180° rich of peak (ROP) at 75%<br />

power, and between peak and 100°<br />

ROP at 65% power. At 60% and below,<br />

there is no “Red Box.” This is controlled<br />

with the mixture knob, referencing<br />

EGTs and CHTs of all cylinders. Proper<br />

mixture control slows the flame front<br />

of combustion so that peak internal<br />

Photo by Jay Burris<br />

combustion pressures (ICPs) are less<br />

and occur later in the power stroke,<br />

where there is better mechanical<br />

advantage and less heat being passed<br />

to the cylinder walls. Going from<br />

ROP to LOP reduces cylinder head<br />

temperatures (CHT) by about 30°F.<br />

All this knowledge has changed the<br />

way many operate their fuel-injected<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> engines, especially the<br />

turbocharged models.<br />

The V35NA POH prohibits 2300 RPM<br />

with MP higher than 24.5", as reduced<br />

RPM brings peak ICP closer to Top Dead<br />

Center (TDC) of piston travel. However,<br />

when operating LOP, the speed<br />

of combustion is slowed, so many run<br />

the TN conversion at 2300 RPM with<br />

full throttle and maximum manifold<br />

pressure, knowing that the slower ICP<br />

peak is kept further from TDC by LOP<br />

operation, and are reassured by normal<br />

cylinder head temperatures.<br />

Beech produced the V35TC from<br />

1966 through 1969, powered by a turbo -<br />

charged IO-520 engine with a reduced<br />

compression ratio to improve detonation<br />

margin. The airplane earned a rep<br />

as fuel hog and cylinder trasher, but<br />

in the mid 1990s, operators of the<br />

V35TC found they could mostly avoid<br />

those problems by operating LOP. It<br />

does well with LOP cruise climbs, and<br />

will do 200+ KTAS up high.<br />

More recently, TAT engineered “turbo<br />

normalizing” (TN) for 520 and 550<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>s, using an intercooler rather<br />

than a reduced compression ratio to<br />

maintain detonation margin. The V35TN<br />

performance is superior to the V35TC,<br />

as it can maintain power to higher altitudes<br />

at lower fuel flows. The V35TN<br />

can do 210+ KTAS above 20,000 feet.<br />

Illustrated in Table 1 are power<br />

choices for IO-520 <strong>Bonanza</strong>s. Nauti -<br />

cal air miles/gallon (Nam/gal) is a<br />

refer ence for range performance.<br />

36 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


<strong>Bonanza</strong>s are flown at night, on instruments,<br />

over all kinds of terrain.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>, Travel Air, Baron<br />

SHOULDER HARNESS<br />

KITS<br />

FAA STC/PMA APPROVED KITS<br />

Pwr Mixt GPH KIAS/KTAS Nam/gal Comments<br />

At 4,000 feet: V35NA<br />

75% 180° ROP 19 162 / 172 9.0 Less range, dirty engine, yecch<br />

75% peak EGT 15.3 162 / 172 11.2 High CHTs and ICPs, bad news<br />

75% 40° LOP 14.4 162 / 172 11.9 Cooler, clean, fast, poor range<br />

65% 20° LOP 12.4 153 / 163 13.1 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

55% 20° LOP 10.5 143 / 152 14.5 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

<strong>45</strong>% 20° LOP 8.6 129 / 137 15.9 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

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At 8,000 feet: V35NA<br />

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65% 20° LOP 12.4 150 / 169 13.6 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

55% 20° LOP 10.5 139 / 157 14.9 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

<strong>45</strong>% 20° LOP 8.6 124 / 140 16.3 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

At 10,000 feet: V35NA<br />

65% ROP 15 149 / 171 11.4 2700 rpm – “best power”<br />

55% 20° LOP 11.5 137 / 159 13.8 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

<strong>45</strong>% 20° LOP 8.6 122 / 141 16.4 Choices of TAS vs range<br />

But at 10,000 feet, the turbo models start looking better:<br />

V35TC<br />

75% 40° LOP 15.6 156 / 181 11.6 A 181 knot airplane!<br />

65% 20° LOP 13.3 149 / 171 12.7 Beats NA on range at 171 kt<br />

V35TN<br />

75% 40° LOP 14.4 156 / 181 12.5 Outstanding speed + range<br />

65% 20° LOP 12.4 149 / 171 13.8 Beats NA, TC on range at 171 kt<br />

Table 1. Standard altitudes. POH numbers. LOP fuel flows based on 14.9 Hp/gal/hr for NA and<br />

TN, 13.7 Hp/gal/hr for TC. Engines running LOP require approx 3" more MP to maintain same<br />

power as ROP; that MP rapidly becomes unavailable for NA engines with increasing altitude.<br />

Note that IAS falls, TAS increases with increasing altitude at same power.<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 37


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The turbo aircraft can climb rapidly<br />

with full power to 10,000 feet and<br />

accelerate to cruise speed sooner, reducing<br />

time en route. They can cruise<br />

at lower RPM and compensate with<br />

higher manifold pressure, re duc ing<br />

engine wear and tach time while<br />

effectively extending TBO if based on<br />

an engine rpm-referencing recording<br />

tacho meter. Routinely operating LOP<br />

for all except take off and initial climb<br />

can further improve efficiency and<br />

reduce engine wear. WOTLOPSOP,<br />

standing for “wide open throttle –<br />

lean of peak – standard operating<br />

pro cedure,” becomes a possibility.<br />

Full throttle operation is modified<br />

with mixture and RPM, throttle is<br />

not decreased until top of descent.<br />

The data presented show the V35NA<br />

is an almost 170 knot airplane up to<br />

10,000 feet, and the turbos are 180 knot<br />

airplanes and better, starting at 10,000<br />

feet. It is also evident that the best<br />

nautical air miles per gallon (Nam/g)<br />

is achieved with a combination of LOP<br />

operation for engine efficiency and IAS<br />

near Vbr for airframe efficiency. (The<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Vbr is something like 113KIAS<br />

at 3400 pounds.) RPM reductions<br />

can improve propeller and engine<br />

efficiencies. Turbo operators can get<br />

all these combinations at high altitude<br />

with good TAS.<br />

In addition to the already noted<br />

advantages of turbo aircraft, they<br />

have the ability to climb through<br />

and above an icing encounter at a<br />

better rate of climb, to cruise at<br />

higher altitudes to provide more<br />

weather flexibility, and to potentially<br />

increase TAS to and be yond 200<br />

knots. Nor mally, turbo aircraft are<br />

equipped with oxygen, which may be<br />

used to reduce fatigue at traditionally<br />

non-oxygen altitudes, especially on<br />

long flights.<br />

38 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY


www.bonanza.org<br />

The turbos have the additional<br />

weight of the turbo system and the<br />

oxygen set-up which reduce useful<br />

load but can improve center of gravity<br />

location. Pilots who have and use<br />

engine monitors and understand the<br />

techniques of engine management<br />

taught by Advanced Pilot Seminars<br />

should enjoy improved engine longevity<br />

and service.<br />

The TAT TN mods are quite pricey,<br />

while the turbo of the V35TC is practically<br />

free, as the word is not out on<br />

what an outstanding aircraft it is when<br />

properly operated LOP. It’s turbo ops<br />

on a budget. Get yours for a song!<br />

For those needing more room,<br />

there are the A36TC and B36TC. These<br />

airplanes have the IO-520UB engine,<br />

which has a reduced compression<br />

ratio like the V35TC. Some owners<br />

operate them LOP; others are unable<br />

as even with balanced injectors<br />

many UB engines do not run smoothly<br />

LOP. Some B36TCs have been<br />

converted to IO-550 engines with<br />

turbonormalizing, and some have<br />

gross weight increases. A36s are also<br />

eligible for anti icing and FIKI (flight<br />

in known icing). Those owners seem<br />

to have big smiles.<br />

My son and I have operated our<br />

V35TC LOP since catching a lecture<br />

by George Braly at Oshkosh in 1995.<br />

We’re now on our fourth engine<br />

since 1981. Initially we were changing<br />

out one or more cylinders at annuals,<br />

but since going LOP, we have not<br />

removed a cylinder prematurely and<br />

we went 200 hours past TBO on the last<br />

engine. Our oil stays clean, there is no<br />

soot in our exhaust stack, borescopes<br />

and compressions are solid, and in<br />

short, we trust the engine. Braly says<br />

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it’s how you run it hard. That seems to<br />

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AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 39


Safety Pilot By Thomas P. Turner<br />

The Airshow Pass<br />

From the NTSB:<br />

The Beech V35B impacted trees<br />

and terrain following a low pass<br />

over a golf course near the intended<br />

destination airport. The pilot and<br />

three passengers were killed.<br />

The airplane was destroyed in a<br />

post-crash fire. The cross-country<br />

flight departed about two hours<br />

before. Visual meteor ological<br />

conditions prevailed. Witnesses<br />

reported that the airplane flew low<br />

over the golf course, and then<br />

pitched up and banked to the right<br />

toward the airport. As the airplane<br />

was banking to the right it suddenly<br />

“dropped out of the air.”<br />

NTSB Probable Cause:<br />

The pilot’s failure to maintain<br />

ade quate airspeed while maneuvering<br />

for land ing, resulting in an<br />

aerodynamic stall.<br />

Through your windscreen the ground rolls into view, growing by<br />

the instant with your extreme approach. Your airspeed indicator<br />

spirals upward and, in seconds, you race along a few feet above<br />

the ground, a smile on your face, and looks of amazement on<br />

the faces of your passengers…who know not the dangers to which you’ve<br />

exposed them. The end of the run rushes to meet you as you haul back<br />

on the controls. Rolling into a steep bank, you complete what I call the<br />

“airshow pass” – a classic high-speed flyby and steep turning pull-up flown<br />

by dozens of pilots each day during the summer fly-in season.<br />

The ground-bound crowds love the<br />

airshow pass, too. They can vicariously<br />

feel the rush of speed, sensed through<br />

the rumble of your engine, the whine<br />

of your propeller, and the flash as you<br />

go by. The pull-up and bank maneuver<br />

spotlights the capabilities of your<br />

airplane, and spectators wish they<br />

could be a great pilot like you.<br />

It’s Always Fun Until…<br />

Unfortunately, the airshow pass<br />

leads to over 2% of all general aviation<br />

accidents, according to AOPA.<br />

Sure, two airshow pass accidents<br />

for every one hundred GA accidents<br />

is fairly small – until you consider<br />

the miniscule amount of time spent<br />

flying this maneuver. According to<br />

42 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

n Attempted low pass and pull-up,<br />

loss of control, stall/spin<br />

n Inadequate airspeed, stall during<br />

low pass<br />

n Steep turn at low altitude, stall,<br />

loss of control<br />

The total number of accidents is<br />

almost equally divided among these<br />

three categories.<br />

Categories<br />

Over 90% of the airshow pass<br />

accidents involve single-engine, fixed<br />

gear airplanes. That doesn’t mean<br />

retractable-gear and multiengine<br />

airplanes are immune to the stall/spin<br />

on pull-up, despite their typically greater<br />

power and cleaner aerodynamics. In<br />

fact, more twin-engine airplanes are<br />

involved in airshow pass-type mishaps<br />

than single-engine retracts.<br />

Photo by Tom Reid<br />

the National Transportation Safety<br />

Board (NTSB), there are an average<br />

of 51 accidents attributed to botched<br />

attempts at the airshow pass each<br />

year. That’s practically one each<br />

week. Since very little of this type<br />

of flying occurs during the cold<br />

months (when attracting an outdoor<br />

audience is less likely), it’s actually<br />

a fairly common occurrence during<br />

the flying season. What goes awry<br />

so frequently? More directly: What<br />

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Causes<br />

Every one of the high-speed airshow<br />

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a loss of airspeed, a stall, and, commonly,<br />

a spin. The NTSB lists three<br />

categories of accidents associ ated<br />

with this maneuver:<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 43


www.bonanza.org<br />

Every one of the high-speed airshow pass accidents resulted from<br />

a loss of airspeed, a stall, and, com monly, a spin.<br />

Only about 14% of the airplanes<br />

involved in this type of mishap are<br />

normally considered to be aerobatic<br />

– such as Pitts, Stearmans, or P-51s.<br />

I imagine that 14% is actually representative<br />

of the aerobatic aircraft<br />

population at most air shows. No<br />

pilot, and no airplane type, is immune.<br />

“Substantial damage” or destruction of<br />

the airplane were the results in 99.5%<br />

of airshow pass accidents. Around<br />

47% of these mishaps proved fatal<br />

and in these cases, a great number of<br />

innocent passengers and spectators<br />

died as well.<br />

FAR 91.119 tells us that the spectacle<br />

of the airshow pass is illegal. The regulation<br />

for minimum altitude says:<br />

n Anywhere. An altitude allowing, if a<br />

power unit fails, an emergency landing<br />

without undue hazard to persons or<br />

property on the surface.<br />

n Over congested areas. Over any congested<br />

area of a city, town, or settlement,<br />

or over any open air assembly of persons,<br />

an altitude of 1,000 feet above<br />

the highest obstacle within a horizontal<br />

radius of 2,000 feet of the aircraft.<br />

n Over other than congested areas. An<br />

altitude of 500 feet above the surface,<br />

except over open water or sparsely<br />

populated areas. In those cases, the<br />

aircraft may not be operated closer<br />

than 500 feet to any person, vessel,<br />

vehicle, or structure.<br />

If there’s someone on the ground<br />

to watch, you need to be at least 500<br />

feet away from the closest person. The<br />

FAA has repeatedly cited pilots for<br />

making “airshow passes” over crowds<br />

at fly-ins, in public areas (like a golf<br />

course), and even private property. To<br />

violate the rule requires a written FAA<br />

exemption… and adhering to the limitations<br />

of altitude exemptions is one<br />

of the most closely scrutinized items<br />

for professional airshow performers.<br />

Diving at the runway, flying along<br />

low at high speed, and climbing above<br />

the crowd provide a rush of adrenaline.<br />

But it’s illegal, and it’s frequently<br />

deadly. Leave the airshow pass to the<br />

air show professionals.<br />

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44 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


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46 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY


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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 47


BPPP By Mike Friel<br />

Obstacle Avoidance Below MDA<br />

Let’s discuss obstacle avoidance during the approach and landing.<br />

If we stay on the published approach we should not have any problems.<br />

There are a few things, though, with the advent of GPS-derived advisory<br />

glideslopes on GPS non-precision approaches, that can lead us astray.<br />

First, take a look at any ILS<br />

in the U.S. Terminal Procedures<br />

Publication (Figure 1). Do you<br />

see that light gray, tapered, slim<br />

V-like symbol on the profile view<br />

that runs from the glideslope<br />

intercept right past DA (Decision<br />

Altitude) right down to the<br />

runway threshold? This symbol<br />

is called a “stipple.” Now take a<br />

look at a VOR approach (or any<br />

non-precision approach). There’s<br />

no stipple on the profile view of<br />

that approach. Why is that?<br />

Figure 1: ILS approach<br />

Figure 2: RNAV approach<br />

It’s because the portion of the<br />

VOR and NDB approach below the<br />

minimum descent altitude is a visual<br />

portion of those approaches. You’re<br />

basically on your own to “see and<br />

avoid” obstacles once you go below<br />

Minimum Descent Altitude (MDA).<br />

The ILS, on the other hand, when used<br />

by certain operators may be flown<br />

right down to the runway. You’re<br />

guaranteed obstacle clearance all<br />

the way to touchdown if centered on<br />

the ILS glideslope, and that V-shaped<br />

symbol on the profile view running<br />

from the glideslope intercept to the<br />

runway shows you that fact visually.<br />

Now for the gotcha part: Look at<br />

a RNAV (GPS) approach (Figure 2).<br />

Some GPS approaches have a small<br />

shaded symbol, somewhat like the<br />

symbol on the ILS but much smaller,<br />

running from the MDA to the runway.<br />

Some don’t. Why is that? It’s because<br />

some approaches guarantee obstacle<br />

protection from the MDA to the<br />

runway and others do not. Now look<br />

at a GPS approach that only has<br />

LNAV (lateral navigation) minimums.<br />

Some have the gray shaded symbol<br />

and some don’t.<br />

There are a variety of reasons<br />

for this, but that’s how it is. The U.S.<br />

Terminal Procedure Publication states<br />

“absence of shaded area indicates<br />

34:1 is not clear.”<br />

48 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


What about those LNAV<br />

GPS approaches not<br />

having that gray shading below<br />

MDA? You guessed it: The GPS<br />

advisory glideslope can run you<br />

right into a tree or other obstacle<br />

if you follow it below MDA.<br />

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Take a look at the GPS in your airplane.<br />

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provides you with a neat “advisory”<br />

glideslope right past MDA right to the<br />

runway threshold. That’s great, but wait.<br />

What about those LNAV GPS approaches<br />

not having that gray shading below<br />

MDA? You guessed it: The GPS advisory<br />

glideslope can run you right into a tree or<br />

other obstacle if you follow it below MDA.<br />

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4. You’ll receive a BPPP Completion Certificate,<br />

which may qualify you for insurance<br />

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the advisory glideslope below MDA on Many aircraft insurance companies<br />

a night LNAV approach in rural New give up to a 10 percent discount<br />

York (see the articles by the Learjet<br />

pilot in ABS Magazine, July and August<br />

2012). At the time, the LNAV approach<br />

had the stipple drawn in the profile<br />

view, indicating obstacle clearance on<br />

the glideslope from the Visual Descent<br />

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BPPP training is fun,<br />

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The stipple has since been removed<br />

an even more capable<br />

from that particular approach. In that<br />

and safer pilot. For more<br />

case, that crew apparently did everything information and to enroll,<br />

right and still collided with obstacles. go to http://bonanza.<br />

The pilot of that aircraft is reported<br />

to have said his near-accident taught<br />

him “to be very cautious when flying<br />

org/pilot-training-bppp/<br />

onlineflight or<br />

call 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700.<br />

a GPS approach at night in IMC into<br />

a non-controlled airport with which<br />

the crew is unfamiliar.” I have to say<br />

that’s an understatement! If that can<br />

happen when the profile view shows<br />

FLYING MAGAZINE<br />

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a stipple, imagine what you can find<br />

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a stipple. Lucky no one was injured during<br />

BPPP Online….”<br />

the incident.<br />

—Pia Bergqvist,<br />

in the April 2013 Flying Magazine<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 49<br />

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Remember, below MDA it’s visual see and avoid. We’re conditioned to<br />

treat an approach with glideslope and course guidance as if it were an<br />

ILS. An LNAV approach gives lateral guidance only. The advisory glideslope<br />

indi cation is not part of the approach. No one surveyed the glide slope,<br />

your GPS is simply pointing out a convenient angle from some point along<br />

the approach path to the runway. The glideslope is there only as guidance<br />

for helping you achieve a stabilized approach. If you treat the GPS<br />

advisory glideslope as if it were a real glideslope you could poke your eye<br />

out (or worse).<br />

Absence of the gray shaded symbol on approach charts indicates that<br />

there may be obstacles in the visual portion between the MDA and the<br />

runway. Look for the symbol (of lack of one) when you brief an instrument<br />

approach.<br />

ILS approach<br />

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glideslope symbol<br />

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RNAV (GPS)<br />

approach with<br />

no symbol,<br />

indicating possible<br />

obstacles along<br />

the GPS advisory<br />

glideslope.<br />

Mike Friel, of East Moriches, New York, retired after a career as a flight<br />

instructor in the U.S. Army and the Drug Enforcement Administration.<br />

He earned the Distinguished Flying Cross as an attack helicopter pilot in<br />

Vietnam, and was General Norman Schwarzkopf’s pilot for the parade in<br />

New York City at the end of the First Gulf War. Mike has over 11,000 hours<br />

total time including over 2000 hours of instruction given. He holds an ATP<br />

in single- and multiengine airplanes and helicopters, as well as instructor and instrument<br />

instructor certificates in helicopters and single-engine airplanes. A member of ABS since<br />

2006, Mike owns a Beech V35A. He is undergoing standardization as a BPPP flight<br />

instructor through the ABS Flight Instructor Academy.<br />

50 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 51


www.bonanza.org<br />

Mexico, Close and Easy<br />

By Jim Herd<br />

In order to preserve and grow the ABS membership, our fleet of planes, their valuation,<br />

and the admirable cadre of service and parts businesses that are such a major asset<br />

to us all, we must expand and promote the wide variety of impressive ways to extract<br />

value from our aircraft. Put another way, we must expand and market the utility of ABS<br />

planes such that many more people want one – they can do a lot more than most people<br />

think. In other words, what and where are the compelling destinations that are comfortably<br />

within the scope of our planes, their pilots, and their passengers? If we can increase the<br />

excitement and allure by answering this question, we can surely inspire ourselves to fly more,<br />

inspire other pilots to buy and fly <strong>Bonanza</strong>s/Barons because they serve these missions so<br />

well, and inspire non-pilots to become aviators to get a piece of this action.<br />

¡HOLA! México<br />

52 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

Pico de Orizaba - 18,701' MSL<br />

Yes, it is basically a marketing<br />

challenge. From within the Lower<br />

48 we have plenty of great domestic<br />

destinations, and then we have easy<br />

access to the Bahamas, Caribbean,<br />

Canada, Alaska, Mexico, and Central<br />

America. They all have great value and<br />

we can market all these destinations<br />

better. I will focus here on Mexico since<br />

I believe it is terribly underrated and<br />

misunderstood.<br />

Most ABS members either don’t<br />

fly to Mexico or perhaps just fly to a<br />

single well-known destination resort<br />

on the Baja Peninsula, because they<br />

have heard that it is a big chore to<br />

cross the border and a big hassle to<br />

fly the Mexican mainland. There is<br />

so much more available in Mexico<br />

than meets the eye! The depth and<br />

richness of the culture, geography, and<br />

destinations are almost overwhelming.<br />

It truly is almost like a flying vacation<br />

to Europe, only much closer and easily<br />

doable from the U.S. or Canada in any<br />

ABS plane. Frankly, I am surprised that<br />

more of us don’t explore Mexico.<br />

Mexico is very General Aviation<br />

friendly. The weather is usually<br />

excellent VFR much of the year –<br />

including when most of us are ready<br />

for a break in the warm sun. The<br />

airports and ATC have procedures<br />

very familiar for U.S. pilots, and the<br />

Mexican aviation professionals almost<br />

all speak excellent English. It is<br />

a great deal easier, cheaper, and less<br />

stressful than trying to fly a personal<br />

plane to or across Europe! Mexican<br />

aviation has just enough difference<br />

to add a little challenging fun and<br />

charm, but it’s not at all intimidating<br />

and no drama if you are respectful,<br />

sensible, and do a little prior planning<br />

– which is fun in its own right. With<br />

modest preparation and due respect<br />

for Mexico as a sovereign nation that<br />

does things a little differently, all is<br />

well. And I would advise any first-timer<br />

to buddy up with someone who knows<br />

the ropes, to do the trip planning and<br />

fly the flights.<br />

Several years ago I was introduced<br />

to flying to and in Mexico by the great<br />

folks at Pacific <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong>. My<br />

wife Jennifer and I became members<br />

of PBS and signed up for their Whale<br />

Petting trip to Baja, Mexico. Steve<br />

Blythe was good enough to walk<br />

us through all the paperwork at his<br />

office in Southern California to make<br />

sure we had done our homework correctly.<br />

Then he helped us at the first<br />

destination: was San Felipe. It truly is<br />

a thrill and an accomplishment to<br />

cross that border with the comfort<br />

that you know you did it right. The<br />

group was about a dozen planes, and<br />

the entire event was very easy and a<br />

great deal of fun. We have been back<br />

with that fun group since, and for other<br />

great trips they have arranged. We<br />

have also branched out on our own<br />

for several trips to Mexico. It really<br />

does open up a whole new world –<br />

do it once and you will be hooked!<br />

Tell your non-ABS friends and they<br />

will want a <strong>Bonanza</strong> or a Baron!<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 53


www.bonanza.org<br />

There is so much more available<br />

in Mexico than meets the eye!<br />

The depth and richness of the culture,<br />

geography, and destinations are<br />

almost overwhelming.<br />

Mexico is a large and varied<br />

country, so it has many<br />

nooks and crannies. Personal<br />

aviation is a fantastic platform<br />

for exploration. If you like to<br />

arrive at a destination resort and<br />

flop down for a week or two, have<br />

at it. There are perhaps a dozen or<br />

more world-class places like that,<br />

and many second-tier places that are<br />

very affordable with the same great<br />

weather and sea and local people.<br />

But if you have a more adventurous<br />

streak then you will be amazed at<br />

the possibilities. Mexico has a history<br />

Oaxaca<br />

Main Town Square<br />

that is far longer, and perhaps more<br />

turbulent than the USA, with a strong<br />

colonial influence including great<br />

history, traditions, architecture, and<br />

character. But let’s get specific and<br />

look at a few great places to visit in<br />

Mexico. All have excellent airport<br />

access for piston G.A., comparable<br />

with any Class Delta airport in the<br />

USA, and each airport has excellent<br />

24/7 security with an admirable record<br />

of safety and security. Rental cars and<br />

all other “normal” services are readily<br />

available. While these locations are<br />

not necessarily household names in<br />

Monte Albán<br />

the USA, they are major destination<br />

attractions for many Mexicans. Oh,<br />

and the cost of personal aviation<br />

in Mexico is surprisingly modest,<br />

especially when compared with<br />

almost any other country outside<br />

the U.S.<br />

Geographically, much of<br />

the Mexican mainland is on a<br />

high plateau, with even higher<br />

mountains. It is all quite stunning<br />

– from the air and from the<br />

ground. Most airport runways<br />

are consequently quite long<br />

and more than adequate for<br />

the needs of ABS members.<br />

Climate varies a great deal, too, due<br />

to altitude, humidity from the Gulf of<br />

Mexico, the extreme dryness of the<br />

Baja, and tropical monsoons at certain<br />

times of year in some areas. Of course,<br />

this creates a fantastic array of flora<br />

and fauna. All of this wonder is best<br />

seen and experienced with our planes.<br />

This is partly due to the obvious<br />

bird’s eye view, but also because our<br />

planes traverse vast areas and hop<br />

over natural barriers to road travel<br />

with ease. In what we call the winter<br />

months, CAVU skies are the norm,<br />

with excellent ground temperatures<br />

to ease your cold northern-latitude<br />

bones without causing a swelter.<br />

54 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Oaxaca<br />

MMOX: 4,989 MSL<br />

rwy 8,038 2 148, paved<br />

Located about 300 miles southeast<br />

of Mexico City, Oaxaca is a world<br />

heritage city famous for chocolate,<br />

coffee, cooking schools, textiles, crafts,<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 55


www.bonanza.org<br />

fiestas, and grasshoppers. Yes, they<br />

eat the grasshoppers! The airport<br />

is a short cab ride away. No car is<br />

needed if you can walk reasonably<br />

well. The city has lovely walking<br />

Guanajuato<br />

streets and your hotel can organize<br />

tours to outlying craft villages and<br />

archeological ruins. The largest of<br />

these ruins is Monte Albán, high<br />

on a hill just six miles west of the<br />

city. (You will have a great view of<br />

this complex when landing at the<br />

airport.) Monte Albán was the heart<br />

of the Zapotec society from around<br />

500 B.C. to approximately 750 A.D.<br />

The Centro Historico is where<br />

action can be found day and night.<br />

There are 27 churches, the most<br />

ornate of which is Iglesia de Santo<br />

Domingo de Guzmán built in the late<br />

1500s. The main town square is lined<br />

with many fine restaurants where one<br />

can dine while listening to musicians,<br />

watching families play and native<br />

craftsman sell their wares. Find out<br />

more: http://www.mexperience.com/<br />

guide/colonial/oaxaca.php.<br />

56 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Guanajuato<br />

Leon MMLO: 5,956 MSL<br />

rwy 11,483 2 148, paved<br />

This hilly silver-mining town is<br />

one of several world heritage cities<br />

near Leon in central Mexico, about<br />

2<strong>45</strong> miles northwest of Mexico City.<br />

It sits in the bowl of a mountain with<br />

colorful buildings rising up all hillsides.<br />

(Expect to walk up and down hills a<br />

lot, or hire a guide for the day!)<br />

Guanajuato has everything you’d<br />

expect to find in an energetic university<br />

town: abundant cafes in lovely<br />

courtyards, shops, museums, a theater,<br />

and Mexican-European flair. What<br />

makes Guanajuato unique is how the<br />

old mining tunnels have been turned<br />

into streets underneath the city. It’s easy<br />

to get lost, but it’s fun driving around<br />

down there! Find out more information:<br />

http://www.mexperience.com/guide/<br />

colonial/guanajuato.php.<br />

Next month: More Mexican<br />

des ti nations by <strong>Bonanza</strong>, and a pilot’s<br />

check list for flying in Mexico.<br />

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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 57


Tech Tips<br />

Tech Tips are answers to questions about a specific airplane,<br />

system or operation presented by an ABS member, and are<br />

the opinion of the Technical Advisor. Answers are the best<br />

information available based on indications presented by the<br />

ABS member asking the question. Actual inspection of the<br />

aircraft or system in question may change an initial Tech Tips<br />

opinion. Aircraft owners, pilots and readers are advised to<br />

physically present airplanes and indications to a qualified<br />

mechanic before choosing a course of action.<br />

Bob Ripley<br />

retired from Delta Airlines as<br />

a manager of line mainte nance<br />

(Atlanta) and has run an<br />

FBO focusing on Beech<br />

maintenance for 20+ years.<br />

Curtis Boulware has managed<br />

a <strong>Bonanza</strong>, Baron, and T-34<br />

Mentor-specific shop for 13<br />

years, winning numerous national<br />

awards for T-34 restorations.<br />

He earned his Private in a T-34<br />

and enjoys flying all models of<br />

the Beech piston family.<br />

John Collins<br />

has previously owned an<br />

FBO and avionics shops, and<br />

for several years has been<br />

ABS’s Avionics columnist.<br />

He owns a <strong>Bonanza</strong> and is<br />

a CFI/CFII.<br />

Dan Honeycutt<br />

is an A&P/IA with over 20 years<br />

experience. He owns a<br />

California-based FBO<br />

specializing in <strong>Bonanza</strong>s<br />

and Barons.<br />

Arthur Miller<br />

has won numerous FAA<br />

awards as a mechanic,<br />

and runs a Beech specialty<br />

shop in central Florida.<br />

Tom Turner,<br />

ABS-ASF Executive Director,<br />

holds a Master’s degree in<br />

Aviation Safety. He has<br />

specialized in Beech pilot<br />

instruction for over 20 years.<br />

Q:<br />

Prop vibration in cruise<br />

Skip Bakos, Crown Point, Indiana<br />

I own a 1998 B36TC with the Tornado Alley turbonormalized conversion.<br />

The plane sat idle for a little more than two years due to some “life issues.”<br />

During that time, there was a humidity problem in my hangar that caused<br />

considerable rust damage on the cam, lifters and other rotables. These problems<br />

were repaired by two very well known and trusted <strong>Bonanza</strong> airframe and engine<br />

shops. We’ve been flying the aircraft often now for the last four months, having<br />

logged some 35 or 40 hours during this time.<br />

During start-up, run-up, taxi, and take-off the plane is amazing. It performs as<br />

expected and provides all of the required power to climb away safely. During<br />

the climb, the plane is smooth as can be and all engine gauges are within<br />

their desired ranges. The major problem we had before the required engine<br />

maintenance was that TIT would exceed the maximum 899 degrees Celsius on<br />

the takeoff roll and would not be achieving the appropriate power. During the<br />

climb-out we are at full power, full prop, mixture set to 35 gph, cowl flaps open,<br />

gear up, and climbing at about 120 knots with the remaining engine gauges all<br />

in the green (normal) operating range.<br />

The issue we are having is when we climb to the desired altitude (doesn’t<br />

matter if it’s 4000 feet or 10,000 feet) and start to level off and accelerate towards<br />

our desired 160-ish knots indicated. Following the checklist step by step, we<br />

close the cowl flaps (while maintaining close eye on CHT not to exceed 380°F),<br />

maintain full throttle (which is about 30.1" MP), smoothly bring the prop back<br />

to the desired 2500 rpm, and then in the 3-5 seconds (as the checklist states)<br />

lean the mixture to between 16.0-17.5 gph while maintaining a close eye on the<br />

TIT peak and also CHT. Leaning the mixture to LOP and about 17.5 gph gives us<br />

about 1540°F TIT based on the JPI and all CHT below the specified 380°F.<br />

Once we are fully configured for cruise, we begin to feel a vibration in the<br />

seats, floor, and rudder pedals. In my opinion it feels like the prop is not in<br />

sync with the engine. This feeling does not happen every time, and when it<br />

does it only lasts for a couple of minutes at the most. During the vibration, all<br />

of the engine gauges remain right where we put them. We have made sure that<br />

the cowl flaps were fully closed (in case it was vibration from them) and even<br />

opened them a little in case they were hitting the cowling, but didn’t change<br />

the feeling at all. The one thing that has made the vibration go away (based on<br />

a recommendation) was to change the pitch of the prop by any amount. We<br />

have reduced it to 2490 rpm and the sensation went away. We would then bring<br />

it back to the specified 2500 rpm and the vibration sometimes happens again.<br />

We have been asked multiple times about making sure we aren’t flying<br />

between 2350-2<strong>45</strong>0 rpm at or above 24" MP and we definitely are not! We<br />

also have felt the vibration when we start our descent without changing any<br />

power settings yet. When we receive a lower altitude we first get the plane<br />

pitching over at least 100-200 fpm and with the desired altitude armed before<br />

decreasing to the 23-25" MP, 2300 rpm, and while maintaining the cruise<br />

mixture setting. While maintaining these specified settings throughout the<br />

58 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

entire descent we start the level off procedure. Depending<br />

on how far from the airport we are sometimes we maintain<br />

the 23-25" and 2300 rpm. However, if we still have some<br />

distance to go we will bring the throttle back to full WOT<br />

and leave the prop spinning at 2300 rpm. We have never<br />

felt this vibration with the prop set to 2300 rpm.<br />

To sum it all up, the vibration we are feeling has happened<br />

at all altitudes and with full throttle and propeller<br />

set to 2500 rpm. Changing the prop has been the only<br />

thing that has made it go away instantaneously. Any ideas<br />

or suggestions? Everyone I’ve talked to is stumped.<br />

A:<br />

It sounds like you have developed a harmonic issue<br />

with the propeller and fuel flow settings. I have<br />

seen this problem happen on some engines when operating<br />

LOP. Next time it happens try to richen mixture<br />

slightly and see if that helps. If not, you may want to<br />

have the propeller dynamic balanced. Please advise us<br />

on what you find, it may help another member in the<br />

future. —BR<br />

Q:<br />

Repairing rheostats<br />

Keith LeMahieu, Frankfort, Illinois<br />

The panel and overhead flood rheostats are<br />

almost gone on my S35. Only the highest setting<br />

is operative. What are my options to repair? Are there<br />

any new STC’d products? Where is the best place to<br />

locate replacement parts? What will the cost be? What<br />

advice do you have?<br />

The part number for the rheostats has changed<br />

A1: from the original and they are now both the same<br />

part number, which is H10-F2-351. The cost is $411.84<br />

from Beechcraft. The reason the rheostats are costly is<br />

because the post lights draw a large amount of amperage<br />

due to the quantity of lights.<br />

There are no approved STC replacements available.<br />

You can convert all of the instruments to the Nulite, which<br />

can be purchased at Aircraft Spruce: www.aircraftspruce.<br />

com/catalog/el<strong>page</strong>s/nulite3.php?clickkey=9386. These<br />

lights draw extremely little amperage and provide much<br />

better illumination for the instruments. You can then<br />

install a smaller rheostat which based on the amperage<br />

draw for all of the lights it supplies. —BR<br />

You also have the option to install the transistorized<br />

A2: dimmers from MaxDim. They are STC’d for the<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>, cheaper, and can handle more current. See www.<br />

aircraftspruce.com/search/search.php?s=MAX+DIM&x=-<br />

572&y= -180 . There are several types of connections<br />

offered, so make sure it matches your rheostat. —JC<br />

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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 59


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Faulty alternator out light<br />

Peter Barclae,<br />

West Bloomfield, Michigan<br />

Q:<br />

I recently had a problem in<br />

my 1987 Baron where the left<br />

alternator out light came on, but the<br />

alternator loadmeter showed that<br />

the alternator was indeed sharing<br />

load and producing power. After my<br />

mechanic investigated the matter,<br />

he said the problem wasn’t that the<br />

alternator wasn’t producing power,<br />

another terminal that drives the<br />

cockpit light was faulty. It turned out<br />

that that terminal was not putting<br />

out the correct voltage. He told me I<br />

had two choices: I could fly it until<br />

the flashing light drove me crazy,<br />

or I could replace the alternator. I<br />

don’t like it when things aren’t working<br />

properly in the plane, so I had<br />

him replace the alternator. When I<br />

received the bill for $2,400 I thought<br />

maybe I should have checked it out<br />

with ABS first as it seems silly to have<br />

to go through this expense, since<br />

the alternator actually was putting<br />

out good power but was not driving<br />

the cockpit light properly. The new<br />

alternator did, however, fix the problem.<br />

So perhaps this was the proper<br />

course of action. I know it is after<br />

the fact, but I was just wondering for<br />

future reference if there was a possible<br />

different and less expensive fix?<br />

A:<br />

Your mechanic was correct in<br />

advising you that the alternator<br />

was at fault. There is an AUX terminal<br />

on the alternator that produces a<br />

voltage approximately half of the<br />

alternator output voltage of 28V. The<br />

sole purpose of this voltage is to turn<br />

off the alternator out lights in the<br />

cockpit. When the AUX terminal does<br />

not produce the proper voltage the<br />

light will illuminate, although it is still<br />

possible for the alternator to provide<br />

28 Volts (as in your case).<br />

Based on the information you<br />

provided your aircraft should have<br />

100 amp alternators installed. The<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

average cost of an overhauled 100<br />

amp alternator is around $1000 and<br />

will require an hour or two to remove<br />

and replace. Your mechanic may<br />

have installed a new unit and not an<br />

overhauled one. There was also the<br />

option of removing your alternator<br />

and sending it out for repair. This<br />

would involve a down time of probably<br />

1-2 weeks for normal shipping,<br />

repair, and return. —BR<br />

Q:<br />

Vanishing fuel<br />

John Jobe,<br />

Florence, South Carolina<br />

I have a 1963 Debonair 35-B33.<br />

Over the past several months<br />

there has been a problem with vanishing<br />

fuel. This has happened about<br />

four times. After flying, I normally<br />

have the tanks topped off, and will<br />

usually look to make sure. It usually<br />

takes about the amount expected for<br />

the time flown.<br />

When I preflight the plane before<br />

flying again, the fuel is down in the<br />

right tank to near the bottom of the<br />

tab. It will take six to nine gallons to<br />

top it off again. There is no sign of a<br />

fuel leak. No fuel stains.<br />

The local mechanics have looked<br />

at it twice. The second time, more<br />

exhaustively, about a month ago.<br />

They can find no fuel leak, no fuel<br />

stains, and no problems with the<br />

fuel vents. The fuel bladders are intact<br />

and attached properly, with no<br />

problems with the fuel lines. The<br />

gaskets between the fuel bladders<br />

and wing and filler are okay. They<br />

replaced both rubber gaskets in each<br />

fuel cap, because they needed to be<br />

replaced, not because that was the<br />

problem; it evidently wasn’t.<br />

It just happened again this week end.<br />

I had flown to Savannah, Tennesee,<br />

and had the tanks topped when I got<br />

there. Took around 41 gal lons, just<br />

as I expected from Florence, South<br />

Carolina. I returned to the plane and<br />

pre flighted it for a trip to Nashville<br />

60 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


(KJWN), a <strong>45</strong> minute flight. It took 11<br />

gallons to top off after arrival at KJWN.<br />

Four days later, in preparation for the<br />

return home, I found the right tank<br />

low. It took seven gallons to top it off<br />

again. What is happening to the fuel?<br />

The thought that comes to<br />

mind is that the tank ported<br />

A:<br />

fuel overboard starting with normal<br />

expansion and then siphoning it down.<br />

I would check the vent system and in<br />

particular the anti-siphon check valve<br />

for that tank. Mud dabbers love to plug<br />

up the vent and anti-siphon system. To<br />

check the vents/anti siphon system:<br />

• Place a 6 feet X 1/4 inch ID (inner<br />

diameter) section of PVC hose over<br />

the fuel vent tube, extending below<br />

the aft inboard portion of the wing.<br />

• Blow into the hose with your mouth.<br />

You should be able to hear air coming<br />

out the anti-ice hole drilled into<br />

the aft potion of the vent tube just<br />

below the wing skin.<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

• You should also hear air through<br />

and the anti-ice flush fuel vent just<br />

outboard and forward of the tube<br />

vent in airplanes with this vent.<br />

• Now block the anti-ice vents with<br />

tape. Leave a long section so as not<br />

to forget to remove it when finished.<br />

• Remove the fuel cap for the tank<br />

being tested.<br />

• Blow into the hose. A helper should<br />

be able to hear air coming into the<br />

tank at the filler opening.<br />

• Your helper should not hear or<br />

feel air coming out the anti-siphon<br />

check valve vent. This vent opening<br />

is on the lower wing skin just<br />

outboard of the fuel cell, forward<br />

of the spar near the wing tie-down<br />

ring on your Debonair.<br />

• After checking the vent, place the<br />

hose over the anti-siphon vent opening.<br />

Blow into the hose. You should<br />

be able to hear air coming into the<br />

tank and also out the vent. —AM<br />

Q:<br />

Leaking gear strut<br />

B.W. Weinstein,<br />

Livermore, California<br />

One of my main gear struts<br />

leaks. We have replaced the<br />

O-ring several times, and carefully<br />

inspected the O-ring and the groove<br />

for contamination or defects (borescope<br />

for the groove). It simply will<br />

not seal. Any suggestions? Is it possible<br />

for leakage to occur around the<br />

bearing that is riveted inside the gear<br />

leg and holds the O-ring?<br />

A:<br />

It is possible, and in your case<br />

probable, for the leak to be at<br />

the bearing O-ring. As you probably<br />

already know, replacing this seal takes<br />

some specialized tooling. The only<br />

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Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 61


Q:<br />

E-185 with a<br />

Hartzell propeller<br />

Robert Stienke<br />

Henderson, Nevada<br />

I recently purchased a 1950<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> with an E185-11<br />

engine that was installed in 1970.<br />

It has a Hartzell HC- D2MV20-7 propeller<br />

that the Hartzell books say<br />

has a maximum rpm of 2600. The<br />

tachometer in my <strong>Bonanza</strong> is original<br />

and shows red line at 2350. What<br />

are the actual RPM limitations of<br />

this installation? No documents are<br />

shown in the POH.<br />

A:<br />

According to the aircraft Type<br />

Certificate the E185-11 engine<br />

on the B35 still requires the original<br />

RPM limitations for the E185-1 and the<br />

E185-8. The limitations are 2<strong>45</strong>0 RPM<br />

for one minute and 2050 RPM for all<br />

other operations. I talked with Hartzell<br />

and they agree. —BR<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

Corrosion repair<br />

guidance<br />

Steven Cargnello, Burlington, Ontario<br />

Q:<br />

We have an STC application with<br />

Transport Canada on <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

and Baron main landing gear inboard<br />

and outboard door hinge bushings.<br />

They would like us to reference the<br />

Beechcraft pro cedure for corrosion<br />

repair. I cannot find a Beechcraft<br />

manual or proce dure anywhere. Do<br />

you know the procedure or manual<br />

that would detail corrosion repair?<br />

A:<br />

There is a new Beechcraft manual<br />

that covers exactly what you<br />

need that covers both the <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

and the Baron: Structural Inspection<br />

and Re pair Manual, Beech part number<br />

58-590001-11. Chapter 20 covers<br />

“Standard Practices for Corrosion.”<br />

You can get the manual from<br />

Beechcraft Technical Publications:<br />

www.beechcraft.com.. —BR<br />

Q:<br />

Flight with aft doors<br />

removed<br />

Earl Weener<br />

Alexandria, Virginia<br />

I have a B36TC and plan to do<br />

some aerial photography. The<br />

photographer has suggested that he<br />

would like to poke the lens out of the<br />

airplane. I assume that one method<br />

would be to remove the rear doors.<br />

I cannot seem to find anything in<br />

the POH stating that the airplane<br />

is certified for flight with the doors<br />

removed. Do you know if the airplane<br />

is certified to be operated in that<br />

configuration, and what limitations<br />

are on that operation? As an alternate,<br />

is it practical and proper to remove<br />

one of the side windows?<br />

A:<br />

There is an article on the ABS<br />

website from the May 2009<br />

ABS Magazine covering flight with<br />

the aft doors removed. The article<br />

is at www.bonanza.org/images/pdf/<br />

flightwithaftdoorsremoved.pdf. Your<br />

B36TC requires a POH supplement<br />

(P/N 36-590006-5) and has some applicable<br />

notes and limitations that<br />

must be observed.<br />

I’ve heard that some photo -<br />

graphers have removed one of the<br />

openable side windows for photography.<br />

The POH provides no guidance<br />

on this, but other than wind<br />

noise we know of no drawbacks.<br />

Most aircraft insurance policies<br />

exclude coverage during aerial<br />

photo graphy operations. Review<br />

your policy and ask your agent or<br />

broker if you have any questions,<br />

if this is a concern for you. —TT<br />

62 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Gear transmission lube<br />

Greg Miller, Ankeny, Iowa<br />

Q:<br />

What types of gear lube are<br />

approved for the landing gear<br />

gearbox?<br />

A:<br />

Two types of oil are approved<br />

for the landing gear gearbox,<br />

Mobil 636 & Mobil Delvac 75W-90.<br />

Both are available at Performance<br />

Aero (www.performanceaero.com)<br />

for a very reasonable price of $7.50.<br />

—DH<br />

A36TC power settings<br />

Noah Bunker, Austin, Texas<br />

Q:<br />

I fly an A36TC and have previously<br />

corresponding with you<br />

about operating techniques. I attended<br />

BPPP in San Antonio two years<br />

ago. I am having some difficulty with<br />

slowing down to approach speeds.<br />

My instructor wants me to use 17" MP<br />

and I think this makes me too slow.<br />

But I wonder what your thoughts are<br />

for approach speeds and settings/<br />

configurations in an A36TC?<br />

It’s a common misconception,<br />

even among <strong>Bonanza</strong>-<br />

A:<br />

experienced instructors, that the<br />

power settings that work for the normally<br />

aspirated and turbonormalized<br />

airplanes work the same way<br />

in the A36TC/B36TC. Twenty inches<br />

of mani fold pressure and 2500 rpm<br />

with approach flaps results in about<br />

110 KIAS in your airplane. Extend the<br />

gear from this configuration and the<br />

airplane will descend at 500-600 fpm<br />

with no power change (perfect for a<br />

precision approach). Reduce MP by<br />

two inches (to 18") and extend the<br />

gear to descend at 800-1000 fpm for<br />

a non-precision descent, and increase<br />

to 24" MP to level off at MDA (with<br />

gear down and approach flaps set).<br />

This is all documented in the ABS/<br />

BPPP Guide to Initial Pilot Checkout<br />

for your airplane, found under PILOT<br />

TRAINING/BPPP on the ABS website.<br />

—TT<br />

Q:<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

Auxiliary<br />

fuel pump<br />

output<br />

Allan Safieh<br />

Doral, Florida<br />

I own a <strong>Bonanza</strong> F33A with an<br />

IO-520BB. The shop changed<br />

the auxiliary fuel pump to a new<br />

one (because the old one reached<br />

500 hours). But the new pump gives<br />

me 14 gph, while the old one gave<br />

me 16 gph. What is the normal flow<br />

I should get?<br />

A:<br />

With the mixture and throttle<br />

pushed all the way in, the pump<br />

should indicate 16 PSI at 14-16 gph.<br />

With the mixture and throttle pulled<br />

all the way out, the pump should indicate<br />

23 PSI and no indicated flow.<br />

Completely unrestricted, the pump<br />

will run at 42 gph. —BR<br />

Q:<br />

Recharging the<br />

air conditioner<br />

Tomas Ortega<br />

Mexico City, Mexico<br />

I had to reseal the original<br />

factory installed A/C compressor.<br />

I understand that the original<br />

coolant was R12, and now all the A/C<br />

people are charging with R-134A. Is it<br />

a 100 percent direct replacement of<br />

the R12? Can I just vacuum the system<br />

and recharge with R134A?<br />

A:<br />

No, sir, I am sorry that is not<br />

possible. R12 and R134 are two<br />

totally different type refrigerants. The<br />

oil in the 134 system may eat the seals<br />

on the R12 system, and the systems<br />

run at different pressures. You will<br />

have to purchase the STC to convert<br />

the system to R134. The cost of the STC<br />

is $4000 from RAM Aircraft. —BR<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 63


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and is good at imparting his<br />

wisdom. BPPP is well-worth<br />

the money.” —David Randall<br />

Half Horizontal<br />

64 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY


1<br />

9<br />

2<br />

4<br />

3<br />

“BRAND” New Merchandise<br />

1. T-shirts<br />

Grey or red t-shirt 50/50 poly/cotton screen printed logo. Sizes S-2XL $12.00<br />

White t-shirt 50/50 poly/cotton screen printed logo. Sizes S-2XL $10.00<br />

2. Long Sleeve Sweater<br />

Men’s 100 percent ring spun combed cotton fine-gauge v-neck sweater with<br />

rib knit cuffs and hem. This soft breathable sweater can be dressed up or down for<br />

a variety of occasions. The sleeves are hand-linked for strength and longer wear.<br />

Embroidered ABS logo. Black. Sizes S-2XL. $38.00<br />

3. Men’s Wind Vest<br />

Shell constructed of windproof/water resistant polyester. A self-fabric v-neck<br />

crossover collar, zippered pockets and elastic bottom. Emboridered ABS logo.<br />

Black or khaki. Sizes S-2XL. $38.00<br />

4. Grey Light Weight Jacket<br />

Men’s lightweight mini ottoman jacket. Has inside storm placket with chin guard,<br />

center front reverse coil zipper with semi-autolock metal tab pull, reflective piping<br />

at back yoke, upper chest seam and above hem, two lower front concealed<br />

zippered pockets and adjustable cuffs with tabs. Embroidered ABS logo.<br />

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White or black. Sizes – choose S/M or L/X. $17.00<br />

6. Black Heavy Coat<br />

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fleece chin guard, front and shoulder yokes, articulated sleeve seams maximize<br />

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right chest and left sleeve. Embroidered ABS logo. Black. Sizes S-2XL. $79.00<br />

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5<br />

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Order Today: www.bonanza.org • 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700 • Fax: 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1710<br />

Visit Our Online Store At www.bonanza.org For More Merchandise & Details.


ABS at<br />

Sun ’n Fun<br />

ABS greeted over 200 members at the annual<br />

Sun ’n Fun Fly-In at Lakeland, Florida, April 9-13. The ABS tent was<br />

once again in the Beechcraft display area directly next to a new<br />

G36 <strong>Bonanza</strong>. The mood was very upbeat with the news of Beech’s<br />

recent emergence from bankruptcy and renewed emphasis on the Beechcraft<br />

heritage and propeller-driven airplanes.<br />

Nearly 100 members attended the annual ABS dinner held at Earhart’s Runway<br />

Grill upstairs in the old Lakeland Airport airline terminal. The buffet was great and<br />

the conversation greater. After dinner ABS President Keith Kohout welcomed<br />

members, then ABS Executive Director Whit Hickman reviewed plans for the 2013<br />

ABS Fly-In in Savannah, Georgia, May 16-18 and Air Safety Foundation Executive<br />

Director Tom Turner announced availability of the ABS Flight Instructor Academy.<br />

Many meetings took place during the event, including discussions with Redbird<br />

Simulations about incorporating BPPP scenarios in Redbird simulators, including<br />

the newly announced $2500 Redbird Jay home simulator.<br />

ABS dinner<br />

door prize winners:<br />

Lord shimmy damper<br />

(donated by Lord Corporation)<br />

Brian Shifflett<br />

BPPP Online+Flight<br />

registration<br />

Dave Aebaugh<br />

Lee Rouselle<br />

ABS Service Clinic<br />

registration<br />

Don Donovan<br />

Larry Olson<br />

Grand Prize:<br />

ABS Fly-In<br />

Full Registration<br />

Mark Dejarnette<br />

66 MAY 2013


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(Minutes from Camarillo & Oxnard Airport)<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 67


CUSTOM ENGINE<br />

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New Airworthiness<br />

Issues<br />

Service information, bulletins, and Airworthiness Directives<br />

are time-sensitive safety information. Watch www.bonanza.org,<br />

ABS Hangar Flying, and ABS’s weekly e-publications<br />

for airworthiness issues as they arise.<br />

➤ Continental Motors Control Arms<br />

The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a<br />

Special Airworthiness Information Bulletin (SAIB) on<br />

the importance of inspecting flight control cables.<br />

SAIB CE 13-27 “is intended to remind owners and<br />

operators of any airplane with cable-driven flight<br />

controls of the importance of adhering to existing<br />

inspection procedures in the applicable maintenance<br />

or shop manuals.”<br />

FAA specifically recommends:<br />

• Follow the existing maintenance instructions and<br />

inspection intervals.<br />

• During inspection, operate the flight controls<br />

through their full travel so all portions of the cable<br />

are exposed for inspection.<br />

• Review AC 43.13-1B, Chapter 7, paragraph 7-149:<br />

“Cable System Inspection.”<br />

For full retails read SAIB CE 13-27.<br />

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Tour Our Salvage Yard<br />

We’re<br />

serious<br />

about<br />

exhaust!<br />

ABS extends condolences to<br />

the family and friends of this ABS<br />

member who recently passed away.<br />

Herman Hassinger<br />

Rumney<br />

New Hampshire<br />

A member since 1970,<br />

he flew a 1974 A36.<br />

Air Salvage<br />

Since 1974<br />

of Dallas www.asod.com<br />

Beech, Cessna, Piper, Mooney, Bellanca,<br />

Commander, Engines, Props & Avionics<br />

lucky@asod.com or tony@asod.com<br />

800-336-6399<br />

68 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


My dad was my initial CFI, making me solo before I could<br />

drive the car. Never imagined he’d be giving me a flight<br />

review in a <strong>Bonanza</strong>. I support ABS to keep the fleet<br />

in the air so my kids may have the same opportunity.<br />

Paul Safran<br />

Beech N35 ( D-6729) 5B2, Saratoga Springs, NY<br />

Your Life Membership Benefits ABS and ASF!<br />

Supporting aging aircraft<br />

Working with the FAA to solve safety of flight areas of concern that impact the longevity and value of our fleet<br />

Delivering BPPP pilot training clinics and new online courses<br />

Conducting expert service clinic inspections of your Beech airplane<br />

Maintaining a world class staff of Beechcraft technical experts to research and offer the definitive answers to your questions<br />

Teaching and offering assistance to mechanics for <strong>Bonanza</strong>s, Debonairs, Travel Airs and Barons<br />

Your Life Membership Benefits You!<br />

Monthly ABS Magazine – for the rest of your life<br />

Part of your Life Membership supports the Air Safety Foundation: an investment in your airplane.<br />

Framed Life Membership Certificate for your home or office<br />

Embroidered golf shirt with special life membership recognition design<br />

Your name will be published in the ABS Magazine yearly<br />

Never having the hassle of renewing your membership again – saving you time and ABS money<br />

Join over 500 members who have made a lifetime commitment to ABS<br />

For more information on becoming an ABS Life Member:<br />

Contact Whit Hickman at 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700 or absmail@bonanza.org<br />

<strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, P.O. Box 12888, Wichita, KS 67277 • Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:00 p.m. US Central Time, Mon.-Fri.


We<br />

Need<br />

Your<br />

Photos!<br />

Attention ABS Members<br />

Your<br />

BEECHCRAFT<br />

Here<br />

The ABS Magazine design department<br />

sometimes needs a good <strong>Bonanza</strong> photo for<br />

an article or ad – would you like to see your plane in print?<br />

We’re looking for good crisp shots, so set your camera at the highest resolution.<br />

The more creative the better. Try a variety of locations – in the air, on the ground or in the hangar.<br />

Would you like to join in the fun? Send us your photos and we’ll respond to you with a sign-off waiver<br />

allowing us to use them at will. And then keep an eye out for your favorite plane’s “guest” appearance.<br />

Send your photos to nancy@villagepress.com or call 800-773-7798 and ask for Nancy<br />

70 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

ABS Board<br />

Term<br />

Expires<br />

President<br />

Keith Kohout (Area 2) *2013<br />

4630 Airport Rd., Suite 104<br />

Cincinnati, OH <strong>45</strong>226<br />

Phone: 513-479-2533<br />

e-mail: kk@hangar26.com<br />

Vice President<br />

Bob Goff (Area 3) *2015<br />

1963 South Creek Blvd.<br />

Port Orange, FL 32128<br />

Phone: 231-342-8040<br />

e-mail: robert.goff6@gmail.com<br />

Treasurer<br />

Ward Combs (Area 6) *2015<br />

10474 Stardust Lane<br />

Blair, NE 68008<br />

Phone: 402-426-8041<br />

e-mail: wacii@abbnebraska.com<br />

Secretary<br />

Ron Hyde (Area 5) *2014<br />

PO Box 569, #1 Airport Rd.<br />

Kenedy, TX 78119<br />

Phone: 830-583-5930<br />

e-mail: ronhyde7@gmail.com<br />

Term<br />

Expires<br />

Lorne Sheren, M.D. (Area 1) *2013<br />

PO Box 404, New Vernon, NJ 07976<br />

Phone: 908-295-8106<br />

e-mail: sherenl@att.net<br />

Cameron G. Brown (Area 4) 2013<br />

150 Riverside Rd., Rockford, IL 61114<br />

Phone: 815-490-6750<br />

Email: camsybil@gmail.com<br />

Tom Rosen (Area 7) *2014<br />

633 Rustic Ranch Ln.<br />

Lincoln, CA 95648<br />

Phone: 916-408-8666<br />

e-mail: tsrosen@pacbell.net<br />

John Annable, M.D. (Area 8) *2015<br />

20911 Earl St. #440<br />

Torrance, CA 90503<br />

Phone: 310-542-0<strong>45</strong>5<br />

e-mail: Johnannable6@msn.com<br />

Ron Timmermans (at large) 2014<br />

4815 Stamford Ct.<br />

Orlando, FL32826<br />

817-312-7464<br />

rontimmermans@att.net<br />

* Second and/or final term<br />

Area 1: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,<br />

New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont.<br />

Area 2: Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Maryland, Michigan, Washington, D.C.,<br />

West Virginia, Canada, and all other foreign countries except Mexico.<br />

Area 3: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina,<br />

Tennessee, Virginia.<br />

Area 4: Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Wisconsin.<br />

Area 5: Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas, Mexico.<br />

Area 6: Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Idaho, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota,<br />

Montana, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming.<br />

Area 7: Alaska, Oregon, Washington, northern California counties north<br />

of the northern boundary of Kern, San Luis Obispo, and San<br />

Bernardino Counties.<br />

Area 8: Southern California, including the counties of Santa Barbara, Ventura,<br />

Kern, San Luis Obispo, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Diego,<br />

San Bernardino and Imperial Counties, plus Hawaii.<br />

We Do<br />

Windows!<br />

Excellent Service<br />

Quality Products<br />

Affordable Prices<br />

Past Presidents<br />

1967 - 1971: B.J. McClanahan, MD<br />

1971 - 1973: Frank G. Ross*<br />

1973 - 1975: Russell W. Rink*<br />

1975 - 1976: Hypolite T. Landry, Jr., MD<br />

1976 - 1977: Calvin B. Early, MD, PhD<br />

1977 - 1978: Capt. Jesse F. Adams, USN(R)*<br />

1978 - 1979: David P. Barton*<br />

1979 - 1980: Alden C. Barrios<br />

1980 - 1981: Fred A. Driscoll, Jr.*<br />

1981 - 1983: E.M. Anderson, Jr.*<br />

1983 - 1984: Donald L. Monday*<br />

1984 - 1985: Harry G. Hadler*<br />

1985 - 1986: John E. Pixton*<br />

1986 - 1987: Charles R. Gibbs<br />

1987 - 1988: Joseph McClain, Ill<br />

1988 - 1989: Lee Larson*<br />

1989 - 1990: William H. Bush*<br />

1990 - 1991: Ray L. Leadabrand*<br />

1991 - 1992: James C. Cassell, III*<br />

1992 - 1993: Warren E. Hoffner<br />

1993 - 1994: John H. Kilbourne<br />

1994 - 1996: Barrie Hiern, MD*<br />

1996 - 1997: Ron Vickrey<br />

1997 - 1998: Willis Hawkins*<br />

1998 - 1999: William C. Carter<br />

1999 - 2000: Tilden D. Richards<br />

2000 - 2001: Jon Roadfeldt<br />

2001 - 2002: Harold Bost<br />

2002 - 2003: Jack Threadgill<br />

2003 - 2004: Jack Hastings, MD<br />

2004 - 2006: Craig Bailey<br />

2006 - 2007: Jon Luy<br />

2007 - 2008: Arthur W. Brock<br />

2008 - 2009: Bill Stovall<br />

2009 - 2010: Ron Lessley<br />

2010: Stephen Blythe<br />

2010 - 2011: Lorne Sheren, MD<br />

* Deceased<br />

Complete Mobile<br />

Installation at YOUR Airport Location<br />

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Schedule dates see www.dbmods.com<br />

email: sales@dbmods.com<br />

15339 Batesville Ct. • Chesterfield, MO 63017 C.R.S. SH2R161L<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 71


www.bonanza.org<br />

Classified Advertising<br />

NEW<br />

Classified Advertising Rates: Members 75¢/word; $5/month for Web placement.<br />

Non-members $1.25/word; $15/month for Web placement. 25 word minimum.<br />

Display Classified Advertising Rates: $195 per month. Ad size is 3-3/8"<br />

by 2-7/8". Include a full color picture of your item along with up to 50 words.<br />

Format: Grouped initials count as one word. Telephone numbers and e-mail<br />

addresses count as two words. All other words count as one.<br />

Terms: Prepaid with order, no agency discounts.<br />

Closing Date: Must be received by 5th of month before placement.<br />

To Place: Ads need to be submitted in writing. Mail to P.O. Box 12888,<br />

Wichita, KS 67277; Fax to 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1710; or use the ABS Advertising Links<br />

at www.bonanza.org.<br />

Questions: If you have questions call 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700.<br />

AIRCRAFT FOR SALE,<br />

RENT, PARTNERSHIP<br />

DON’T MAKE AN EXPENSIVE MISTAKE! Call me for a Free<br />

Consultation on your purchase of a <strong>Bonanza</strong> or Baron before<br />

you Pre-Buy. Visit my web site at www.beechcraftbuyers.com.<br />

Or call 850-240-7243.<br />

Thinking of selling your <strong>Bonanza</strong>? Call me; I have buyers<br />

looking for good clean <strong>Bonanza</strong>s. BeechcraftBuyers.com.<br />

850-240-7243.<br />

1977 A36 Air Conditioned creampuff. 3320TT, 1470SFRM,<br />

680SPOH. GNS530/430. KFC200AP, HSI, flight director. Dual<br />

glideslopes. Backup vacuum. Stormscope. Rosen sunvisors.<br />

G&D window inserts. Many extras. Beautiful interior/exterior.<br />

SFBay Area. 415-680-6189; oaktree6189@yahoo.com.<br />

Beautiful 1972 V-35B, 2680TT, 470 SMOH by Victor Black<br />

Edition, King IFR, Stormscope, Century IV AP/FD, Heated Prop,<br />

Dual Pressure Pumps, Aux Generator, Many other options, Like<br />

new P&I, One owner since new. $89,900. 386-290-9000.<br />

’63 <strong>Bonanza</strong> P35. Very clean, always hangared, AZ, no damage.<br />

Mechanic pilot owned. Call for pictures and list extras and<br />

condition. $60. (928) 713-3943 Bob.<br />

Pristine 1989 A-36 AFTT 2485, SFREM 775,KFC150 AP, GTX-330<br />

w/traffic, EDM-700 6-Probe, JPI Fuel Flow, Hot Prop, 4/13 Annual,<br />

Complete Air Mod Interior and Sky Harbor Paint, Both Better Than<br />

New! $242,500. Dan Volin 815-<strong>45</strong>1-2696; aerojetservices@aol.com.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> for Sale. 1992 F33A – ABS Magazine “cover girl”<br />

August, 2007. Turbo-Normalized, TKS, IO-550. Lost medical.<br />

Located at KPWT (WA). Send email request for PowerPoint flyer<br />

with photos and details. jimposner@comcast.net.<br />

1952 <strong>Bonanza</strong> C35 6000TT 1000SMOH 350POH E185 Cygnet<br />

dual yoke, baron front seats, 1/4” tinted glass, speedslope. RMI<br />

HSI w/glideslope Bendix/King audio & Comm, Garmin GPS155XL<br />

& dig EGT. Will 602-3<strong>45</strong>-0338, $20K.<br />

Beechcraft 95 Travel Air for sale 1958 BE-95. 875 SMOH left<br />

and right. Newer props with chrome spinners. This is a one of<br />

a kind Travel Air. Speed brakes. Ray Jay turbo-normalizing.<br />

Copilot instruments. Beautiful paint. HSI, Century III auto pilot,<br />

just out of annual. Beautiful aircraft. See pics/advertisement at<br />

Barnstormers.com. Cell 612-743-9268 and e-mail: wingsandwires@<br />

yahoo.com. Price $59,995.<br />

1984 BARON 58P 1038 TT., 400 STOH, Moon Dust, Venetian<br />

Red, Sahara Tan, King radios, auto-pilot, altitude pre-select,<br />

color radar, yaw damper, radar altimeter, storm scope, $375,000.<br />

713-468-6684.<br />

1/3 Partnership A36 KDPA 1972 A36 Hangar DPA NDH 4400<br />

TTAF 1200 SMOH New Paint & Interior Full IFR Apollo GPS/Com,<br />

SS, April annual All ADS $40,000. Contact DuPage<strong>Bonanza</strong>@<br />

gmail.com.<br />

1969 Beautiful 69. Beechcraft A36<br />

4400 TT, IO-550 Conversion, 1300 since factory, 300 since<br />

TOP new cylinders and magnetos, D’Shannon 15 gallon tip<br />

tanks, total 104 gal, New Avionics panel and leather interior<br />

2009, Aspen Pro 1000, synthetic vision, Garmin 480 coupled<br />

to Stec 50 and Aspen, Garmin GTX 327, ModeS, Gear Advisory<br />

Warning system, Garmin 696 with chart view and XM weather<br />

data, JPI eng. miltonreskovich@hotmail.com.<br />

2002 Pristine <strong>Bonanza</strong> A-36 for sale , hangared, fresh annual,<br />

1400 TTAF, standard instrument package plus engine monitor,<br />

tip tanks – babied. All maintenance performed at SR Aviation<br />

in Georgetown, <strong>Bonanza</strong> specialists. Flies smooth as silk and is<br />

cross country machine with tip tanks. Georgetown TX (hangar<br />

available). Send me email and I will email pics. Thanks for your<br />

interest. Jeffrey L Minch minch2011@gmail.com; 512-656-1383 cell.<br />

1977 B 55 for sale. Owners business and recreation missions<br />

have changed. For more details please call and ask for Ed.<br />

205-807-5800.<br />

1979 V35B. TTSN <strong>45</strong>75, 275SMOH, Mike Smith, Speed Mods,<br />

Top speed 184K cruise 178K. KFC 200 auto, Garmin 430, Good<br />

Avionics, Scimitar Prop. Always Hangared. Many extras, same<br />

owner 24 years. $129,000. Don Taft call 217-553-7705.<br />

Partnership: 1982 B36TC. Annual just completed by Windward<br />

Aviation caught up everything not handled on initial purchase.<br />

TTAF: 2900, 990 SMOH, 3 cyls < 200 hrs, 3 cyls new. Looks 8/7.<br />

530W, 430, KFC200, built-in O2, etc. Fantastic traveling machine.<br />

Based at KSUA, relocation, share pct, etc. negotiable. Lee 650-<br />

619-3446; clee_harris@hotmail.com.<br />

Beautiful 1975. V35B, N<strong>45</strong>81S, 3072TT, IFR, IO-520, 1395 SMOH,<br />

KFC200 AP/HSI, Collins Stack, KLN 89B, Stormscope, NDH,<br />

Always hangared, same owner last 20 Years, Arkansas $87,500.<br />

Call 501-<strong>45</strong>0-6296; www.ottodental@yahoo.com.<br />

1979 F33A in Mint Condition. 248 hrs on Eng & 3 Bld Prop<br />

Western Skyways overhaul. D’Shannon Baffling, Century III w/<br />

alt hold & App Coupling, Stby Elect Hor, GEM, Storm Scope,<br />

Shadin Digital Fuel Mgt, ICARUS AltAlert Sys, Gap seals, “Knots<br />

2 U” HID Pulse Light, Tanus Eng Heater, NDH, Always hangared.<br />

$146,500. Call Ben 702-369-4168, cell 425-269-4168.<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 73


www.bonanza.org<br />

’64 S <strong>Bonanza</strong>. Very clean original airplane. 380 Reman, 4800+<br />

TT, 3-blade McCauley, King Silver Crown. 2001 GPS, GAMIs,<br />

Clevelands, Oil Pre-heat, Strobe, Century I coupled. July annual<br />

completed. $74,950 OBO. 360-432-8292 (WA). egpilg@msn.com.<br />

1980 58 Baron. 9353TT 1425REM 90 new cylinders; JPI760<br />

KFC200 GNS430W/530W GTX330 GDL69 Radar A/C more.<br />

Beautiful throughout pics avail. Jim danceskater@cox.net;<br />

(918) 724-0218.<br />

1981 Factory Turbo’d A36TC<br />

Fast, Capable Arizona Plane<br />

Garmin MX20, GNS 480, GNC 250XL, GT 330, GMA 340, KFC<br />

200 w/yaw dampener, aux. inst. press, eng monitor, elect<br />

tach, fuel totalizer, eng monitor and much more! 3200TT,<br />

1330 SMOH Ram engine w/numerous mods. Contact<br />

N38082@aol.com for pictures & specs.<br />

1969 V35A. 2821 TT,1709 TSN, Century IV AP w/FD, HSI, dual GS,<br />

Collins Microline, dual yokes, 20 gal. tips, factory O2, Smith speed<br />

mods, Insight monitor, Rosen visors, intercom, gas towmotor,<br />

hangared. $75,000. Call 541-772-2009 or rlc@roguelaw.com.<br />

V35B Turbo TKS 1975. 3232TT, 1496SMOH, prop 384s NEW.<br />

Osborne tip tanks, TKS de-ice, standby air, STEC55, KX165,<br />

KX155, HSI, PMA7000MS, EDM700, Gamijectors. $149,000. Call<br />

509-972-2170 or visit www.N1156T.com. Contact e-mail: jan7743@<br />

gmail.com.<br />

BEECH WANTED!!! All models, run-outs OK, needing P&I/Radio<br />

upgrades OK, fast discriminate transaction on your ramp 20 years<br />

experience/references. Jim 760-803-3093, avloc@yahoo.com.<br />

’77 Baron 58P. TTSN<strong>45</strong>82, SMOH-L470/R1170, PROPS-540SN,<br />

NDH. All logs, known ICE, IFR-GPS, AP/FD/YD, nice paint and<br />

int. Fresh annual, WY. 307-850-4816.<br />

INSTRUCTION<br />

1st Flight across the North Atlantic? Need help with<br />

insurance? Would you like to fly over & then visit the Duxford<br />

Air Museum? Hastings? The Normandy Beaches with a pilot<br />

who knows the territory?? Email: Captainedc@aol.com or<br />

www.flythepond.com.<br />

Southwest Beechcraft Instructor: All models. Available in<br />

Las Vegas, Phoenix, Flagstaff, and all surrounding airports –<br />

will travel. Initial and recurrent training, flight reviews, IPCs,<br />

insurance checkouts, additional ratings, and assistance with<br />

sales/purchases. BE-58/F33A owner. CFI/CFII/MEI with ATP,<br />

call Troy Dixon (602) 628-2314; TroyJasonDixon@yahoo.com.<br />

New ABS Credit Card Designs!<br />

ABS is pleased to introduce an updated look for our great <strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

<strong>Society</strong> credit card program. Our partner INTRUST Bank has rolled out two<br />

outstanding design choices – both featuring great planes and our ABS logo.<br />

If you currently carry our ABS Platinum Visa ® and would like to switch to one<br />

of the new designs, simply call INTRUST Bank at 800-222-7<strong>45</strong>8, Monday<br />

through Friday, 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., or Saturday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Central Time.<br />

They will be happy to make the switch for you. Your account number remains<br />

the same. If you do not call, you will receive the “3-planes” design when<br />

your current card expires.<br />

Did You Know?<br />

With your ABS Platinum Visa ® you receive valuable discounts<br />

through Beechcraft Parts! In addition, the card strengthens the<br />

<strong>Society</strong>’s mission of promoting aviation safety and camaraderie<br />

among <strong>Bonanza</strong>, Debonair, Baron, and Travel Air operators.<br />

Don’t Have a Card?<br />

What are you waiting for? Your ABS Visa ® comes with a low<br />

APR, no annual fee, and a free rewards program. With INTRUST<br />

Rewards you earn cash back with every purchase. Or, you may<br />

choose to redeem your rewards points for gift cards, travel,<br />

or merchandise.<br />

Don’t delay! Apply for your ABS card today at intrustbank.com/abs, or call 800-222-7<strong>45</strong>8.<br />

74 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


www.bonanza.org<br />

Beechcraft Instructor, Southern California. All models<br />

of <strong>Bonanza</strong> and Baron. Your SoCal, experienced Beechcraft<br />

training specialist. Dan Ramirez 949-429-8273 or 909-262-7737<br />

or Danv35@aol.com.<br />

Baron Instruction – Tennessee based (will travel) Stephen<br />

Hammers, CFI, CFII, MEI, ATP – 20+ yrs. Exp. Baron E55 Owner,<br />

Initial and Recurrent Training, Instrument Competency Check<br />

and Insurance Checkout. See www.AVSaircraft.com for more<br />

information. 615-479-7195.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>, Baron, and P-Baron Instruction – Gold Seal and<br />

Master CFI. Insurance approved P-Baron initial and recurrent<br />

training, Garmin and G-1000 instruction, insurance check-outs,<br />

instrument and ME ratings, assistance with purchases. Gerry<br />

Parker, 713-826-6663 (TX); gparker@pmkc.com.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Instructor – all models. North Central Florida –<br />

will travel. Initial and recurrent training, IPC’s, flight reviews,<br />

insurance check outs. BPT instructor. Buck Williams, ATP CFII<br />

MEI. 352-222-0873. www.masterwingsLLC.com/HMW.<br />

P-Baron, Baron, <strong>Bonanza</strong>; initial, recurrent training, insurance<br />

approved, nationwide; systems, operational considerations,<br />

mishap review, FAR review, advanced avionics. I come to you,<br />

E55 owner. 25+ years aviation training experience. Dave Garvey<br />

925-212-3274; dgarvey@flyatm.com.<br />

EQUIPMENT, PARTS, SERVICE<br />

SEAT ADJUSTER BROKEN? We repair Roton, Hydrolok, and<br />

Beech. We overhaul shimmy dampers. Exchanges available.<br />

Call Jerry @ 810-300-1140.<br />

For Sale – One of a Kind 1982 V35B – $180,000<br />

Thirty-Fifth Anniversary <strong>Bonanza</strong>. Serial #D10397 – only<br />

six made after this one! Excellent condition! 3442TT, new<br />

factory rebuilt 550B, and new McCauly 3-blade prop.<br />

Garmin 530W. King 200 flight director auto pilot with yaw<br />

damper. Many extras! Owner of this airplane since 1987.<br />

For more information, contact Ray at (936) 273-4782 or<br />

ray@raymondfhoffman.com. (07/12)<br />

Original Beechcraft. Three points <strong>Bonanza</strong>/Baron hydraulic<br />

jack re-condition to like new. Best Offer 386-290-9000.<br />

2007 <strong>Bonanza</strong> G36/A36. Wingtips and lights with model<br />

9007904 Whelen, power module for lights $2000 OBO. (309)<br />

6<strong>45</strong>-9774 or evolti90@yahoo.com.<br />

TWO complete sets of vertical style gauges. One set was<br />

operational when removed in 1992 but cannot guarantee working<br />

condition. Two face plates and one installation rack. Can<br />

send pictures. 225-773-8070. $400 OBO.<br />

$1370 $1785<br />

Made in USA<br />

Phone: (954) 966-7329 FAX: (954) 966-3584<br />

5614 SW 25 St., Hollywood, FL 33023<br />

web: www.survivalproductsinc.com<br />

email: sales@survivalproductsinc.com<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 75


Wing Tips for 92 F-33A. Strobes, running<br />

lights and lens. Excellent Condition. $1200<br />

set OBO. www.fly-boy24@cox.net for<br />

pictures. 714-944-8402.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Cowls, Nose Bowl, 3Blade<br />

McCauley. Completed F33 conversion.<br />

Now selling No Damage History components.<br />

Engine Cowl with BDS Baffle Kit,<br />

Nose Bowl, McCauley 3Blade and Spinner<br />

Model406-C, 12 Champion Fine Wires,<br />

Exhaust and mufflers. $7,500. (214) 356-2717.<br />

Wing Tips for 84 A-36. With strobes,<br />

lights and lens. Excellent conditions.<br />

$1200. Email: wbbrucemd@yahoo.com<br />

for pictures. 570-768-9306.<br />

58P Baron Engine for Sale from a 1980<br />

P58 Baron TSIO520WB3B has 790 hours<br />

since overhaul by Western Skyways. 90<br />

Hours since NEW cylinders. Just finished<br />

teardown inspection, ready to go. Located<br />

at John Wayne Airport, Santa Ana, CA.<br />

Call for price: (760) 250-94<strong>45</strong> Dennis.<br />

Aero Surfaces is lowering its labor rate to<br />

offset the increasing cost of rebuild parts.<br />

Call us at Ruddervator City for a quote, or<br />

visit our site. AeroSurfacesLLC.com FAA<br />

Repair Station OG3R735L. 530-893-5416;<br />

email aerosurfaces@chico.com.<br />

Wing Tips. 1970 V35B Includes Strobes<br />

Lights Lens. $600. 949-433-3330.<br />

Avionics for Sale. KING KX 155 NAV/<br />

COM ($1,500). King KR86 ADF ($150).<br />

Apollo GX55 (moving map gps) with<br />

antenna and manual ($1,500). GPS<br />

Engineering Corp PM 3000 Intercom with<br />

music port ($150). King KMA 24 panel<br />

($350). All tagged. All to be sold in one<br />

lot or separate. Phil Stuffco 780-940-5327;<br />

philstuffco@shaw.ca.<br />

FLIGHT CONTROLS. We re-skin Elevator<br />

Flaps and Ailerons for 33 to King Air<br />

300. All flight Control are built in a Fixture<br />

by FAA Cert Technicians. Call Davis<br />

Martin Structures DBA Control Center<br />

LLC 405-401-7757.<br />

Spar Mod. Kit Installation <strong>Bonanza</strong>/<br />

Baron. Calkins Aero Service, Inc. –<br />

Houston, TX. 281-579-6674, caero@<br />

sbcglobal.net.<br />

Garmin 496 system for sale – GXM<br />

30A & low profile antennas, auto/yoke/<br />

friction mounts, all adapters/cables, 12v<br />

auto cable w/speaker, guides, etc. Still in<br />

original box. Looks like new – pictures<br />

available by request. $1200 + shipping. 513-<br />

477-7383. Contact: larrybennell@aol.com.<br />

1991 F33A McCaulley three blade prop<br />

with spinner, 1250 snew 250smoh. $4000.<br />

316-648-0132.<br />

Custom Magneto Repairs. Crossfire<br />

Magneto Service: overhaul, testing, and<br />

forensics. Huge inventory of new and<br />

used parts. Fast turn times, exchange<br />

available. We only use OEM parts!<br />

Exceptional performance, dependable<br />

service. Crossfire Magneto Service, 5293<br />

Gulfstream Ct., Loveland, CO 80538. Paul<br />

Brevard 970-672-6505; pbrevard@msn.<br />

com; crossfiremagneto.com. The Hottest<br />

Magneto You’ll Ever Fly!<br />

Mike’s Upholstery: Custom interiors,<br />

singles-light twins. FAA certified. Same<br />

location since 1968. North Omaha<br />

Airport (3NO), Omaha, NE. Mike Roney<br />

402-572-8788.<br />

Aluminum Baron Elevators. Reskin<br />

your Baron Elevators in “Aluminum.”<br />

Travel Air D and E models, all 55, 56, 58<br />

(to include TC and P models). Exchange<br />

available, no more corrosion problems,<br />

“replace one elevator at a time.” Available<br />

at SRS and other trusted Beechcraft<br />

Flight control overhaul facilities. FAA<br />

CRS #U5LRO68X, FAA/PMA. www.srs<br />

aviation.com. Toll free 877-364-8003.<br />

CUSTOM GPS MOUNTS<br />

MODELS FOR MOST BEECHCRAFT<br />

Models for<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>s & Barons<br />

from $149<br />

• Fits Single and Dual Yokes<br />

• CNC Billet Aluminum Quality<br />

• Easy to Fit<br />

• No Modifications to Your Aircraft<br />

Angerole, Inc. • Charlottesville, VA<br />

434-466-3872<br />

www.angerole.com<br />

BENDIX/KING AUTOPILOTS<br />

Service, Parts, Loaners,<br />

Troubleshooting by Phone<br />

Kings Avionics is a specialist in your autopilot system.<br />

We offer customized repair and overhaul of KFC 150<br />

and KFC 200 autopilot systems including flight director<br />

indicator and KCS 55A HSI system. We also offer<br />

repair services for Bendix/King Nav/Com, DME,<br />

and Transponder. Please call Kings Avionics, Inc. in<br />

Olathe, Kansas or Salt Lake City, Utah and we will<br />

assist you in troubleshooting your aircraft.<br />

237 North 2370 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116 • 801.539.8412 • www.kingavionics.com • scheduling@kingsavionics.com<br />

280 Gardner Drive, Ste #3, New Century, KS 66031 • 913.829.4606 • www.kingsavionics.net • service@kingsavionics.net<br />

76 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


Flight Controls Re-Skinned. We reskin<br />

Elevators Flaps and Ailerons 33 to<br />

King Air 300. All flight controls are built<br />

in fixtures by experienced craftsman.<br />

FAA Cert. Repair Station U5LRO68X.<br />

Call SRS Aviation Toll Free 877-364-8003;<br />

www.srsaviation.com.<br />

Engine Upgrade? STC’d IO-550-B Engine<br />

Conversions for S35, V35, V35A, V35B,<br />

C33A, E33A, E33C, F33A, F33C, G33, 36,<br />

and A36 <strong>Bonanza</strong>s. IO-470C or IO470-N<br />

Engine Conversions for A35 thru G35<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>s & 33 thru F33. Other Mods,<br />

shoulder harness assemblies, instrument<br />

panel conversions, SS battery boxes, seat<br />

conversions. All <strong>Bonanza</strong> Mods. Hammock<br />

Aviation Services, Inc. 972-875-4279.<br />

Ennis,TX. www.hammockaviation.com.<br />

Exhaust System Repairs. Mufflers –<br />

Flame cones installed, end plate ass’y,<br />

etc. Exhaust Manifolds – Ball end, flanges,<br />

patch work. Tailpipes – ends repaired. Call<br />

Custom Aircraft Parts at 800-561-1901 or<br />

619-561-5757. Ship to 14374 Olde Hwy. 80,<br />

El Cajon, CA 92021. Visit our website at:<br />

www.customaircraft.com.<br />

Elevators, 33 thru Baron. FAA-approved<br />

repair station #209-53. Biggs Aircraft. 405-<br />

258-2965; Fax 405-258-3016.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Inspections, maintenance,<br />

and repair. Quality service with reasonable<br />

prices. Owner assists available.<br />

Dynamic Propeller Balancing. <strong>Bonanza</strong><br />

owner with 25+ years experience. Brian<br />

Stout, A&P, IA. Flying S Aviation. RHV,<br />

San Jose, CA. 408-258-9462.<br />

RIGGING TOOL RENTAL. Increase<br />

safety, performance, and control with<br />

ABS rigging tools $100 plus two-way<br />

shipping for 12-day rental. Available tools<br />

are an Aileron travel board and one each<br />

Ruddervator (D-1 through D-2680) and<br />

Ruddervator (D-2681 and after) travel<br />

boards. RESERVE AHEAD for your<br />

inspection/repair. ABS HQ 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700.<br />

Cover-Ups by Denise. Expanded vinyl<br />

gear & flap actuator covers for <strong>Bonanza</strong>s<br />

and Barons. Uplock cover – $38. Retract<br />

rod cover – $40. Steering rod cover –<br />

$20. Wing Flap actuator cover set – $47.<br />

NEW!! Chamois main gear cover set – $69.<br />

Charge for shipping and handling. Call<br />

or fax Denise at 321-725-9226.<br />

Wanted: Dual control yokes, single<br />

control yoke, handle, or any parts to<br />

them laying in your hangar. Have some<br />

avionics, may trade. Call 580-431-2333;<br />

email: airmech@sctelcom.net.<br />

BARON A/C STC KITS FOR SALE!<br />

Cool Air approved for 55 thru 58TC<br />

series Barons. Total electric, remote<br />

mounted. Capable of ground cooling,<br />

light weight R134 certified. Call Gary<br />

Gadberry at Aircenter, Inc. 423-893-<br />

5444 (TN) or email aircntr@aol.com.<br />

www.aircenterinc.com.<br />

Dual & Single Control Yokes large<br />

handles, trim knobs, all misc. parts for<br />

control yokes, exchange your faded<br />

& cracked handles for our like new<br />

refinished ones. Exchange singles for dual<br />

& vice versa. Call for quote, we buy any<br />

duals, singles or any parts. Air Mech, Inc.,<br />

580-431-2333; email: airmech@sctelcom.<br />

net. For 20 years: Being your best source<br />

for affordable yokes is our specialty.<br />

Flight Controls for all Beechcraft thru<br />

King Air 300 rebuilt by FAA approved<br />

repair station #YYSR526L w/25 years<br />

experience, painting & balancing done in<br />

house. Stebbins Aviation, Inc. 442 Downes<br />

Terr., Louisville, KY 40214; 800-852-8155;<br />

502-368-1414.<br />

WING TIPS for 1967 V35 and 2000<br />

A36, strobes, lights & lens. EXCELLENT<br />

CONDITION. $1,000 each set OBO. Bill<br />

201-230-4757.<br />

The right tools for the job<br />

wingbolt wrenches • made in the USA<br />

m <strong>Bonanza</strong> through the King Air Series of aircraft.<br />

m These wrenches are used to inspect and replace as<br />

required the wing attach bolts on Beechcraft Aircraft.<br />

m Available for purchase or rental.<br />

m Lifetime Warranty.<br />

m See website for additional information.<br />

Ryan Machine • 9608 Taxiway Dr. • Granbury, TX 76049<br />

email: info@RyanMachine.net<br />

www.ryanmachine.net<br />

817•573•2786<br />

Volume 13 • Number 5 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY 77


Fuel Gauge Printed Circuit Modules<br />

Rebuilt F33, V35, A36 <strong>Bonanza</strong> and<br />

Barons. Guaranteed. Replaced if defective.<br />

$490 ea. Exchange. Send old unit<br />

or call: Birks Aviation Products, 3520 W<br />

Saymore Lane, Peoria, IL 61615; 309-686-<br />

0614; email: jbirks2@att.net.<br />

Seat Specialists. Seat recline cylinders<br />

repaired, seat repair, seat replacement<br />

parts. Call Chuck at AvFab (660) 885-8317<br />

or chuck@avfab.com.<br />

Tables, new and used available.<br />

Contact Chuck 660-885-8317 or chuck@<br />

avfab.com.<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Parts – Specializing in 35<br />

and 36 <strong>Bonanza</strong>s. We dismantle many<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>s for parts! A thru P, M thru<br />

V35A-B, A36, B36, Debonair, A-F33.<br />

Email bonanzaparts@gmail.com or call<br />

requests to 530-661-1696. Visit our web<br />

<strong>page</strong>, www.bonanzaparts.biz.<br />

Dual Yoke Rental. Baron/<strong>Bonanza</strong>.<br />

$300 plus shipping for first two months,<br />

$125/mo thereafter. Steve Weaver 843-<br />

475-6868.(WV).<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

REAL ESTATE & GETAWAYS<br />

SPRUCE CREEK FLY-IN REALTY –<br />

RESIDENTIAL AIRPARK, www.fly-in.com.<br />

Daytona Beach, Florida. ABS Sponsor,<br />

members. Home of over 60 <strong>Bonanza</strong>’s and<br />

Baron’s. Gated Country Club Community<br />

with its own Airport, 4000' paved runway<br />

x 180' wide, 5/23. Private GPS approach.<br />

(7FL6). Taxiway Homes from $540,000,<br />

condo’s from $130,000. Golf/Nature<br />

Homes from $180,000. Lenny Ohlsson,<br />

Broker, SPRUCE CREEK FLY-IN REALTY,<br />

800-932-4437; e-mail: sales@fly-in.com.<br />

Cape Cod MA. Plan you vacation to Cape<br />

Cod now. The Inn on Onset Bay is 30<br />

minutes from KPYM. www.innononset<br />

bay.net; reservations@innononsetbay.net;<br />

508-295-1126.<br />

Threshold Ranch Residential Air park<br />

Brief description: Premium Texas residential<br />

airpark in NW San Antonio/Boerne area.<br />

Large 3/4 to 1 acre lots starting in the 80s.<br />

Gated, City water, underground electric/<br />

gas, curbed streets, paved backyard<br />

taxiways. IFR full service airport (5C1).<br />

Thresholdranch.com. Kevin Best 210-260-<br />

5111. Contact e-mail: kafleming@mac.com.<br />

RIVER RANCH, LAKE PLACID, NY,<br />

famous elegant premier property used<br />

for VIP 1980 Olympic parties. 300 acres, 10<br />

miles groomed trails; 6 bedrooms, sleeps<br />

12- Two bedroom wings, with separate<br />

living room suite and entrance – ideal<br />

for two families. www.adkbyowner.com/<br />

listings/VR7805.html. Phone: 203-340-2330.<br />

WANTED<br />

SHARE HANGAR SPACE at Boeing<br />

Field WANTED: Aircraft to share private<br />

hangar space at Boeing Field, Seattle<br />

Washington. The hangar is heated, 60'<br />

x 60' has an office and private restroom,<br />

will share with owner’s <strong>Bonanza</strong>, please<br />

call 206-999-7679.<br />

MISC<br />

Motivated Salesman Looking For<br />

New Opportunity 10+ Years of High<br />

End Sales Experience. Commercial Pilot.<br />

Core Values: Honesty, Integrity, Safety.<br />

Bachelor of Science Degree in Aviation,<br />

Marketing and Communications. Current<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong> Owner and ABS Member. For<br />

more information, please visit www.<br />

jimbrennan.info Thank you, Jim Brennan<br />

206-422-2091.<br />

ABS Store Merchandise<br />

ABS ‘BRAND’ NEW ATTIRE<br />

Sweatshirt – Black or Grey $32.00<br />

Men’s Vests $60.00<br />

Women’s Vests $53.00<br />

Men’s Wind Vests – Black or Khaki $38.00<br />

Men’s Polo – Black, White or Red $32.00<br />

Women’s Polo – Black or White $32.00<br />

White Logo Tshirt $10.00<br />

LS Black Logo Tshirt $18.00<br />

Grey Logo Tshirt/Red Logo T $12.00<br />

SS Red Striped shirt $46.00<br />

Blue Oxford Shirt $<strong>45</strong>.00<br />

Charcoal Striped L/S Shirt $52.00<br />

Black VNeck Sweater $38.00<br />

Grey LS Crewneck/Red SS $24.00<br />

Black/Grey Coat S-XL $64.00<br />

Black/Grey Coat 2XL $70.00<br />

Lightweight Grey/Red Jacket $53.00<br />

Heavyweight Black Coat $79.00<br />

White or Black logo caps $17.00<br />

DVDs<br />

BPPP Highlights <strong>45</strong>00 $59.50<br />

Instrument Flying #s 4600 $48.50<br />

Owner Performed Maint <strong>45</strong>01 $31.25<br />

Pre-flight Inspection <strong>45</strong>02 $10.00<br />

Service Clinic Highlite (old) <strong>45</strong>03 $31.25<br />

Service Clinic 2006 Convention DVD5 $40.00<br />

Those Who Won’t …. DVD7 $25.00<br />

Wings in Focus $40.00<br />

ABS MEMORABILIA<br />

Auto Tag Holders $ 2.50<br />

Binders – Navy or Burgandy 3000 $ 9.00<br />

Checklists – <strong>Bonanza</strong> 3030 $15.00<br />

Checklists – Barons 3031 $17.00<br />

Checklists – Travel Air 3032 $17.00<br />

Emergency Sub Pilot 3034 $15.00<br />

Mountain Flying $15.00<br />

Surviving 1st 24 Hrs 3033 $15.00<br />

Child’s Logbook 3140 $ 2.50<br />

Keychain-Pewter 3135 $ 6.00<br />

Personalized Mousepad $15.00<br />

Personalized Mug $20.00<br />

Pewter Ornaments 3200 $ 7.50<br />

PowerWheel $34.95<br />

Zipper Pulls – Pewter $ 6.00<br />

JEWELRY<br />

Earrings – Detailed 8100 $ 6.50<br />

Earrings – Gold Loops 8110 $10.00<br />

Silver Earrings – side $20.00<br />

Silver Earrings – 3D $20.00<br />

Gold-filled Necklace Vtail $15.00<br />

Silver Necklaces – side $15.00<br />

Silver Necklaces – 3D $15.00<br />

Pin – Contemp Design 8007 $ 5.00<br />

Pin – Low wing Crystal 8002 $ 7.00<br />

Tie Tac 8050 $ 6.00<br />

Women Fly pins $ 4.00<br />

The Barnstormer and the Lady by Dennis Farney<br />

The story of Aviation<br />

Hardback<br />

Legends Walter and Olive<br />

230 <strong>page</strong>s<br />

Ann Beech, the remarkable<br />

couple whose careers<br />

spanned virtually the entire<br />

history of <strong>American</strong> aviation.<br />

How they founded the<br />

Beech Aircraft Corporation<br />

in the Great Depression and<br />

met the giants of aviation<br />

– Amelia Earhart, Charles<br />

Lindbergh and more.<br />

ABS LIBRARY<br />

Beechcraft Twin 4000 $24.95<br />

Colvin’s Clinic L2 $39.95<br />

Flight Control Manual L10 $<strong>45</strong>.00<br />

Flying High Perform 4010 $38.50<br />

Flying Beech <strong>Bonanza</strong> 4015 $38.50<br />

Flying Stories* FS $50.00<br />

From Travel Air to Bon 4020 $39.95<br />

E-Series <strong>Bonanza</strong>s – Gage* L7 $30.00<br />

IFR: A Structured Approach E3 $34.95<br />

Instrument Flying Update E4 $36.95<br />

Landing Gear Repair Guide L9 $25.00<br />

The Immortal Twin Beech 4030 $39.95<br />

The Lady and the Barnstormer 164 $29.95<br />

They Called Me Mr. <strong>Bonanza</strong> 4035 $39.95<br />

Those Incomparable <strong>Bonanza</strong>s 4040 $39.95<br />

ABS REFERENCE LIBRARY<br />

DVD edition 7 DISC $35.00<br />

DVD ed 7 exchange DISC $35.00<br />

*All proceeds to ABS-ASF.<br />

Order Today:<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700<br />

FAX: 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1710<br />

VISIT OUR ONLINE STORE<br />

FOR AVAILABILITY AND<br />

DESCRIPTIONS<br />

78 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013


w<br />

Additional details are available<br />

at www.bonanza.org, under News & Events.<br />

More extensive coverage of “regional” fly-ins can<br />

be found on their websites (see web addresses below).<br />

ABS Events for 2013<br />

Please post all your events on the ABS website www.bonanza.org.<br />

May 16-19<br />

ABS/ASF Service Clinic at Honeycutt Aviation – Marysville, CA (MYV)<br />

3rd Annual ABS Fly-In, Savannah, GA. See <strong>page</strong> 2.<br />

MAY 31 – JUNE 2<br />

ABS Maintenance Academy at Edmonds Aircraft Service, Newport, NH (2B3)<br />

JUNE 8<br />

BPPP LIVE at Camarillo, CA (CMA)<br />

June 9<br />

ABS Flight Instructor Academy LIVE at Camarillo, CA (CMA)<br />

JULY 29 - AUGUST 4<br />

ABS at AirVenture – Oshkosh, WI (OSH)<br />

AUGUST 8-11<br />

ABS/ASF Service Clinic at SpanaFlight, Puyallup, WA (PLU)<br />

AUGUST 22-25<br />

ABS/ASF Service Clinic at Edmonds Aircraft – Newport, NH (2B3)<br />

September 12-15<br />

ABS/ASF Service Clinic at Aero Kinetics Aircraft – Denton, TX (DTO)<br />

September 20-22<br />

ABS Maintenance Academy at Waypoint Aviation, Riverside, CA (RAL)<br />

October 9-12<br />

ABS Convention at AOPA Summit – Fort Worth, TX<br />

October 16-20<br />

Beech Party: 40th Anniversary of the Beechcraft Heritage Museum (THA)<br />

OCTOBER 31 – NOVEMBER 3<br />

ABS/ASF Service Clinic at Cruiseair Aviation – Ramona, CA<br />

Regional & International Societies<br />

Visit these websites for more information.<br />

Australian <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.abs.org.au<br />

Brazilian <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.bonanzaclube.com<br />

European <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.beech-bonanza.org<br />

Midwest <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.midwestbonanza.org<br />

North East <strong>Bonanza</strong> Group • www.northeastbonanzagroup.com<br />

Northwest <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.nwbonanza.org<br />

Rocky Mountain <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.rmbonanza.org<br />

Pacific <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.pacificbonanza.org<br />

Southeastern <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.sebs.org<br />

Southwest <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> • www.southwestbonanza.com<br />

79


www.bonanza.org<br />

Display Advertising Index<br />

Display Advertising Director: John Shoemaker<br />

2779 Aero Park Drive, P.O. Box 968; Traverse City, MI 49684<br />

Ph: 1-800-327-7377, ext. 3017 • Fax: 231-946-9588<br />

E-mail: johns@villagepress.com<br />

NOTICE: ABS assumes no responsibility for products or services herein advertised, or for claims or actions<br />

of advertisers. However, members who are unable to get satisfaction from advertisers should advise the ABS.<br />

Any references made to the ABS or BPPP, Inc. in any advertisements in this magazine do not indicate or<br />

imply endorsement of or recommendation by the <strong>American</strong> <strong>Bonanza</strong> <strong>Society</strong> or the BPPP, Inc. organizations.<br />

ABS exists to promote aviation safety<br />

and flying enjoyment through education and<br />

information-sharing among owners and<br />

operators of <strong>Bonanza</strong>s, Barons, Debonairs<br />

and Travel Airs throughout the world.<br />

www.bonanza.org<br />

1922 Midfield Road, P.O. Box 12888<br />

Wichita, KS 67277<br />

Tel: 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700 • Fax 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1710<br />

e-mail: absmail@bonanza.org<br />

Office Hours:<br />

Monday thru Friday; 8:30 am – 5:00 pm<br />

(Central Time)<br />

ABS Executive Director<br />

J. Whitney Hickman, whit@bonanza.org<br />

ABS-ASF Executive Director<br />

Thomas P. Turner, asf@bonanza.org<br />

Technical Questions<br />

absmail@bonanza.org or 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700<br />

BPPP Questions<br />

lisa@bonanza.org or 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700<br />

Membership<br />

audrey@bonanza.org<br />

Convention<br />

absevents@bonanza.org<br />

ABS Store<br />

www.bonanza.org or 316-9<strong>45</strong>-1700<br />

Membership Services<br />

Monthly ABS Magazine • ABS Technical<br />

Advisors • Beechcraft Pilot Proficiency<br />

Program • Aircraft Service Clinics • Air<br />

Safety Foundation Research • Annual<br />

Convention • Affiliated Aircraft Insurance<br />

with Falcon Insurance • Members-only<br />

Website Section • Regulatory & Industry<br />

Representation • ABS Platinum Visa ®<br />

(with Beechcraft Parts Discounts) •<br />

Educational Books, Videos & Logo<br />

Merchandise • Tool Rental Program •<br />

The ABS Flyer a monthly e-newsletter<br />

• Professionally Staffed Headquarters<br />

ABS Store ........................65, 78<br />

ABS Life Membership .................. 69<br />

Aero Technologies LLC ................. 46<br />

Aero-Tow LLC ....................... 76<br />

Aero/Mechanical Technologies ........... 50<br />

Air Mod ............................ 2 4<br />

Air Salvage of Dallas ................... 68<br />

Air-Parts of Lock Haven ................ 4 7<br />

Aircraft Door Seals, LLC ................ 4 4<br />

Aircraft Engineering Inc. ................ 3 4<br />

Aircraft Insurance Agency by Duncan ...... 4 4<br />

Aircraft Specialties Services ............. 39<br />

Aircraft Spruce & Specialty Company ...... 33<br />

Airwolf Filter Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55<br />

Alpha Aviation Inc. .................... 37<br />

Angerole ..........................26, 76<br />

Arrell Aircraft Sales Inc. ................. 67<br />

Aspen Avionics ....................... 57<br />

Aviation Design ....................... 43<br />

Aviation Research Systems, Inc. .......... 29<br />

Avidyne Corporation ................... 27<br />

Avstar Aircraft of Washington ............ 33<br />

Avstat Aviation Inc. .................... 62<br />

B & C Specialty Products Inc. ............ 71<br />

BAS Inc. ............................ 79<br />

Beaver Air Services .................... 56<br />

Beechcraft .......................... 9<br />

Biggs Aircraft ........................ 60<br />

<strong>Bonanza</strong>/Baron Pilot Training ............ 31<br />

Bruce’s Custom Covers ................ 30<br />

Carolina Aircraft Inc. ................... 26<br />

Cincinnati Avionics .................... 75<br />

Continental Motors .................... 10<br />

Cruiseair Aviation Inc. .................. 25<br />

Cygnet Aerospace Corp. ............... 25<br />

D’Shannon Aviation ................... 51<br />

DBM ............................... 71<br />

Delome ............................. 19<br />

Dürr Technik ......................... 30<br />

Eagle Fuel Cells ...................... 38<br />

Exxel Avionics ........................ 51<br />

Falcon Insurance Agency ... Inside Front Cover<br />

Flight-Resource, LLC .................. 3 4<br />

Floats & Fuel Cells .................... 46<br />

Flying Colors Aviation .................. 55<br />

G & D Aero Products, Inc. ............... 57<br />

General Aviation Modifications Inc. ........ 61<br />

George Baker Aviation ................. 51<br />

Great Lakes Aero Products Inc. .......... 31<br />

Hampton Aviation ..................... 15<br />

Hartwig Aircraft Fuel Cell Repair .......... 1 4<br />

Hartzell Propeller Inc. .................. 23<br />

Herber Aircraft Service Inc .............. 8<br />

Insight Avionics, Inc ....... Inside Back Cover<br />

InTrust ............................. 7 4<br />

J. L. Osborne Inc. ..................... 13<br />

J. P. Instruments Inc. .................. 21<br />

Kalamazoo Aircraft Inc. ................. 11<br />

Kings Avionics Inc. – KS ................ 62<br />

Kings Avionics Inc. – UT ................ 76<br />

Knisley Welding Inc .................... 6 4<br />

Knots 2U Ltd. ........................ 18<br />

Lighthawk ........................... 6 4<br />

Lincoln Skyways Inc. .................. 47<br />

M-20 Products ....................... 67<br />

Main Turbo Systems, Inc. ............... 4 3<br />

McFarlane Aviation .................... 75<br />

Mena Aircraft Engines, Inc. .............. 57<br />

Microaerodynamics Inc. ................ 26<br />

Mountain Aero LLC .................... 39<br />

Mountain View Aviation ................. 63<br />

Murmer Aircraft Services ................ 61<br />

National Airparts Inc. .................. 50<br />

Niagara Air Parts Inc. .................. 59<br />

Oilamatic Inc ......................... 20<br />

P2 Inc .............................. 6 4<br />

Parts Exchange ...................... 68<br />

Penn Avionics ........................ 12<br />

Performance Aero Inc ............... 40-41<br />

Performance Aircraft Parts Inc. ........... 38<br />

Pilots N Paws ........................ 4 6<br />

planecover.com ...................... 67<br />

Plane Power Ltd ...................... 7<br />

Poplar Grove Airmotive Inc .............. 68<br />

Precision Avionics ..................... 38<br />

Precision Engines, LLC ................. 37<br />

Precision Propeller Service Inc. ........... 60<br />

Ram Aircraft LTD Partnership ..... Back Cover<br />

Rocky Mountain Propellers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . 67<br />

Ryan Machine ....................... 77<br />

Select Airparts ....................... 25<br />

Sky-Tec Flyweight Starters ............ 7<br />

SoundEx Products .................... 79<br />

SRS ............................... 31<br />

Sundance Flying Club .................. 2 4<br />

Superior Air Parts Inc. .................. 35<br />

Survival Products Inc. .................. 75<br />

Tornado Alley Turbo Inc. ................ 77<br />

Vac-Veterans Airlift Command ........... 72<br />

Waypoint Aviation ..................... 55<br />

WildBlue LLC ........................ 20<br />

Windward Aviation .................... 59<br />

Zeftronics ........................... 77<br />

80 AMERICAN BONANZA SOCIETY MAY 2013

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