| The Little Clipper ready for ski action! |
Finally! Got the Clipper out Saturday as the sun warmed the snow to forty degrees. Had a little trouble running last time out, but it was 24 degrees. In the photo she's ready for a test-run, hence the missing cowl. Fired up the O.S. 40 four-stroke and throttled on--- and she sank in the four inches of wet snow.
Okay, well, my Dad gave me his old Arctic Cat Jag which hasn't run in ten years. I'd been thinking about some kind of groomer for winter runways, and the snowmobile would be perfect! So I had some work to do to get the "Zamboni" running, and by afternoon I was running it up & down the main east-west runway.
| The Zamboni |
| Clippy's view of the runway |
It doesn't take much for the little Cub to get airborne, and this little plane was eager! After ten feet she took to the air and we had a sweet flight over the snowy fields and pines. Brought her in to the lower end of the North-South runway where the snow was smooth and undisturbed. Thought she might just sink into the snow, but she shushed down on one ski, then the other, and settled to a stop at the edge of the first snowmobile berm, idling!
| Not straight- but smooth! |
| Scarlett and her Maiden USA skis |
Here are a few pix of the Maiden skis.
They're really a nice product, and quite an improvement over the plastic DuBro SnoBird skis. The DuBro skis are nice, and inexpensive, but the mechanism to lock the ski to the axle leaves a bit to be desired (and often failed, leaving a ski hanging down) The suspension system, too, could stand a little improvement, but they're good for $15 skis.
Maidens cost $40 a pair, but they're well worth it. Hopefully these photos will show you enough, and if you're interested you can see them in person sometime. They use two lock bolts opposed at 60 degrees to positively grip the axle, and a simple spring gives them some suspension flexibility. Even if the spring pops off, the travel of the ski is limited to about 5 degrees either side of level, so you'll never have an "unintended air brake" and can still land. (See "Ski Club", 3/6/13).
Anyone else get any ski-flying in this season?
Wheels...er...skis down!
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