April 30, 2011 - Form Practice w/ Dragon Flight

Finally the forecast was predicting good flying weather for this Saturday which was when Massey Aerodrome was having their annual spring Fly-in.   Even better, a replica of the 1911 Curtis-Ely Pusher would be at the fly-in and might actually fly.  This was the airplane that was the first to land and take off from a ship.  I've been looking forward to this day all week.   The plan was to meet the other Dragon Flight RVs at Carroll County airport at 9AM, do some formation practice, then fly to Massey as a team.

Sure enough, the weather was good.  In fact, as I headed northwest over Baltimore, the weather was great.  Visibility was phenomenal.  The air was smooth.  Everything on the ground is now green, instead of winter's dirty brown and grey.  With the new lens on my camera, this is the best picture of Baltimore I've ever taken. 

 
At Carroll County, when Mike R. (Cuban) pulled up in his RV, I didn't know who it was.  In the last month, he had replaced the "pastel" colors of his RV with a more aggressive paint scheme.  Jack S. drove up in his MG to check it out. 
 

I was lead initially.  We had a four-ship:  Tulip was #2, Aussie #3 and Cuban #4.   The broken layer was around 6000 feet so we climbed above it in search of smooth air. 

The following shots were all taken by Aussie's passenger Steve. 

 
Above, it was all blue.
 
Below, it was white and green. 
 
We did some easy turns in fingertip formation to get warmed up.  Then I moved Cuban into the slot for some Diamond formation work. 
 
 
After some maneuvering in Diamond formation, I put Cuban back into Fingertip, then I had Aussie & Cuban do a cross to the opposite side so we were in Echelon formation.  Then we did some easy Echelon turns as shown here.
 
Then it was time for some break and rejoins.  Here you can see me well into the break.  Tulip has just started his break.
 
 
 
I turned the lead over to Tulip and became #4. 
 
 
Nice shot of my RV in flight over Maryland countryside. 
 
I'm surprised my RV looks as good as it does.  It was covered with yellow pollen when I arrived at the airport and I didn't have time to wash it.  Maybe the wind blew it off. 
 
 
Shallow echelon turn to the right.  You can just see Tulip's canopy behind mine.
 
Great close-up of Cuban.  You can just see my left wingtip to the left of his sunglasses. 
 
Tulip and me on Aussie's wing in a right turn.. 
 
 
Shallow Echenlon turn to the left. 
 
Still in a left hand Echelon turn.
 
I really enjoyed the formation practice.  All too soon it was over.  We landed back at Carroll County.  Tulip had to leave but Jack S. in the RV-8 pictured below decided to join us in the transit to Massey Aerodrome. 
 
I had the lead since I knew the way to Massey -- back across Baltimore, over Essex Skypark, and across the Bay. 
 
Aussie was #2.  Steve got this nice shot of me on our side-by-side takeoff.
 
We weren't really in formation flying across Baltimore.  To stay under the Baltimore Washington International (BWI) airspace, we had to stay below 1500 feet. 
 
You can see the Francis Scott Key bridge to the left of my RV. 
 
Aussie is over Essex Skypark with the rest of us over the Back River.  Cuban is testing out his newly installed smoke system. 
 
 
Once over the Eastern Shore, Cuban moved into the lead with Aussie and I on his wing in a V formation.  Jack has never flown with us before so he was just hanging behind us, not in tight.  We overflew Massey at 1500 feet -- above the traffic pattern -- and Cuban popped his smoke.
 
In the turn back to Massey, we separated to about 1000 feet between planes.  You can see Massey just to the left of my rudder. 
 
There were a number of planes in the pattern but we fit in pretty easily and landed on runway 2. 
 
 
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