Is it just as good as a pawnee?
What was the rate of climb you had on tow and what type of ship were
you in?
Thanks!
Bird Dog has two seats, Pawnee, 1.
For a personal plane that is a good thing, for training new tow pilots that
is a good thing.
For Club Ownership.. they cost about twice the price of a good Pawnee and
the insurance cost reflects.
I know a NV Club that had a BirdDog and sold it for both reasons.
BT
"Scott Alexander" <scottandre...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:12753f47-6edd-4708...@a31g2000yqn.googlegroups.com...
Pretty sure I towed behind one several times at Sugarbush, VT in the
early 80's. As I recall it climbed far better than a SuperCub. As best
as I can compare across the years it climbed at least as well as a
Pawnee. I was flying an LS-3 - usually full of water.
The L-19 that ran out of gas right after I broke ground on takeoff
didn't climb at all well.
9B
Why not? Was it overdeveloped that day? That's too funny!
Texas Soaring Association used L-19s for many years but replaced them
with Pawnees, which are stronger. But the Bird Dogs were popular with
the towpilots for their nice handling, had two seats, good for
training new towpilots, but could have used more power with heavy
gliders on hot Texas days. I don't fly the front end of the rope
myself, but I liked being towed by the Bird Dogs. There is a neat way
to stay in just the right position on tow: line up the horizontal
stabilizer in the "X" made by the wing struts and landing gear, and
you're right where you should be.
p.
Excellent towplane.
Easy to fly.
Will pull anything- maybe not like 260 Pawnee, but plenty good.
Parts can be hard to get.
Becoming valuable as warbird so insurance prices are high.
Would be a good dual purpose plane for someone that wanted both
warbird and tug.
UH
Montreal Soaring Council in Canada operates 3 L-19's. Scroll down to
the bottom of http://www.flymsc.org/AG/CLUB/CLUBFLEET.htm to see
them. The club came in second in the Canadian OLC with about 55,000
km of cross-country. Dropping them an e-mail might get you some great
info. Good tows, with water in hot/humid conditions.
2D
Climb rate approx 150-200fpm better than a Pawnee in any type ship
> Climb rate approx 150-200fpm better than a Pawnee in any type ship
The descent rate is better, too. The L-19 has more effective flaps.
Zulu
The author of the Bird Dog book, Minard Thompson has an office just
down the hall from my office here.
Jim
That being said...
1) We have had quite a bit of maintenance on the ship over the last
year which we are able to do in house. I cannot speak to the question
if the L19 requires more maintenance and/or fuel than a Pawnee. If
you are really interested in the details on our maintenance history
please drop me a line and I will forward your contact info to our
maintenance chief.
2) We are actively looking for a second tow plane - specifically a
Pawnee (anyone know of one available?) - which we would use as the
primary tow plane while we determine which ship is "better".
My $0.04.
- John DeRosa
I remember the Scout from my training many years ago: the tug would
"Split S" after the release and direct to landing. Never had problems
with them. Apparently, they do the same with the L-19.
George used to have seven L-19's. Three of them were flying, and four
were a source of spare parts.
He did hand-prop for the same reason he was towing with an almost dry
tanks. He believed that there is no point of taking heavy starter or
unneeded gas... up and down, hundred times a day.
Richard
BTW. George Baron and his father were a Great American Aviators. They
are worth of some sort of historical biography. Now , when they are
gone, nobody seams to care for who they were, and what they did for
American Soaring.. Very soon nobody will remember their names.