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SSG
Ferry Flight
This
is in order to share with you the arrival of our wee
Rainbow Cheetah - registration Sierra Sierra Golf, a
personalised 'number plate' crediting the primary contributors
who made this event possible - Steve, Schatzie &
Greg.
SSG has been in the making since October and on Monday
19th December myself and able airman Roland Stedman
flew Kalula to Jo'burg and spent this week 'hands on'
in the final stages of the building and completion.
This was a great experience, being able to have involvement
in the evolvement of such a well engineered and masterfully
built little aeroplane. Most impressive is Rainbow Aircraft's
dedication to excellence, their complete commitment
to their product and the professionalism with which
the assembly plant is run. Good times were had with
the Vladimir and Alexei Chechin, which included Alexei's
great hospitality and Vladimir's comfort at having someone
continually peering over his shoulder whilst he finished
buil ding SSG.
On Friday 23rd at 11h00 and after a very thorough pre-flight
SSG was taxied out by Vladimir to runway 21 at Springs
airfield. Bristling with cameras and with my heart in
my mouth we witnessed the awesome moment where SSG put
space between the landing gear and the ground. She flew
a treat and this gave justification to Vladimir's confident
nonchalance, where he had previously stated that he's
launched 60+ such new Cheetah projects and "they
all fly - after all why shouldn't they, they are designed
and built to fly - right." Giving further testimony
to this statement was the fact that only the most minor
tweaks were needed in the aircraft's trimming, in order
for Vladimir to sign her off.
Roly and I loaded her up, filled the fuel, emptied the
bladders and at 12h30 we taxied out for the <500km
ferry flight home. With 110hrs+ of Cheetah flying time
and having just witnessed the building and the test
flight, I was without a shred of anxiety as the throttle
was drawn to full and we blasted off. After a courtesy
orbit overhead, I pointed the sharp end towards Emoyeni
and set power for 'cruise climb', this to gain height
and lessen the impact of the Freestate midday thermals.
The flight was fantastic, just below four eights of
cloud, with the smooth purr of the 912S up front and
recording average ground speeds of 160kph. Crossing
the escarpment at FL100 Roly introduced some descent
and this along with some tailwind had the ground speed
occasionally touching 200kph.
The most exciting moment of all was making the approach
radio call to Emoyeni Aviation Park at Camperdown, KZN,
having Bryan Eaton respond and knowing that in a moment
or two, a childhood dream would be realised - I was
arriving home with a real aeroplane. Star supporter
No.1 - my Schatzie, was there and to my great excitement,
so too was all of my family and a bunch of friends.
The presence of this reception committee instantly gave
credence to my own excitement and pride. The warmth
of support and the sharing of the occasion gave more
lift than what even SSG generates.
The trip had taken exactly 3 hours from 'gate to gate'
and we had a third of a tank remaining. Brilliant figures
for any little aeroplane in this class. More impressive
perhaps was the faultless delivery, satisfying me yet
again that my intensive measuring and checking of all
types available had resulted in great buyer satisfaction.
Now nestled in the hanger at Emoyeni is one little SSG
- Rainbow Cheetah 912S and I look forward to your coming
out there and sharing with myself and Schatzie, by taking
a wee cruise of the patch. I guess it'll be like popping
around to see the newborn - just a whole lot more alluring.
Happy landings for 2006 and see you at Cloud Base .
Cheers for now,
Steve
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