Van's Air Force

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WDYDWYRTW? Jan 31 - Feb 1, 2026

DeltaRomeo

doug reeves: unfluencer
Staff member
(What did you do with your RV this weekend?)

…. not very much it turns out. 😊

North Texas.
Our hangar door faces north and is in the shade all the time, so we’re gonna be the last square inch of the airport that thaws out. I did drive out there yesterday to check on things.

v/r,dr

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PS: So I’m going into the simulator to earn $40 shaking in a box in the dark for two hours. 😂 Beats slipping on the ice.
 
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Changed out #1 EGT Probe, couldn't find the new barrel connectors I bought for next time the cowl was off, so I buttoned it all up and took a rip up to the grass strip. Of course #2 then went haywire because of a broken connector. Plane didn't seem to care though.

I'll refrain from telling you how nice the weather is.

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(What did you do with your RV this weekend?)

…. not very much it turns out. 😊

North Texas.
Our hangar door faces north and is in the shade all the time, so we’re gonna be the last square inch of the airport that thaws out. I did drive out there yesterday to check on things.

v/r,dr

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PS: So I’m going into the simulator to earn $40 shaking in a box in the dark for two hours. 😂 Beats slipping on the ice.
I feel your pain. We get a little rain from time to time and the lack of shade makes the moss grow on the doors and the ramp. Good for ice skating practice, bad for walking.
danny
 
Installed an oil pressure switch that turns a light on my panel when oil pressure is below 20 PSI. This way I can start my engine with the avionics off and still have a way to immediately know oil pump is functioning.
 

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Sawed and sanded those darned wood slats off the back edge of KELLI GIRL’s main gear legs. Sawdust and fiberglass dust everywhere!
This ought to solve that sudden heavy right wing that appeared out of nowhere after I installed them. As soon as all the ice is gone (I’m right behind Doug at 52F and also facing north), I’ll fly her and see if the roll is gone. Fingers crossed!
 
We have a similar problem facing East. Scott (rocketdoc) and I managed to clear the ice and fly. I had a blast today. Pattern was quiet. No flight schools. I had the pattern almost all to myself. Flew an hour of T&Gs. So much fun. Tower gave me a short final once. Love chop & drop. Tower gave me a go around because a student was stopped on the runway. Dang these birds can climb!
Loved every minute. Parked and set up the oil drain for the first oil change and left fir the day. Back tomorrow to finish.
 
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The story of my first RV-8 flight …

The RV-8 and I met in Sedalia, Kansas—a place so aggressively flat that the horizon feels like it’s mocking you. The airplane looked innocent enough: polished aluminum, smug little grin, sitting there like it hadn’t already decided to test my character over the next 900 miles.

The weather briefing was the usual Midwest lie:
“Winds aloft… moderate.” Moderate, as in only trying to kill you a little.

I launched westbound and immediately learned that the RV-8 is an honest airplane—but also a bit of a smartass. The headwind wasn’t just strong, it was personal. Groundspeed numbers looked like I’d forgotten to remove the tie-downs. I swear at one point I could’ve opened the canopy and jogged alongside it.

First fuel stop was somewhere that technically qualified as an airport but emotionally felt like a truck stop with commitment issues. The AWOS was already laughing when I dialed it up:
“Wind… two eight zero at a lot.”
On short final, the windsock was fully horizontal, pointing at a nearby cow like it owed it money. I slipped that RV-8 so hard the airplane filed a noise complaint against me. Touchdown was… survivable. Not pretty. But we were both still speaking to each other, which counts.

On the ramp, the wind was doing its best to turn the RV-8 into a kite. I fueled one-handed while using my body as a human tie-down, whispering reassuring things to the airplane like, “You’re a good airplane. Don’t embarrass me.”

Back in the air, the desert started creeping in. The sky turned that late-day golden color that makes you feel like a hero in a movie—right up until you realize the sun is winning the race to the horizon.
By the time I got near Hemet, it was just past sunset. Not dark-dark. Just that sketchy, in-between lighting where depth perception files for workers’ comp.
I keyed up for runway lights.
Nothing.
Tried again.
Still nothing.
The runway was there, technically—just a long, black suggestion running through darker blackness. The kind of runway that makes you deeply reflect on your life choices.
I circled once, mostly to pretend I was calm. The RV-8, of course, was thrilled. “Oh good,” it seemed to say. “Drama.”
Final approach felt like landing on a memory. No lights, no visual cues, just airspeed, attitude, and the quiet confidence that comes from knowing you’ve messed up worse before.
I held it off.
And off.
And off.
Then—chirp, chirp, chirp.
A perfect three-pointer.
The kind where even the airplane pauses for half a second like, “…well I’ll be damned.”
I rolled out in the dark, laughing inside my headset like a lunatic, taxied in by feel and stubbornness, shut down, and just sat there listening to the engine tick itself cool.
Sedalia to Hemet.
Headwinds, crosswinds, disappearing daylight, and a runway that tried to ghost me.

The RV-8 and I came to an understanding that night:
It would keep testing me.
 And I’d keep sticking the landing—sometimes on skill, sometimes on luck, but always with a story worth telling.

And honestly?

That perfect three-pointer in the dark?
Yeah.
That one’s staying canon forever.
 
The story of my first RV-8 flight …

The RV-8 and I met in Sedalia, Kansas—a place so aggressively flat that the horizon feels like it’s mocking you. The airplane looked innocent enough: polished aluminum, smug little grin, sitting there like it hadn’t already decided to test my character over the next 900 miles.

The weather briefing was the usual Midwest lie:
“Winds aloft… moderate.” Moderate, as in only trying to kill you a little.

I launched westbound and immediately learned that the RV-8 is an honest airplane—but also a bit of a smartass. The headwind wasn’t just strong, it was personal. Groundspeed numbers looked like I’d forgotten to remove the tie-downs. I swear at one point I could’ve opened the canopy and jogged alongside it.

First fuel stop was somewhere that technically qualified as an airport but emotionally felt like a truck stop with commitment issues. The AWOS was already laughing when I dialed it up:
“Wind… two eight zero at a lot.”
On short final, the windsock was fully horizontal, pointing at a nearby cow like it owed it money. I slipped that RV-8 so hard the airplane filed a noise complaint against me. Touchdown was… survivable. Not pretty. But we were both still speaking to each other, which counts.

On the ramp, the wind was doing its best to turn the RV-8 into a kite. I fueled one-handed while using my body as a human tie-down, whispering reassuring things to the airplane like, “You’re a good airplane. Don’t embarrass me.”

Back in the air, the desert started creeping in. The sky turned that late-day golden color that makes you feel like a hero in a movie—right up until you realize the sun is winning the race to the horizon.
By the time I got near Hemet, it was just past sunset. Not dark-dark. Just that sketchy, in-between lighting where depth perception files for workers’ comp.
I keyed up for runway lights.
Nothing.
Tried again.
Still nothing.
The runway was there, technically—just a long, black suggestion running through darker blackness. The kind of runway that makes you deeply reflect on your life choices.
I circled once, mostly to pretend I was calm. The RV-8, of course, was thrilled. “Oh good,” it seemed to say. “Drama.”
Final approach felt like landing on a memory. No lights, no visual cues, just airspeed, attitude, and the quiet confidence that comes from knowing you’ve messed up worse before.
I held it off.
And off.
And off.
Then—chirp, chirp, chirp.
A perfect three-pointer.
The kind where even the airplane pauses for half a second like, “…well I’ll be damned.”
I rolled out in the dark, laughing inside my headset like a lunatic, taxied in by feel and stubbornness, shut down, and just sat there listening to the engine tick itself cool.
Sedalia to Hemet.
Headwinds, crosswinds, disappearing daylight, and a runway that tried to ghost me.

The RV-8 and I came to an understanding that night:
It would keep testing me.
 And I’d keep sticking the landing—sometimes on skill, sometimes on luck, but always with a story worth telling.

And honestly?

That perfect three-pointer in the dark?
Yeah.
That one’s staying canon forever.
Enjoyed that, thank you.

My first 10 hours in the RV8- I think I was more focused during those flights than I have been in years, during any of my pursuits including flying the 737 and racing motorcycles. Kind of like a new driver that can't take their eyes off the road for a split second. It has made me a better pilot for sure. After about 30 landings it became almost second nature so I can finally see the forrest for the trees again.
 
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Finally a flying day. Up to -10C (14F) sunny with light 12 kt winds. First time trying out the RV Bits 2" air dams. Worked great. Cyl head temps in the low 300's and oil up to 185F. Nice flight around Lake Simcoe (in the distance) down low past all the ice fishing huts. Not bad in the cabin but cool on the feet!

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Brrrr. As cool (see what I did there?) as Alton Bay looks, I gotta say y'all are living on another planet! Let's call it Hoth. I'm sure that name isn't taken...

As for me, I departed 85 degree SoCal and flew out to Phoenix for some upset recovery training. The temperature here is only 84 degrees, so, you know, a lot colder.

Aside from the headwind that persisted throughout the entire eastbound flight (and I'd wager I'll have a headwind going westbound, too), it was a pleasant trip free of any bumps. Everyone with an airplane seemed to be airborne around the L.A. basin. Have you ever seen the traffic display get so cluttered that it was almost useless? That kind of busy.

I love Phoenix. Between the runway and the FBO ramp, I had to stop three times: twice for tumbleweeds, and once for a massive dust devil. :)

--Ron

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The list is slowly getting smaller. Set my flaps in the G3x to 0,10,20, and 30. Works nicely with the POS12 sensor and Gad27
 

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The list is slowly getting smaller. Set my flaps in the G3x to 0,10,20, and 30. Works nicely with the POS12 sensor and Gad27
Don't forget the 2 - 1/4" bolts in the middle of the wing attach. There is a SB on this as many have forgotten to install them. Looking good!
 
Don't forget the 2 - 1/4" bolts in the middle of the wing attach. There is a SB on this as many have forgotten to install them. Looking good!
Thank you! Yes got em on both sides and torqued. I hadn't got to them yet in that photo. I've heard that that is an issue and that blows my mind for such a critical attach point of bolting on the wings!! I def made sure I had 11 bolts/per side attaching the wings with proper ED, washers and torque. BTW, a light rivet gun tap with something soft in between gun and bolt head was the trick to getting the upper bolts in, and careful tap with lube on the bottom for taildraggers for anyone nearing permanent wing attach.
 
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