Mudspike Air Cargo

Christmas trees delivered…!

I thought I’d have to get creative again to get into the VFR only airport at Daniels Field, but a well placed hole in the overcast allowed me to take a peek under as I was abeam the airport and heading for the VOR to shoot an ILS into Eugene…

Once I got down in the hole, I spotted what I was looking for - the major highway that leads straight up to the dirt strip…impossible to miss. Just like the old saying IFR = I Follow Roads. I was clued in to how it should look based on the Airnav.com preview photos…

Sure enough…the road is only a hundred feet from the strip…and lined up parallel with it…

You aren’t stealing my cargo this time American Truck Simulator…! (If you get in a pinch, and can’t get into a field due to IFR conditions or something, you can hire a truck to take your cargo the rest of the way for a fee. You don’t make any money, but you don’t get penalized for not completing the contract - nor do you get points toward your rep if you choose to do this. I’ve only had to do it once.)

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Those airfield all look semi-unique, are they crafted by ORBX into the standard scenery that you get for the PNW or did you have to get em separately?

Some of them (Longview Ranch, Jackson Hole) are ORBX custom airports. The others have been lightly crafted by ORBX for the larger scenery regions (for instance, Pacific Northwest, No. California, So. California). For instance, for the Pacific Northwest scenery region - the advertise 400 “upgraded” airports. I think there is some generic-ness to them, but they do look unique enough to keep it interesting. I probably have a dozen of the higher detail ORBX airports too in this region, but I haven’t visited many of them yet while flying for Air Hauler 2…

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Quick Christmas Eve flight…800 lbs. of tinsel (I gotta wonder what that looks like) for a short 73NM flight from OR78 to S48… Weather is not great, but I’d love to have a bank loan for Christmas!

On top at 6K for now…! Kinda miserable looking below us though… :thinking:

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This could be an…uh…obstacle…

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It wasn’t pretty. And it wasn’t technically legal. But we managed to get the tinsel delivered.

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Heading up to S44 - Spanaway airport. Weather there not the greatest, but Joint Base McChord / Lewis has an ILS 34 that runs right abeam S44, so I can probably catch a glimpse as I’m coming down the ILS…

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Very moody feeling in northern Oregon this afternoon…

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I gotta admit. I was thinking this was going to be the leg that would push me to 40%. 866 lbs. of frozen food headed up to S44 Spanaway…

Getting close to McChord / Lewis…picking up the localizer and making some step downs until I break out. Visibility under the ceiling is fair…a few miles…good enough…

Getting a white Christmas…!

Down and in - last flight for the afternoon for sure…

Oh man…! So close! 39.87…! 40% will have to wait until Christmas Day unfortunately…my aircraft broker will be excited though!

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I couldn’t resist getting one more flight in this early, early Christmas morning. The problem was though, that all of the outbound flights from my last location (S44 - Spanaway) were either too much cargo (1,700 lbs.) or had just expired, so they weren’t available.

So for this flight, I took a gamble and picked the only other thing available out of S44 - a MISSION…! Now, I haven’t flown any missions in AH2. Your total REP level is a composite of cargo, passenger, and mission flying. I’ve been 100% concentrated on cargo flying. Missions have you fly supplies (or passengers) just as you would cargo, but the difference is that you have a time limit in which to complete the mission. This flight from S44 to 2WA3 (Stuart Island) was about 101 nm, and I’d be given 49 minutes to complete it.

I was a little worried for several reasons. First - the weather. It has been miserable in the PNW the last couple of days. Mucking about in the soup causes performance loss at the minimum, and extra time to shoot approaches or hunt around for an airport at the other end. Second, the destination airport (according to AirNav) is just a tiny strip with some interesting approach notations. This could be a bit more exciting that I want.

So off we go into the weather…

I keep the throttle firewalled, lean out the engine, and aim for a short climb to 4,000’ which I’ve calculated will keep me at a minimum height above the highest obstacle enroute. Most of the flight will be over water, and I’m counting on a ceiling of at least five or six hundred feet at the destination to let me come zooming in over the water…

It become a race between my GPS time enroute display and the occasional reminders from Air Hauler that I’m running out of time. At the beginning of the flight I have about a two minute margin, and I’m getting pretty nervous that by the time I maneuver to land, I’ll fail the mission. After starting a 100’ per minute let down about 20 minutes out, I gain another 10 knots and end up banking a couple more minutes.

My gradual let down gets me below the bases and I’m starting to feel a bit more confident - the only hurdle left is to FIND the airstrip and land on it in the first pass…

I spend an inordinate amount of time looking at the sectional chart, comparing it to my GPS, and pulling up Google Earth to figure out my best plan of attack. I figure I will aim for the small airport on the east end of the island, which lines up nearly perfectly with the much smaller strip on the west end of the island. A large hill apparently blocks approaches from the west, and perhaps could be a problem in the event of a go-around.

I arrive at 1,300’ - my minimum descent altitude while I zip across San Juan Island (home of Friday Harbor) and I’m relieved the weather has given me a break…

As Stuart Island comes into view just beyond San Juan Island, I’m reminded that I have about 8 minutes left - my GPS is showing around 3 minutes out…a nice little buffer and I start to relax a bit, but I don’t pull the throttle back just yet…

I cross over the east airport and start my turn to follow the strip of land toward my destination…but I still haven’t spotted the dirt strip. I’m getting nervous again…

Then I spot it - whoa - that’s no joke…! 1560’ x 50’ embedded right in the side of a hill. I start to scrub off speed quickly and start concentrating on form rather than speed. I get all the flaps in, slow to around 70 knots, and start to concentrate on not under OR overshooting…

The reliable and trusty 185F proves her worth once again - handling the small strip with little problem…

I unload the mission packages with a few minutes to spare…

And with that successful mission - 40.03 REP…

As well, we are sitting on a nice bit of company cash ~ $387,624

I’m more relieved that elated. That will come later. Time to get the 185F back to Longview Ranch. She’s only 2.6 hours out of a Phase A (50 HR) check and sitting at around 71% condition. I don’t know if I should repair her to 100% prior to selling her and if that will allow me to get more cash or not. Time to do some research.

Already in the back of my mind is the thought of keeping the faithful workhorse. I could hire a pilot I suppose. Decisions, decisions.

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Nice early christmas morning flight beach!

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On my way (dead leg) from Stuart Island (2WA3) over to Methow Valley State (S52) - sort of planning to pick up some cargo to take down to the home base at Longview Ranch (that contract might time out before I get there though - only 9 hour from now).

Anyway - enroute, I swear it looks like Active Sky is making it appear that Mt. Baker has erupted… :volcano:

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I do love Active Sky…

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Back home at Longview Ranch. Time to push the 185F into the hangar, give it a rest, an “A” inspection, and contemplate the future. Big decisions coming for MAC…

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Well, thanks to the input and weighing the pros and cons of the different airframes for the MAC fleet expansion - I’ve settled on the DHC-6 Twin Otter. If I had gone with the prettier Do228, I’d have to dial up my sliders in Air Hauler to extend the runway lengths of the airports we could go to, so I do feel that the Twotter is a good choice.

Redding Jet Center over near Mount Shasta happens to have a nice, though slightly worn, Twin Otter for sale. She’s an ex Air Inuit aircraft with tundra tires and a cargo configuration. She’ll need a paint job (I have no idea how I’m going to do that), but I’m putting the deposit down today…!

The Twin Otter will be a bit more complex than the Cessna 185F, so it might take me a bit of time to get up to speed. Avionics are the custom coded Aerosoft Garmin 530, which I might upgrade in time to the GTN 750 if I spot a deal on one.

Thanks to everyone who participated in the poll. Yes, the Do228 is faster, has better avionics, and might edge out the Twin Otter on fuel burn, but like I said when I started looking - it isn’t so much about distance and speed as low speed handling and runway lengths at a lot of these back country fields in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.

As for the 185F - I haven’t quite decided what to do with that. Still trying to figure that out.

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I used to fuel USFS twotters a long time ago in the exact spot you took that picture! I also made that building for X-Plane for free but doesn’t look nearly as good. They also had a Shorts and possibly a Dornier if I remember right. Lots of cool aircraft can be found in that corner of the airport during fire season: AH-1 Fire Cobras, Skymasters, Turbo Commanders, Bae146’s, P-2V’s, S-2T’s, OV-10’s, DC-7’s, Hueys, etc.

edit: DC-7’s not 8’s… slight difference

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That is a trip…! Small world…(or not…just a cool coincidence!). Yeah, Redding looks like my kind of airfield for sure!

I think Tom Weiss did a nice Forestry Service livery for the Twin Otter…

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That looks good, makes it harder for me to make the decision between buying the Dornier and Twin Otter though, I was actually leaning the other way.

Went back down to Redding yesterday and picked up the Twin Otter out of the paint shop and went ahead and signed the rest of the paperwork. N125SA Sharkpaint livery by “jankees” (Jan Kees Blom) - what a cool scheme! Perhaps not totally mountain-ish, but we are moving towards the coast…!

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It is not cheap though. Since I don’t have enough money to buy it outright, I have to lease it…and monthly payments are not cheap! It will definitely have to fly each month our this company will go bust…!

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As with any big purchase (you can see the dip when I bought the C-185F back in July as well) - the balance sheet sort of hemorrhages for a bit. I’m hoping that the load hauling ability will more than offset the lease price. With $72,719 earned in the previous month with the 185F, I should easily be able to clear above the Otter lease payment at the same or slightly less flying pace.

Now to reposition her back to The Ranch (OG39 - Longview)…

At some point in the near future, this GPS is going to have to get swapped out. It has default functions only, so I can’t change flightplans on the fly easily. I’d love to put a GTN 750 in the panel, but in my limited research on the Flight1, Aerosoft, and Reality XP forums, I’ve only seen mention that the RXP GNS 530W will swap into that panel without too many problems. Now I have to wait for that to go on sale.

Here’s something I hadn’t seen in FSX or P3D ever…an AI float plane apparently tried to land at Redding and he is stuck on the runway…

Off we go…laggy throttle response on these PT-6s - an FSX/P3D problem that just has to be recognized and ignored…

She climbs like a scalded dog…I can see why jump outfits love them, they just point their nose up, hang it on the props, and they get to altitude in no time…

After an hour or so uneventful flight, the weather starts to get a bit more ugly toward The Ranch. I put the anti-ice equipment on and hold my altitude at 11,000 and finally spot a hole I can spiral down through (there are no instrument approaches at OG39, but I have plans to build my own!)…

A couple of S-turns on final to scrub off a bit more altitude, and then we are settling down…

Reverse is kind of funky on the Otter too - owing to the poor turboprop modeling in P3D. It has a tendency to want to lurch out of reverse and rocket you forward unless you time it right. It is a bit of a delicate balance of braking and reverse though.

On the ramp and preparing for my Air Hauler type ride (you have to take a checkride any time you buy a new airplane in Air Hauler…a pretty simple hop with headings and altitudes)…

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