Monday, October 5, 2009

Grass...



There is just something about a grass runway. Maybe it's just me, but There is something special about it.





Zuehl field began life as an auxiliary field for Randolph Air Force base in 1932. Randolph had just opened in 1930, it was named after Captain William Millican Randolph, a native of Austin who was on the Randolph base naming committee at the time of his death. CPT Randolph died in a plane crash returning to his home base after a meeting.

We have been working at Zuehl Field for a couple weeks. We are doing an annual on a 182, and an engine an a debonair.


I like the country feeling a small grass field offers. Sometimes it is fun to play with the big boys, and taxi out behind an md11, but other times it's just nice to be on a small quite little field, knowing if you want to go for a ride around the patch you can just jump in, fire-up and pull onto a runway and go!

The other side to the small air field is you tend to see a few of these

This Mooney has been on the ground for at least 8 years. For someone who loves to fly and would love to own their own plane, it makes you sick to see one sitting and rotting away! You have to wonder what the owner is thinking!

On the other side of the field sits this beauty. again, unfortunately she has not flown for awhile.
Its an amazing looking airplane. I'm not sure what happened but in 1997 she was in Oakland CA being rebuilt, notice the old United paint scheme had been put on. after all that work she now sits in a field.


I would have loved seeing it land on that grass field. Reports are that the owner landed on a small wheat field next to zuehl field (this wheat field had been a runway during the military days) The landing roll was under 900 feet. I would have loved to see that! There is supposedly a video, if I ever find it I will post it!

This airplane also as an interesting History. She began life as an Air Force C118 53-3279


Later it became Navy 53-3279 and flew trans Atlantic and through out Europe.


It flew under Navy colors until 1983. Also note worthy she has come home in a sense, It began life in the Air Force in 1954 being assigned to Randolph AFB, and now back at Randolph Auxiliary Zeuhl field.

The plane is in flying condition, it's about 90% complete, but because of litigation the owner has been unable to finish restoration. The shame of it is its a group of pilots fighting the owner.

That is the great thing about a small field, you just don't know what will pop up next, sometimes they are full of great stories.

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