by cowpatz » Tue Apr 08, 2025 2:29 pm
A fairly flat day today following the emotional turmoil of the last few days and coming to terms with the fact that I will probably only ever fly again in the virtual world.
I just thought that I might put together a mini bio of my aviation career for those that might find it interesting.
How it all started
In my early teenage years, I lived on the northern base of Mangere Mountain in Auckland and opposite the Kirk family. I established a lifelong friendship with Phillip Kirk who was of similar age. Phillip’s Dad was a 737-200 Captain as well as the then Auckland District Senior pilot for NAC (National Airways Corporation). Phillip’s older brother was then training to be a private pilot and today is a 777 flight instructor with Air NZ.
You may know of Phillip’s sister, Judith, who was on the TV quiz show, “Sale of the Century” back in its day. She later married a RNZAF A4 Skyhawk pilot, and became Judith Dobson. Phillip and I were pretty much inseparable during those High school years. Most weekends we would climb up to the top of Mangere Mountain and fly our radio controlled slope soaring gliders. A local resident, Maurice, used to regularly fly with us. Maurice worked at Air NZ as a technical drawing draughtsman, and he also held a PPL (Private Pilots licence). Maurice took a few of us local youth under his wing and encouraged us to build (and later to design) our own flying models. He had several designs to choose from, and the construction was such that cheap, and readily sourced materials could be used. Usually the fuselage was made up of a plywood box that included formers and housed the radio gear and battery. To that balsa was used to make the longerons etc and the skin. The balsa would be sealed and then tissue paper doped on over the balsa skin (cheaper than fibreglass). The wings were polystyrene foam that were joined together using plywood spars and then the wings covered with thin cardboard sheet, glued on with Carpetex glue (smelly stuff). The wing centre section would be wrapped with PVA impregnated strips of cloth. Balsa leading edges would then be glued on with PVA and then sanded to shape. Full length ailerons were thenformed and glued onto the training edge. All tissue covered and painted. The empenage was usually made from solid balsa but sometimes constructed using foam like the wing. The clear canopy was made by forming and shaping a balsa form and then acetate sheet was warmed in the oven and then firmly placed down and stretched over the form and left to cool. It was then trimmed to fit and glued onto the fuselage. Maurice was pioneering in his construction methods and was one of the first NZ RC modellers to use polystyrene foam wings that were cut, and shaped, using heater wire and a home made wooden bow powered by a train set transformer. He taught us so much about design (wing sections, Reynolds number, longitudinal stability, wing dihedrals, and weight and balance and so on). He even produced a booklet with all the design formula in it to help us in our designs. It even included how to select and draw wing sections from published co-ordinates and the aerodynamic attributes of each.
We would spend many evening hours with him, constructing wings etc and discussing all things aviation. These days that many boys in a single man’s house on an evening would have the neighbours ringing the police! We all pushbiked there and usually had to pedal back home fairly late in the evening. He was inspirational and I was a sponge for all things aviation……..probably at the expense of my school work. Instead of studying for my School Cerificate exams I was building a V tail 72” span slope soarer……little did I know then that this would be of significance later the in the following year.
Many other RC soaring pilots would regularly join us up on the mountain at weekends and most of them worked in the aviation industry. When we were flying on the southwestern slope, we could clearly see Auckland Airport, and we even had a radio scanner that we could use to listen in to the Auckland Control tower frequency. My uncle also held a PPL and would occasionally take me flying from Ardmore airfield.
My grandparents lived at Ardmore for a while. Back then the Ardmore teachers collage used to be on the land right beside the Southern boundary on runway 03/21. My grandfather was the Head groundsman and my grandmother was head of housekeeping. They had a small cottage right beside the runway and not too far from where the Airline Flying club currently stands. I loved visiting them. I would just watch the aircraft all day long, when I wasn’t helping out in the hothouses during the holidays. Back then Auckland Aero Club had 13 Victa Airtourers. Most were painted in a different colour and each had the rising sun scheme painted on the top of the wings.
It was these early teenage formative years (1973 – 1975) that piqued my interest in aviation.
I was going to be an Architect. It was all planned. I could draw well, and I was enrolled in a technical curriculum at High School.
Towards the end of my last year at school I broke the news to my father that I was no longer interested in being an architect and that I wanted to be a pilot. Now my Dad was an English tradesperson, specifically, a fitter and turner and worked for the Auckland Regional Council at the local water purification works at Mangere (when they used to stink). I imagine, to him, that my proclamation sounded much like a child’s dream, similar to wanting to be a train driver or drive fire engines etc. To his credit he didn’t hit the roof or roll his eyes, he just paused and said 2 things:
1. What happens if you lose your licence (medical)? He didn’t say “make the grade”.
2. How are you going to pay for it?
Of course, I had never considered either of those 2 options.
He suggested that I learn a trade, and that I could use the money I earned to learn to fly, as well as have a back up career in the event that I could no longer fly for some reason.
It was sage advice. So, I considered what I could do that was both aviation related and as close to flying as possible. Back in the day Aircraft Ground Engineers could become Flight Engineers and Flight Engineers could become pilots.
And, so it was decided…………..an Aircraft Engineer I would be.
To be continued…..