Pelican Parts Forums

Pelican Parts Forums (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/)
-   Off Topic Discussions (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/)
-   -   is crop dusting dorky? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/591040-crop-dusting-dorky.html)

UconnTim97 02-11-2011 04:16 AM

is crop dusting dorky?
 
Discuss...

masraum 02-11-2011 04:25 AM

You mean farting while you're walking??? No, that's not dorky. It's awesome if you time it right. Like walking past the cube openings of 4 or 5 coworkers right before they are heading to a meeting or puncher or something. That way they have to walk through it.

Or, at least, vie heard about that or something....

Tom '74 911 02-11-2011 07:31 AM

I think not. Considering the pass at about 3:12 this guy makes. . . dive bombing over and UNDER power lines and then avoiding the house at the end; I think it's not dorky - but I will say that I only speak for myself and that is only MY opinion.

<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="480" height="390" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/1ekyNGnl0MA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Seahawk 02-11-2011 07:34 AM

Toe jam from Crop dusters have more stones than 90% of the dorks on this BBS.

Burnin' oil 02-11-2011 07:36 AM

"Crop dusting" is dorky-neutral. Crop dusters are cool, especially the helicopter dusters.

audiman08 02-11-2011 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Burnin' oil (Post 5840529)
"Crop dusting" is dorky-neutral. Crop dusters are cool, especially the helicopter dusters.

unless they have big dorky racks...


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1297443082.jpg

crustychief 02-11-2011 08:09 AM

It isn't like the old days, notice the GPS on the cowl. Better living brought to you by technology and chemistry.

widgeon13 02-11-2011 08:15 AM

No! It takes rocks and nerves as well a excellent piloting skills.

t6dpilot 02-11-2011 08:28 AM

Crop dusting dorky? Hell no! What widgeon says 100%. I have often thought about what that job would be like. I might even be good at it since I spent enough time low to the ground like that in the 'six.;)

cashflyer 02-11-2011 08:49 AM

I started spraying in an Piper Pawnee.
Then I moved into an AT-301.
No crop-hawk, GPS, etc. Just an auto flagger that usually didn't work.

Not me or my pic - just pics for reference.
Pawnee
http://cdn-www.airliners.net/aviatio.../8/1343876.jpg
AT-301
http://www.airtractor.com/Websites/a...History/10.jpg

The 301 is radial powered. The plane in the OPs video is turbine powered.

Joeaksa 02-11-2011 08:56 AM

Tim,

Come on out here to Arizona and will take you (and the wife if she wants) up for a ride. As a former crop duster and spray pilot, am guessing that 99% of the people on the forum could take about 2 minutes of our normal spraying flights.

Under the wires, inches from the plants (and the ground) and so on usually gets on most people's nerves in a short time frame. Some go silent, some jabber and some even try to grab the controls and take control. Not that they know how to fly but they do not like it...

Was just giving some dual instruction to someone recently who wanted to be a spray pilot. Finally sat them down and broke the hard news to them that they just did not have what it took to do this and that they needed to find something else in the aviation world to do. They locked up when we got near the ground and just not where you want to be.

You make a mistake flying most things and you have a chance to recover. Dusting you normally do not. Good friend of mine was one of the original pilots selected to the group of 10 to be the "Freedom 7" group of astronauts. He got bounced out due to what they thought was a funky heartbeat only to find out later that there was nothing wrong. Just over 10 years later after he retired from the Air Force he was crop dusting in the Dakota's when a bird flew into his windshield.

He could not see and went down hard in the field he was spraying. He had over 200 gallons of chemical in his hopper and he was covered in it, not to mention injured really badly with a punctured lung and numerous broken bones. Had to be cut out of the plane and he stayed in the ICU for a couple of weeks then into recovery. Hospital officials could not figure out what was going on as every bunch of flowers anyone brought into the wing where he was wilted and died within hours. Turns out the chemical he was spraying was oozing out of his body in such a high concentration that it killed everything around him.

Dusting is a young mans game and someone 20-40 years old is par for the course. If you see them at the local pilots hangout they usually have a lot of friends buying them drinks. What you do not see is the wheelbarrow they need to carry their balls out nor the life insurance policy that they have to support their family when they go down. Most spray pilots move on at age 35-40 as they realize that they have a chance to live and that chance is not being a spray pilot.

scottmandue 02-11-2011 08:58 AM

When I pulled off I-5 very late at night and got a cheap hotel room in a small farm town... across the street was an old plane with a radial engine... he fired that thing up around 5AM... that was not cool.

It is very cool to watch though.

SmileWavy

cashflyer 02-11-2011 09:13 AM

To echo what Joe said, I quit flying spray planes when I got married.

wdfifteen 02-11-2011 09:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by crustychief (Post 5840598)
It isn't like the old days, notice the GPS on the cowl. Better living brought to you by technology and chemistry.

That's a GPS? I thought it was a radar detector. :confused:

LakeCleElum 02-11-2011 10:19 AM

Crop Duster? So, I guess this thread isn't about the old motorcycle I rode in high school!!!! My friends called it a Crop Duster.

scottmandue 02-11-2011 11:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LakeCleElum (Post 5840920)
Crop Duster? So, I guess this thread isn't about the old motorcycle I rode in high school!!!! My friends called it a Crop Duster.

Two stroke?

t6dpilot 02-11-2011 12:24 PM

Well said Joe, well said. Even though I do not know duster pilots personally, I know that Joe speaks the truth. Dusting is a dangerous game...

Jim Bremner 02-11-2011 12:34 PM

Epic Fart Stories..... - AR15.COM

Dantilla 02-11-2011 06:19 PM

I've stopped for gas at a few rural airports in the Midwest. Always keep a sharp eye for dusters, as they don't always talk on the radio, and they don't always land or take off on the runway aligned with the wind, as they will do whatever gets them back to dusting the quickest.

I will ALWAYS give them the right-of-way, as those guys are real pilots, earning a tough living.

I'm just a weekend warrior type pilot, probably just going back to visit relatives.

944Larry 02-11-2011 06:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cashflyer (Post 5840696)
I started spraying in an Piper Pawnee.
Then I moved into an AT-301.
No crop-hawk, GPS, etc. Just an auto flagger that usually didn't work.

Not me or my pic - just pics for reference.
Pawnee
http://cdn-www.airliners.net/aviatio.../8/1343876.jpg
AT-301
http://www.airtractor.com/Websites/a...History/10.jpg

The 301 is radial powered. The plane in the OPs video is turbine powered.

I started in a Stearman and then moved up to a Pawnee (AKA Flying Bar-B-Que Pit) Ended in a Jet Ranger and quit in 2000.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:16 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website


DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.