ARLA/CLUSTER: Projecto Amelia Earhart chega à Nova Zelândia

João Costa > CT1FBF ct1fbf gmail.com
Segunda-Feira, 10 de Julho de 2017 - 10:35:01 WEST


Historic flight reaches New Zealand

The around the world Project Earhart flight has left Sydney to cross
the Tasman Sea to New Zealand.

Pilot and radio amateur Brian Lloyd WB6RQN, 62 of Texas, is marking
the flight by Amelia Earhart 80 years ago.

Brian in his small aircraft, flying by visual flight rules, had a
minor transgression by nudging restricted air space, but after
correction landed without incident at Warnervale about 95 km north of
Sydney at nightfall.

After a rest and feed he stopped at the local radio station for an
interview before preparing for the flight to Sydney International
Airport.

A problem with an antenna tuning unit meant little Amateur Radio
activity was possible until it was fixed.

As Brian WB6RQN explains, as soon as he got to altitude he radioed
Sydney. That caused some confusion at first, but soon the penny
dropped that he was on his way.

He said: “ Sydney is a big airport with nothing but airliners. I doubt
they have seen anything as small as Spirit in ages.

“I landed and they even sent out a follow-me truck to guide me where I
was to meet the customs and immigration people. Sure, I could have
navigated there by myself but the truck gets me there without any
possibility for error.”

Brian WB6RQN continued: “ The guys from customs and immigration were
excited to see me and said I was a celebrity in Australia. First I'd
heard of it. Anyway, they signed and stamped all the paperwork so I
could be on my way.”

He took off for New Zealand into beautiful clear-blue sky, about an
hour late. But a 45 knot tailwind soon had his groundspeed up over 200
kts so the projected arrival time came back to its original schedule.

Then Brian encountered thunder snow but used a Stormscope to navigate
a path. At a lower altitude he had warmer air, no snow, no lightning
and no icing.

He landed at Hamilton Airport on the North Island of New Zealand.
There he was greeted by officials and showed them he had the correct
spray cans to kill off any ‘imported’ insects.

There he will stay for a week, hoping to fix the ATU and do some
maintenance on the single-engine 1979 Mooney 231 aircraft before the
big flight across the Pacific.

The flight began on June 1 in Miami Florida taking him across the
Atlantic Ocean to South America, through Africa, India, South-East
Asia, and Australia.

Jim Linton VK3PC



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