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IN CELEBRATION OF OUR
20TH YEAR SPECIALIZING IN
MOONEY AIRCRAFT;
Get your BRAND NEW
PRE-PUBLISHED
BOOK AVAILABLE FOR YOU NOW!
"THOSE MOONEY AIRPLANES"
by Richard Zephro; studying the Mooney since 1974; 38 year private pilot/owner of Mooneyland and author
of the articles within this website.
FLYING IS NOT CHEAP! Within
this book we will discuss not only how to save money while owning your
own airplane, we will discuss ways to save big bucks on purchase,
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Further; we will discuss matters of safely operating your prized BIRD,
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FOR MOONEY ENTHUSIASTS, OWNERS, AND ASPIRING OWNERS OF MOONEY AIRCRAFT
IN PARTICULAR, APPLICABLE TO ALL AIRCRAFT OWNERS IN GENERAL AND INCLUDES
100 HOUR/ANNUAL INSPECTION GUIDE AND ALL ABOUT MOONEY AIRCRAFT; HOW TO
KEEP THEM SAFELY FLYING (ON THE CHEAP) DO IT YOURSELF STUFF, WHAT
TO WATCH FOR, AND INCLUDES 124 FULL SIZE PAGES OF INFORMATION AND
PHOTOS.
(Includes some reprints
and references from Mooneyland and tons of NEW information at your
fingertips)
GET YOUR PDF COPY IN ADVANCE OF PUBLICATION EMAILED DIRECTLY TO YOU FOR $39.95; A TEN DOLLAR SAVINGS PRIOR TO PUBLICATION. CLICK ON THE "BUY NOW" PAYPAL LINK BELOW, PURCHASE THE BOOK AND I WILL PERSONALLY EMAIL IT TO YOU IMMEDIATELY. (2MB) in size. (this is the first of a series of must have books to come by author; Richard Zephro and you will automatically receive any updates, revisions, & additions to this BOOK). See our dedicated new website for Mooney information at: www.mooneybooks.com. Enjoy & learn, learn, and LEARN! Richard "zef" Zephro
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Please Indicate on your order whether you have Earth/Beige or Grey Tones Interior. Each order my vary in color but this will compliment your Tones.
How serious is there a CONCERN?
Will it ever affect 
YO!
"DUMMY"!
4 Deadheading pilots ferrying a Canadair regional jet lose control frolicking and playing at 40,000 feet. All Dead.
An M20A wood wing Mooney gets a 2x4 strapped to a rotting wing spar for "easy fix". 4 Dead, 2 in jail.
Low altitude aerobatics, coming out the bottom of a split S maneuver, hits ground. 1 Dead.
Regional airliner choose the wrong runway (too short for take off) ALL Dead.
Young fueler refuels recip. Bonanza with Jet A. 2 Dead.
Buzzing! A gazillion accidents, most fatal.
FUI (flying under the influence).
Pilot takes Alka Seltzer tablet for headache with NO WATER and just shoves it in his mouth! Choked. 1 Dead.
VFR Pilots fly in to IMC purposely. Gazillion Dead.
IFR pilot flies his plane in to known (small Cell) to wash his plane off. 1 Dead.
Small plane pilot flies his bird in to LAX TCA with no authority, takes tail off airliner in flight. Many Dead.
Chopper pilot decides to tow a small boat to the shore....Didn't work. Scratch 1 Bell Jet Ranger.
Pilot flies his Mooney in to an airport with a short runway to get his non working brakes worked on. Result: Mooney bulldozer.
Citation lands long downwind on very short runway. All on board survive but had to be rescued by boats!
Rock 'n Roll stars who fly in planes.... ;o)
DUMB and DUMBER:
"Dumb accident number one is low-level maneuvering flight. Last year there were 135 mishaps that resulted in hitting wires, towers, buildings, or the ground. They typically involved a low-time pilot out for a spin, literally in some cases, and there were fatalities in almost 50 percent of the cases." AOPA
Have you ever completed a flight whereby you pronounced something you did as "Stupid"? I will be the first to volunteer one of mine: About 3 years ago I pulled a plane out of the maintenance hanger. A car had to be moved so I could taxi out to the runway. I did the pre-flight in the hanger and after a subsequent conversation with the mechanic, I got in the plane, taxied it out toward the runway when all of a sudden the mechanic drove up to the plane frantically waving his arms and making a cut throat sign for me to kill the engine. I did not question it and shut her down immediately. The tow bar was still in the nose gear! (blush). Sometimes we get away doing stupid stuff while others aren't so fortunate.

For those of you whom are smarter than I was that day, they will check the plane on a once around inspection just before you board the plane should anything have diverted your attention after the normal pre-flight. Additionally, smart pilots will include themselves as an important pre-flight item to check. If you find yourself rushed to get off the ground, or you have get-home-itis, or for any reason you find that you are not really at 100%; DON'T FLY that day! It's a NO-GO pure and simple.
How are your decision making habits normally? Are you fully prepared to make unexpected intelligent and immediate decisions, or do you simply leave (shit-happens) occurrences to fate? This is where the "WHAT IF" portion of being a good pilot comes in. For the past 30+ years, I have read everything from FLYING's "I learned about Flying from that" articles. I even have a book produced from Flying Magazine full of those articles. I read at least monthly the list of accidents during that month at the www.ntsb.gov site, not to be morbid by any stretch, nor to be disrespectful, but to help insure that none of my hundreds of customers have filled any of those pages with a fatal result (not I could ever find thank God) but importantly, to learn from some of other less fortunate pilots mistakes, and you wouldn't believe how many occurred that one would consider a "STUPID MISTAKE" where you finish the article shaking your head in disgust. What a waste often, and all because of improper decision making and usually due to a pilot not ever considering in advance what he would do in any particular scenario, or at least the one that did he or his plane in. I know of several pilots over the years who have landing their airplane's gear up and each time all of them got out of the plane and said or thought the same three words: DUMB, DUMB, DUMB! Look if we all admit to ourselves that we are as humans capable of occasional "DUMBNESS", then we are on our way to a good start for not becoming one of those statistics that would fall in to the "DUMB" category.
THE VAST OPERATION of aviation activities carry a very low risk, while a few or them are dangerous beyond belief. Avoid the dangerous few and indulge passionately in the safe airship operation and you can expect to live long enough to see your great grandchildren graduate from Harvard. Here are eleven things that you can do that will make your flying 10 times safer than average.
1. Check yourself as the pilot.
2. Never never never say, "I have to get there."
3. Do your aerobatics from the ground
4. Don't buzz things
5. Don't fly dangerous airplanes
6. Don't confuse being FAA Legal with being safe.
7. Take time to learn from the pilot who killed himself doing something stupid.
8. Don't fly with meds, alcohol, or illegal drugs in your system.
9. Do thorough pre-flights.
10. Don't fly beyond your personal limitations.
11. THINK!
Tim "Kingfish" Moore
Here are a couple of facts we should consider:
Nearly half
of IFR approach accidents occur at night while 70% of
IFR accidents occur during daylight.
The hourly rate of IFR accidents is lower than the VFR rate but the fatality rate is
three times higher.
By eliminating the "dumb" in accidents, the fatal accident rate could be cut by one third. This is great news to the average conscientious pilot and his passengers. Avoiding these easily defined problems is something all of us could do; and if we did, many problems facing general aviation would subside. Public perception of our activity would improve significantly.
Do you wanna see something really stupid and dangerous? Click below...
This pilot cannot think in 3 dimensions. Not everyone should be pilots!
SO WHEN I AM ASKED OFTEN IF flying is safe? My answer is generally: It's as safe as the pilot, so my advice to pilots is to learn a lot and don't forget what you learn and be aware that over 85% of accidents involve pilot error! SO, DON'T WORRY AS MUCH about the airplane being ready as you should WORRY ABOUT YOURSELF!



Another Darwin finalist
PILOTS,
A LESSON FOR LIFE. INSTRUCTORS, DRUM THIS INTO YOUR STUDENTS' HEADS
For those of you not familiar with a Cessna 182, do not be misled by the photos.
The 182 is a high wing aircraft
This 182 was brand new, glass cockpit and all, with a total of only 80 hours
on it.
Its pilot
was flying to a camp carrying a lawn mower (with gas in it) in the back seat.
He also had a 12v to 110v inverter plugged in with the inverter sitting on the
floor in
the back, running his laptop computer.
He landed
on the grass runway and smelled gas fumes during rollout.
He stopped turned the airplane around to back-taxi and reached back to feel the
lawn
mower and stop the fuel leak before it messed up the carpet any more than it
already had,
when POOF! the entire back seat area ignited.
He pulled the mixture out, jumped out, called 911, and began running to the line
shack in hopes
of finding a fire extinguisher (he had removed his from the aircraft as he did
not think his plane
would ever catch fire and what is more, mounted between the front seats it was a
nuisance
when he reached down there every time to disengage his seat rail lock).
He got half way to the line shack and turned around to see the wings fold down
to the ground.
Fire trucks arrived 12-15 minutes later and put out the fire.
Best guess is that the inverter somehow
sparked and ignited the gas fumes.
He admitted if this had happened in the air there would not have been enough
time to land and
escape before the smoke and flames overpowered him or the airplane
disintegrated in mid-air.
The pilot
was known to be good. He was obviously not a very
good judge of what to carry in the back of an airplane, or, anything can go
wrong, or the conviction that has killed many a pilot: "It can't happen to me".
Morals
to the story: Never carry any fuel on board other than what is in the airplane's
tanks.
Always have your fire extinguisher handy on board; you never know when you will
need it.
Fly Safe Ollie!
Why, I sointenly will!
Fly a lot; but most of all:
FLY SAFE!

PS An avid Mooneyland reader recently wrote me: "zef, I am sure that all of your thoughtful articles on safety on your website has saved at least one life, maybe more, but you may never know it so on behalf of them and me, I wish to thank you from the bottom of my heart". :o)
There is nothing funny about accidental death due to
aviation accidents, but we took a very serious problem to make some light of
because STUPIDITY FACTOR EXISTS!
zef


Mooneyland highly recommends Tom "TJ" Johnson for any and all AVIATION INSURANCE NEEDS.
www.airpowerinsurance.com *** www.warbirdinsurance.com
Or call Tom Johnson "TJ" direct at: 602 628-2701. Tell TJ to give you the great and personal service he has given so many of our Mooneyland customers. zef said so! CLICK HERE for more information and testimony about TJ.
You know dats right!

