Friday, October 16, 2009

008 In the Village





On Wednesday we took 008 to some nearby villages (Obura, Gema and Owena) and got a preliminary look at how it will perform on the sloped, mountain airstrips. On this first time out, we kept the plane light – just three of us on board, and a light fuel load. Mark Wuerffel had joined us from JAARS a few days earlier, and he occupied the cockpit with Rick. I sat in a passenger seat behind and left the flying to them, since together they both have nearly thirty years of experience in PNG, and have flown into these three airstrips many times in other aircraft.





The village folk turned out as they usually do. Airplanes visit here frequently (it's a coffee producing area, and aircraft are the main mode of export).  Their arrival is often a source of entertainment, but a new airplane is especially noteworthy for them. In the years to come, Kodiaks will become a normal sight here, providing service to these communities, transporting church people, missionaries, medical teams, educators and a myriad of other types of passengers and cargo.








As time passes, our aviation staff will develop a set of standards for each of the several hundred airstrips in PNG with the Kodiak, for things like takeoff and landing weights, surface conditions, wind and weather minima. These will vary from site to site, based on the surrounding terrain, runway slope, length and typical wind patterns at each place. What we are learning about the Kodiak’s specific characteristics will be applied to each airstrip. Of course, the goal is to safely carry as large a load as possible in and out of these sites.





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