Spitfire K5054 90th Anniversary Circumnavigation of the UK: PIREPS

Leg 03 (Part 1)

Having spent far too much time in trying to find an FSX Spitfire XII, and after NOT finding one I decided to repaint a clipped wing Mk XIV as if it was a Mk XII, eventually I got 41 Sqdn's EB-Z, MB854 to the ramp at Leuchars for Leg 03 y'day. Parked next to that Sea Fury again.

Leg 03-a.jpg

Having found a slot to take-off in the middle of that air show I found myself in, the Tower asked me to taxi around past the crowd for a photo-opportunity, of all things, but I wasn't likely to refuse seeing as they'd filled my tanks for me. Firstly I passed two very weird looking machines, all angular and pointy, not as stylish as a Spitfire at all.............

Leg 03-b.jpg

And then I paused by the crowd line as requested before heading to the threshold and getting airborne. It seems there's some people using flash for their cameras in broad daylight, would you believe? :oops:

Leg 03-c.jpg

I got airborne OK, and didn't follow the full list of waypoints as it seemed the RW Spitfire Tr9 had backtracked down to Edinburgh, and I was interested in catching the rest of you guys before you all landed back at Eastleigh and went off to Morocco to fly whirlybirds! I headed off north east right away at around 2000 ft and going as fast as I could, prop in fine pitch, mixture leaned out and throttle on the firewall! Thus setup the Mx XII was doing WELL over 300 kts, which was very pleasing indeed. :)

One of the beauties of flying over the JF Photo-real scenery that I have is that all the old and abandoned airfields are still clearly visible from this altitude, and this one's RAF Kinnell, just south of Montrose a way.

Leg 03-d.jpg

It's notable in the pic above how well the RAF camouflage scheme works over the UK countryside, it's pretty difficult picking out the Mk XII's shape above those varied fields.

Just a little way further north I passed o'head Montrose itself, a lovely seaside harbour town that's well worth a visit if you're in range. I hadn't time to do that, and pressed on towards Lossiemouth. Note Scotland's predeliction toward golf courses, they're all OVER the place!

Leg 03-e.jpg

Turning north and paralleling the coast line for a while, I was approaching the large port city of Aberdeen, but my next waypoint was actually the VOR aerial at Dyce Airport, a little inland. At one time Dyce held the record as the busiest helicopter field in the world, but that was during the North Sea oil boom here in Scotland. There's Dyce directly ahead.

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I was going somewhat faster than the Tower there expected (just over 330 kts at this point...) and they were so surprised they took this shot of me passing o'head. D Day invasion stripes weren't too common in that area of course....... :)

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Heading further and further north I passed over another derelict airfield, this one was a Fleet Air Arm field during WWII and as with all such FFA fields, it had it's own ship's name, this one being HMS Mergansar.

Leg 03-h.jpg

Only a little further north the coastline turns abruptly to the east into the Moray Firth itself, which eventually leads all the way to Inverness. Right on the corner is the town of Inveralochy, which also had its own RAF airfield back in the day. Nowadays it's a road transport depot, part of a housing estate, a kart racing track and farming of course.

Leg 03-i.jpg

After another 40 nms heading east I was in sight of Lossiemouth, a station I know VERY well indeed having spent many hours there with my youngest daughter while she was learning her trade as an Air Trafficer in the RAF. Having got the OK from the tower I was all set to do a low, fast pass along the main 23 runway even though I would have to land on the 10 strip due to the wind. The Spitfire's not as forgiving of crosswinds than the stations Typhoons & Poseidons of course. They need the much longer runway and the 10-28 one is only used for special flights like mine.

The scenery I have for the station, from UKMil, is very accurate, even having the red & white threshold caravans in which I've spent more than a few hours, arrowed in red below.

Leg 03-j.jpg

Part 2 follows.
 
Leg 03 (Part 2)

Making a very low (50 ft.....) run across the field in front of the Tower was pretty darn effective at waking them all up for sure. :)

Leg 03-k.jpg

Making a long right hand turn over the west end of the field I lined up with the 10 runway, canopy open, wheels and flaps down and full rich mixture, with my prop in coarse pitch of course. This being Scotland, they didn't have just the odd tree on the runway centre line, they had a small FOREST there!

Leg 03-l.jpg

Touch down was just about OK, I've done a lot better, but my excuse is I'm not used to the opposite torque of a Griffon engined Spitfire. (that's my reason and I'm sticking to it, OK?) :) As Melo discovered, the taxiways at Lossie are long and twisty, but luckily I could remember them from my time there in the RW and soon I was parked on the Visiting Aircraft Parking just to the west of the Tower, and went to sign in at the Ops Office, a place I know very well indeed.

Leg 03-m.jpg

On my first visit there I spent some hours in that greenhouse in the pic above, being the 'Visual Confirmation Officer with a HUGE pair of binoculars for SATCO for the day, GREAT fun! :)

The UKMil scenery is a little vintage in that their aircraft at Lossie are all Tornado FGR4s, which were there when I was, so it all looked very familiar to me, but to my amazement one of them started up and taxied off to the far end of the 05-23 runway to take off! I didn't realise they were AI aircraft, complete with flight plans, and I watched them doing their thing for quite a while. The arrow shows the one I saw startup actually taking off, and it went off across the Firth, presumably to the Tain Range on the North side.

Leg 03-n.jpg

All in all it was a very good and quite exciting flight, the extra power of the Griffon engine suited the low level characteristics of the Mk XII a treat, and as a result I AVERAGED 350 kts for the whole flight! I burnt 69 gallons of fuel, which was hardly surprising really, which gave me a burn rate of only 3 galls/mile.

I'll keep the Mk XII for Leg 04 down to Prestwick I think ad I can do its 'low level thing' down the Caledonian Canal quite nicely. :)
 
Spitfire K5054 TR9 Flight 7: MOD St. Athan AB (EGDX) to RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG) Part 1

For this event I am flying in FSX. Using Active Sky 2016 for weather and Little Navmap for navigation.
Flying an Aeroplane Heaven Mid-War pack TR9 Spitfire. Repainted to match the livery of the K5054 TR9 Spitfire.

01 ready to start.jpg
Ready to start the engine for this seventh flight of the UK tour. Wind direction indicates a takeoff on runway 08. Taxied down the grass beside the runway for takeoff on runway 08.

02 takeoff 08.jpg
Lined up for takeoff on runway 08.

03 On the way.jpg
On the way to RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG).

04 fuel conservation.jpg
My routine adjustments. Set the throttle, mixture, and prop settings to conserve fuel. Throttle set to about 63%, then coarsened the prop pitch and moved the mixture back to get a RPM of 2500 with about 4 boost.

05 Cardiff below.jpg
Cardiff is below.

06 freighter Newport Docks.jpg
A freighter waiting for its turn to enter Newport Docks.

Since it is nearby I could not resist heading further up the river toward Dean Forest Regional Airport (EGDF). Kit first built the airport for FS98 on the bank of the river Severn, and I have since helped him upgrade it for FS2004 and FSX. EGDF is near the town of Lydney where Kit lived for many years.

07 Bridge approach 19 ft.jpg
Approaching the Prince of Wales Bridge.

08 Bridge 1 - 11 ft.jpg
Squeezing through at 11 feet altitude.

09 Bridge 2 - 40 ft.jpg
Under the Severn Bridge at 40 feet altitude with plenty of room to spare.

10 Past both bridges.jpg
This is the first time in a long time that I flew under both of the bridges from the South.

Continued in Part 2
 
Spitfire K5054 TR9 Flight 7: MOD St. Athan AB (EGDX) to RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG) Part 2

The EGDF Tower asked me for a fast pass down the runway and of course I obliged.

11 EGDF 200 kts 26 feet.jpg
200 Knots at 26 feet altitude. Much easier to get really low in familiar territory.

12 tower view 25 ft.jpg
Tower view of my aircraft at 25 feet altitude.

13 climbing out to get on course again.jpg
Climbing out to swing around and get back on course.

14 EGTG.jpg
Just passed Filton (EGTG) in the distance.

15 High Littleton below.jpg
The town of High Littleton is below.

16 SW near Wells.jpg
Turning to fly South West near Waypoint 5 and the town Wells.

17 W near Bridgwater.jpg
Heading West near town of Bridgwater.

18 near Watchet.jpg
Over the town of Watchet. We are enjoying this flight along the UK coastline.

19 Near Bossington.jpg
Flying along the coast near Bossington. Right after this we banked left and climbed up over the cliffs to stay on course.

20 Passing EGDC.jpg
Passing by Chivenor (EGDC).

Continued in Part 3
 
Spitfire K5054 TR9 Flight 7: MOD St. Athan AB (EGDX) to RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG) Part 3

21 some aerobatics.jpg
Enjoying some aerobatics.

22 still raining.jpg
Still raining steadily as it has been the whole flight so far.

23 foggy locally.jpg
Starting to get more foggy.

24 At 700 feet.jpg
Down to 700 feet altitude trying to maintain ground contact and not get swallowed up in the clouds. No chance to do a flyby or fast pass down the runway at the destination airport this time.

25 Getting worse.jpg
Weather conditions are getting much worse. Close to RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG) now though, so have mixture full rich and prop in fine pitch for landing with full flaps, gear down, and canopies open. Hoping I can find runway 31 in this murk.

26 Base for31.jpg
Base leg for runway 31, still searching.

27 Final for 31.jpg
On Final for runway 31. Very grateful that they had the approach lights turned on!

28 Moments before touchdown.jpg
Moments before touchdown. Landed safely. Closed the canopies as soon as we were safely down. Did not want to have to bail out the cockpits.

29 Parked at EGDG.jpg
Parked at RAF St Mawgan AB (EGDG).

30 weather at EGDG.jpg
Here is the Active Sky Weather picture after landing. Lucky that we were able to get down safely in these conditions.

We had 41% fuel left on board after engine shutdown.

The flight was 215 miles. The flight was completed in 1 hour and 10 minutes at an average speed of 160 knots.

I used 50.1 gallons of fuel on the flight. For this flight the Merlin engine used 42.9 gallons per hour.

Seven flights completed and only two more to go.
 
Spitfire K5054 90th Anniversary Circumnavigation of the UK Announcement

K5054 TR9 with escorts.jpg

For everyone already flying the route: Please plan to finish your flights in June.

For anyone else who wants to join in even at this late date: Anyone who starts flying during the Month of May (today or tomorrow) is very welcome to continue and complete the Nine flights during June.
 
The EGDF Tower asked me for a fast pass down the runway and of course I obliged.

View attachment 189340
200 Knots at 26 feet altitude. Much easier to get really low in familiar territory.

View attachment 189341
Tower view of my aircraft at 25 feet altitude.

Somehow I just KNEW you'd do a fly by at EGDF Melo, nice one. :) (y) And a Bridge Flight............. ;)

And that second pic is pretty much what I'd have seen from my bedroom window in my old house too! Bizarrely I'll be there tomorrow as well.
 
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