One of the sacrifices that I had to
make several years ago, in order to capitalize the development of
Aero-News, was to divest myself of a number of my favorite toys.
So... for quite a few years, and for the first time in a LONG time,
I was not an aircraft owner... outside of some bits and pieces of a
few creative partnerships here and there... but nothing that was
'mine all mine.'
Thankfully; that has changed and may change a number of times
again as ANN continues its breathtaking growth and progress. But
for now, my primary mount is a recently rebuilt Glasair III that is
turning out to be far more fun than I expected... even though it
took a year plus to get it to the point where I felt it could do
what I wanted. The Glasair III was one of those aircraft I've
always wanted to own and there have been a few attempts to pick one
up over the years... without success. And then, N2JZ (soon to be
rechristened N411AN) came into my life.
N411AN came to me as a result of a tragedy, though. The product
of a number of years of hard work and quite a lot of flight time,
N411AN was originally the product of an irrepressible aeronaut by
the name of Dr. John Zazadny... or "Dr. John" as we all knew
him.
I knew John many moons ago when I lived out west, and remembered
him as an intriguing and inventive guy who definitely marched to
his own drummer.

Sadly, John died in a midair a few years back while flying his
T-18 off the California coast. Through a number of mutual friends
and associates, his trusty G-III came to be mine about a
year and a half ago. I'm mindful that this was once a good man's
pride and joy, that it was one of the most active Glasair III's to
ever fly, and that while I could buy the airframe, it was up to me
to respect the legacy that was passed on to me by a family who
missed John immensely, and was concerned that was once N2JZ would
be treated right and respected appropriately.
N411AN was, at one point, (and may still be) one of the highest
time G-IIIs in the world... though its total time may not be all
that impressive by certificated standards. It was built straight,
right and obviously flew a heck of a lot (over 3000 hours at this
writing) ... but it also sat for quite a while after Dr. John's
untimely end and was in need of some updates, some mods, and some
TLC.

Glasair Aviation's Mikael Via has been a good and trusted friend
for a few years now... and played a pivotal role in helping me
along a process that I was ill-prepared for. It was his
recommendation that led me to Southern Air's Lanny Rundell, a
former Glasair staffer and reputed to be one of the best homebuilt
techs and rebuilders this side of the Mississippi. I've come to
trust that description. The bird required some long-overdue gear
updates, a new prop, a fresh coat of paint (the elder version was
starting to peel and while not awful looking, it wasn't what I
wanted... if you want to fly good, it helps to look good... grin).
The older gear system required extensive upgrades, the electrical
work was in need of some serious TLC and the bird was a stock older
G-III... meaning short wings (no extended tips) and the elder flap
system... which was the one thing I truly did not like about the
original design.
After some help from Mik and assurances from Lanny that it could
be done, we retrofitted the much more aerodynamically-talented
slotted flap system, built a set of extended wing tips, and then
went through the beast from stem to stern. On top of all that, a
little bit of artistic inspiration from John Knolla at Aerographics
produced some vinyl artwork that could be applied to the aircraft
and make her look like a million bucks.. or so we hoped it might.
Check the pix... I think he did it.

The project was not without its heartaches. It took well over a
year longer than I had hoped... and while it was easy to think that
Lanny was dragging his feet, some serious education about the
realities of all that we did has convinced me that, overall, we did
pretty good. And, if anyone was an impediment to the process, it
was probably as much due to my own ignorance and inexperience with
such a complex project, as anything.
That was then, this is now.
A few hours ago, we brought N411AN home... it was a bright clear
day, we had a honking tailwind, and after a few hours of thrashing
around over LA, I was finally getting my feel back for an airplane
that I once flew fairly aggressively 'back in the day' with friends
like Bob Herendeen and Ted Setzer. As a matter of fact, some of my
best memories in the Glasair III involved spins... LOTS of spins,
with the late great Bob Herendeen (we miss you, Bob... lots) who
got a kick out of how much I enjoyed the airplane and opined many
moons ago that I was probably going to have to get one of my own
someday.
Bob and I spun the hell out of the G-III... upright,
inverted, power-on, power-off, you name it... and it was as
interesting a spin session as I have ever flown... especially
working with a master of the craft like Bob. I loved the airplane
back then, and as I tucked the gear up on departure from
Louisiana for the voyage home, that intense affection renewed
itself with great abandon as I made a farewell pass down the field
(250 mph+++), and headed 600 nm east to a new home for what was
most assuredly now the prettiest Glasair III in any known
universe.

It was a great trip and a most proper homecoming. Despite
loafing along at 21 inches and 2350 rpm (I need a prop balance yet
on the brandy new Hartzell we installed, before I can run it at
lower revs... but that prop hauls like it was at a tractor pull), I
wound up with nearly 230 knots true -- and thanks to the
benevolent wind gods, a homecoming ground speed of 272 knots! I did
600 NM in a total of 2 hours and 12 minutes of flight time.
Baby! It was as good a feeling as I've had in a while... and
while the extended wings are not meant for hard aerobatics, it
appears a few rolls haven't hurt a darned thing... over and over
again.
The icing on the cake, though, was an inquiry from JAX Center as
I slid on down to an approach vector for Northern
FL (temporary Home for N411AN until I move to my new house in
a few days... on an airpark, complete with my own hangar!) It seems
they saw my ground speed and were a mite curious... what was I
flying?

"A Glasair III," I replied.
"Is that a turboprop?"
"Negative, JAX... it just thinks it is..."
N411AN is home... and the adventures are just beginning.