When flying at high altitudes (as I almost always do) it becomes even more important to have a Mode c transponder. Once you have the transponder your size is not that important. Up at those altitudes and speeds the big planes you worry about all have TCAS and are talking to controllers and I suspect that they really don't do a lot of looking for traffic out the window anyway so does not really matter how big a plane you are flying.
I think you have a lot of guts flying at the lower altitudes. When I am over 10,000' I can almost always glide to an airport or choose between several. At 3,500' you are looking for the best looking road and hoping there are not power lines you can't see. > ----- Original Message ----- > Hello All, > On that note it seems that some of you are flying at altitudes that > some of the bigger boys fly at. I remember with my other experimental > airplane at 5500 feet I felt awfully small so I stayed at altitudes at 3500 > feet or less because of my model size airplane! Even in the Cherokee Arrow > or going over Lake Michigan I usually stay to 7500 feet or less. You guys > have a lot of guts! > Doran > N 186 RC _______________________________________________ Search the KRnet Archives at http://tugantek.com/archmailv2-kr/search. To UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to KRnet-leave at list.krnet.org please see other KRnet info at http://www.krnet.org/info.html see http://list.krnet.org/mailman/listinfo/krnet_list.krnet.org to change options