Tom Rabourn 
                                    decided to make this takeoff himself. We 
                                    lined up on the centreline, with everything 
                                    pushed forward. Flaps were at zero. Then the 
                                    power went in and the big IO-520 up front 
                                    started bellowing. The airplane quickly 
                                    gathered energy and I glanced over; the 
                                    airspeed was building through 35 knots. Then 
                                    40. Then, without warning, Tom reached down 
                                    and forcibly yanked the flap lever almost 
                                    all the way up. Faster than I could follow 
                                    it with my eyes, the airplane literally 
                                    leaped straight up, clearing the mythical 50 
                                    foot obstacle in a single bound. The 
                                    airspeed needle stayed glued to 40 knots and 
                                    we continued clawing upwards, nose in the 
                                    sky, runway falling behind. Tom's 
                                    re-invention of Cessna's venerable aerial 
                                    pick-up truck, the 185 Skywagon really does 
                                    it's number.
                                    Rabourn, a recently 
                                    retired airline pilot living in Carefree, 
                                    Arizona just north of Phoenix, views his 185 
                                    as an after-college present to himself. "I 
                                    had three kids in college at the same time 
                                    and as soon as they got out, I bought the 
                                    185."
                                    
                                    
                                    When he says, "...I 
                                    bought the 185," however, it doesn't mean he 
                                    actually bought a 185. What he bought was 
                                    more of a 185 "kit" as it was far from being 
                                    a complete airplane. In fact, all Rabourn 
                                    got was the basic airframe missing the 
                                    engine, interior and lots of parts. The 
                                    airplane had been a research and development 
                                    airplane for a well known turbine engine 
                                    manufacturer who had stripped it out and 
                                    replaced the original engine with one of 
                                    their turbines, then abandoned it.
                                    When Rabourn stood back 
                                    and looked at the pile of parts, in his 
                                    mind's eye he saw a different airplane than 
                                    Cessna had originally designed. What he saw 
                                    was the basis on which he could build the 
                                    bush airplane he'd always wanted.
                                    When Rabourn was finished 
                                    building, actually resurrecting or 
                                    reincarnating might be better terms, the 
                                    C-185, he had received an unbelievable 26 
                                    STC's for changes made to the airplane. All 
                                    of the changes had been made in the name of 
                                    expanding on the airplane's already 
                                    impressive utility envelope. The airplane 
                                    had become an aerial version of a 4 x 4 
                                    super-truck which, although already 
                                    impressively capable, was further modified 
                                    to gully-run the desert and ignore 
                                    topography.
                                    Some of the mods are so 
                                    small as to be invisible. For instance, 
                                    Rabourn is a big, big guy. The in-seam on 
                                    his jeans is 36 inches! So he wanted the 
                                    seats to slide far enough aft to let him in 
                                    and out without having to fold himself up 
                                    like a pocket knife each time. The STC for 
                                    the extended seat rails includes a short 
                                    piece of seat belt, including the buckle, 
                                    that clips to the front edge of the pilot's 
                                    seat keeping it from doing the infamous 
                                    Cessna Slide, racing back down the tracks on 
                                    takeoff.
                                    Other mods are more 
                                    obvious, like the upward hinged, float plane 
                                    doors which are also often fitted to jump 
                                    planes and make loading outsized cargo 
                                    easier.
                                    
                                    
                                    The back seat area is 
                                    more for carrying "stuff" than people. The 
                                    seats (also STC'd) are cute little fold-away 
                                    units that stow up against the fuselage 
                                    sides creating a huge cargo bay, but pop 
                                    into place when needed.
                                    In the back of the cargo 
                                    compartment is a survival kit weighing 143 
                                    pounds which is figured in as part of the 
                                    airplane's empty weight because it is 
                                    permanently installed. It goes where the 
                                    airplane goes. Tom uses his airplane for 
                                    bouncing around in the bush, and is prepared 
                                    for any eventuality, but he also knows that 
                                    out in the west, if you're outside the city 
                                    limits and the engine quits, you're 
                                    instantly in a survival situation.
                                    Since short, ugly runways 
                                    was where he was headed with the airplane, 
                                    one of the STC'd mods was the P. Ponk 
                                    Aviation STC, which replaces the gear mounts 
                                    with a special unit that guarantees the 
                                    gearbox will survive a ground loop or really 
                                    hard landing.
                                    Getting in short, means 
                                    coming in slow, so Tom installed a Robinson 
                                    conversion kit which not only puts a cuff on 
                                    the leading edge of the wing, but couples 
                                    the ailerons to the flaps so when the flaps 
                                    go down, the ailerons droop with then, which 
                                    steals some of their effectiveness. Tom flew 
                                    the airplane for a while with just the 
                                    Robinson kit, then installed vortex 
                                    generators (VG's) along the top of the wing 
                                    to put energy back into otherwise lazy 
                                    airflow at slow speeds which made his 
                                    ailerons more effective when the flaps are 
                                    down.
                                    The engine is the normal 
                                    Continental IO-520D, rated at 300 hp for 
                                    five minutes and 285 hp continuous. Tom, 
                                    however, restricts his horsepower for 
                                    increased engine longevity by keeping the 
                                    rpm down on take off via what he calls an 
                                    "Alaskan Prop Limiter"; that's a wooden 
                                    clothes pin clipped on the prop control 
                                    shaft that stops it at 2650 rpm, holding the 
                                    power to 285 hp. I didn't ask if the clothes 
                                    pin was STC'd.
                                    
                                    
                                    What makes the airplane 
                                    really work for him in Arizona and the high 
                                    density altitudes of the west, however, is 
                                    the addition of the Air Research 
                                    turbocharger by Turbo Tech. A manual waste 
                                    gate control turbo, it allows him to hold 
                                    75% power to 17,000 feet which also lets him 
                                    flight plan 150 knots at 10,000 feet while 
                                    only burning 15.5 gallons per hour. That's 
                                    at 27 inches of manifold pressure. Aren't 
                                    turbos wonderful?
                                    Incidentally, the 
                                    airplane was so completely taken apart that 
                                    the FAA registration has it listed as a 1990 
                                    Skywagon, not a 1967.
                                    The 185 was originally 
                                    born as Cessna's answer to those folks in 
                                    the 1960's who were saying, "Hey, we love 
                                    our 180's, but can't you make them a little 
                                    larger? Make them carry more." So Cessna 
                                    took what had been a winning design and made 
                                    just a little more of it. In 1961, when they 
                                    introduced the 185 Skywagon, it literally 
                                    was just a 180 on steroids. The empty 
                                    weights stayed about the same, 1525 pounds, 
                                    but the gross went up from 2,800 pounds to 
                                    3,300 pounds. Bingo, just like that, they 
                                    had another 500 pounds useful load to play 
                                    with. To help get that extra weight off the 
                                    ground, the 230 hp 0-470 Continental of the 
                                    C-180 was hopped up a little, turned a 
                                    little faster and given a rating of 260 hp 
                                    in the 185. In 1966, answering the same 
                                    folks who were probably saying "Okay, so now 
                                    the airframe will carry the weight, now give 
                                    us the power to get it off the ground 
                                    better." The answer was the 185E which 
                                    boasted the IO-520D rated at 300 hp. 
                                    With that kind of power and displacement 
                                    increase, the airplane now was capable of 
                                    carrying what ever you could put into it. In 
                                    fact, even though the empty weight of the 
                                    bare airplanes went up, the advertised 
                                    useful load was 1840 pounds which included 
                                    65 gallons (84 gallons optional) of fuel. 
                                    The airplane was only five knots faster than 
                                    the C-180 and stalled four knots higher, but 
                                    it was also carrying nearly 600 pounds more 
                                    cargo/people/fuel. None of these performance 
                                    figures, of course, mean anything when put 
                                    against Rabourn's modified airplane.
                                    As we climbed into the 
                                    airplane, it was obvious to me that 
                                    everything about the Skywagon makes it feel 
                                    like a much bigger airplane. One thing that 
                                    immediately made it seem so much longer, 
                                    even though it really isn't, was how far I 
                                    had to pull the seat forward to reach the 
                                    rudder pedals. In fact, between the upward 
                                    hinged door and the extended seat rails, it 
                                    has to be the easiest Cessna on Earth to get 
                                    into. These would be good mods for any
                                    Cessna.
                                    Tom orchestrated the 
                                    start (it was hot and we didn't need me 
                                    screwing it up) and we were on our way. The 
                                    heavy weight aspect of the airplane was 
                                    obvious from the very beginning. The amount 
                                    of power it took to get it moving and the 
                                    amount of rudder it required to make a turn 
                                    all hinted at inertia. It didn't want to be 
                                    moved and then, when it moved, it didn't 
                                    want to be stopped. This is all relative, 
                                    however, as after a few minutes the feeling 
                                    of inertia disappeared to be replaced by a 
                                    feeling of solidity.
                                    
                                    
                                    After a short 
                                    conversation on the taxiway about how I 
                                    could almost see over the nose, Tom 
                                    suggested we crank my seat up. Crank, crank, 
                                    crank. Now I could absolutely see over the 
                                    nose.
                                    Out on the runway, I 
                                    purposely hunched down a little so the nose 
                                    would hide the very centre of the runway 
                                    which gave me a hard reference where the 
                                    edge of the runway intersected the cowling. 
                                    Power going in, I simply hugged the yoke to 
                                    my chest and stared at my reference until 
                                    the tail felt like it wanted to come up, 
                                    then I eased it forward (against some trim, 
                                    which I should have set a little further 
                                    forward). As soon as the tail came up I had 
                                    C-182 visibility. I've never been crazy 
                                    about spring gear and I could feel the main 
                                    gear legs sort of wobbling around. The 
                                    airplane wasn't doing anything, as it was 
                                    taking only a tap here and there to keep it 
                                    straight, but that soft feeling made it 
                                    difficult to know exactly what it was doing. 
                                    On the next takeoff, I raised the tail a tad 
                                    higher and pinned it on more securely which 
                                    loaded the legs and eliminated some of the 
                                    wobblies.
                                    Once off the ground, Tom 
                                    immediately set the turbo control for max 
                                    continuous power and we wandered up hill at 
                                    900 fpm while holding 70 knots. It was about 
                                    90° out and we were at 2,500 MSL, so the DA 
                                    was about 5,000 ft.
                                    
                                    
                                    In the air, the airplane 
                                    actually feels big. I hadn't expected it to 
                                    feel much different than a C-182, but it 
                                    does. Its wing loading is a solid 2 pounds 
                                    per square foot heavier and you can tell it. 
                                    There wasn't much turbulence, but what 
                                    little there was, the airplane just chopped 
                                    through. In playing with the controls, the 
                                    ailerons were heavier than a 182's and the 
                                    airplane's response was a little slower, all 
                                    part of the big airplane feel.
                                    Once at altitude I 
                                    immediately began playing with the stalls 
                                    and slow flight. The first stall was clean 
                                    and the yoke was against my chest at 
                                    something like 52 knots IAS. I held the yoke 
                                    back, just to see what it would do, which 
                                    was exactly nothing. The stall didn't break 
                                    and the airplane just mushed ahead. I added 
                                    some speed, grabbed the man-sized handle on 
                                    the floor between the seats and yanked it up 
                                    to give me full (40°) flaps and tried the 
                                    stall again. Same thing, except the stall 
                                    was down around 38-40 knots. The Robinson 
                                    kit must really work, because in the same 
                                    situation, the book says a stock Skywagon 
                                    would be stalling around 54 knots.
                                    
                                    
                                    Then, with the yoke still 
                                    against my chest and flaps down, I slowly 
                                    eased power in, bleeding off back pressure 
                                    as the nose tried to come up. I found I 
                                    could motor around with something like 
                                    13-15" and 35 knots all day long. The 
                                    ailerons were a little soft, but the 
                                    airplane was totally controllable and 
                                    pulling back to simulate an inadvertent 
                                    stall in that situation only generated a 
                                    slight bump and a little roll to the left. 
                                    Leaving everything alone and relaxing a hint 
                                    of back pressure put the airplane back 
                                    flying again at 35 knots.
                                    On downwind, I got out 
                                    10° of flap which made the airplane very 
                                    manageable and speed-stable. I bled the 
                                    speed down to the 65 knots Tom recommended, 
                                    keeping a little power in to maintain 
                                    glideslope and to fly out around a noise 
                                    sensitive area. I opted to fly final with 
                                    only 30° flap, rather than hanging them all 
                                    out. All the way down, the end of the gravel 
                                    runway just sat in the windshield, until it 
                                    started moving towards us and I bled the 
                                    power off to let it down.
                                    The first landing wasn't 
                                    pretty as I was still trying to figure out 
                                    where the ground was and planted it on a 
                                    little too firmly. We got a little bounce 
                                    and I just held the attitude waiting for it 
                                    to come down. Gravity always sorts these 
                                    kinds of situations out and it settled back 
                                    on to roll pretty much straight ahead even 
                                    though we had a slight crosswind. On the 
                                    next landing, I was able to ease it into 
                                    ground effect with a little more grace and 
                                    we touched down with no bounce. Tom had 
                                    warned me to make sure the trim was full aft 
                                    prior to touch down or it would do the 
                                    famous main gear to tailwheel and back 
                                    hippity hop 180/185s are famous for. I 
                                    didn't see a sign of that tendency.
                                    On roll-out I could feel 
                                    the airplane try to initiate a slight turn, 
                                    but then I'd feel the gear legs twist 
                                    sideways, greatly softening that turn, 
                                    giving me all day to keep the nose straight. 
                                    That's one of the strong points of the 
                                    spring gear, designed and patented by old 
                                    time race pilot, Steve Wittman. At no time 
                                    on rollout were my feet doing anything more 
                                    than just tapping now and then. It was 
                                    really easy to control, although being on 
                                    the gravel probably helped that. We didn't 
                                    make any hard surface landings so I don't 
                                    know if it has the same manners there or 
                                    not. I doubt if it does.