Cub stories are 
                                    always of a whimsical nature. "I remember 
                                    falling out of one when trying to get out of 
                                    the front seat," or "We always used to glide 
                                    down over the tree tops by the river bottom 
                                    to surprise the girls skinny dipping." There 
                                    are damned few blood and guts Cub stories 
                                    because, except for frontline liaison 
                                    stories, the Cub just wasn't made for blood 
                                    and guts situations. Besides, everybody has 
                                    flown a Cub, so too many people can figure 
                                    out whether you're lying or not. Better to 
                                    stick with Leopoldopf Colibris, or 
                                    Polikarpov I-16s. With those, not many can 
                                    tell whether your facts are straight.
                                    
                                    Even though the 
                                    perennial yellow Cub may be plain vanilla, 
                                    there is a Cub mutation that is guaranteed 
                                    to give rise to a few stories and definitely 
                                    is capable of inspiring blood and guts 
                                    narrative. This mutant is known as the 
                                    "clipped Cub."
                                    
                                    Originally, 
                                    when you spoke of the clipped Cub, you were 
                                    talking about one specific type of animal. 
                                    These days, however, thirty-odd years after 
                                    the first Reed Conversion was STC'd, you 
                                    have to be very careful what type of machine 
                                    you are talking about, because the Reed 
                                    clipped wing conversion was just the 
                                    beginning in a whole new saga of the J-3 
                                    Cub.
                                    
                                    The original 
                                    Reed conversion did nothing more than 
                                    shorten the wings 40 1/2 inches on each 
                                    side. No, this wasn't done by whacking away 
                                    at the tips, as many folks believe. Rather, 
                                    the inboard forty were sawed off, the attach 
                                    fitting holes redrilled and the wings thrown 
                                    back on. A few other little goodies had to 
                                    be done, such as installing a vertical "U" 
                                    shaped stiffener that bolted vertically to 
                                    the spars and picked up the upper lift strut 
                                    bolt. This was needed because when the wings 
                                    and lift struts were shortened, the strut 
                                    intersected the wing at a different angle, 
                                    which introduced eccentric loads on the 
                                    original lift strut attach fittings, a 
                                    definite no-no. This changed strut angle 
                                    also meant the fuselage strut fittings had 
                                    to be heated and bent.
                                    
                                    The supposed 
                                    purpose of the Reed conversion was to take a 
                                    little of the Cub out of the Cub. It cut 
                                    down the float on landing, made it less of a 
                                    cork in rough air, made it stronger because 
                                    the bending moments were less and speeded up 
                                    the roll rate because the wings were 
                                    shorter. It is highly doubtful if any Reed 
                                    conversions were done to help the airplane's 
                                    stability. It was the last two points, the 
                                    increased strength and roll rate that caught 
                                    everybody's eye. Here was a way a couple of 
                                    guys could spend a weekend with a sabre saw 
                                    and welding torch and produce their very own 
                                    65 hp acrobatic machine. Incidentally, the 
                                    Reed STC applies only to wood spar Cubs, 
                                    although I believe there is an STC for 
                                    chopping aluminium Cub spars.
                                    
                                    A Reed Cub 
                                    looks just exactly like any other Cub, 
                                    except that there is only one short rib bay 
                                    between the ailerons and the fuselage, as 
                                    compared to a couple bays in the stock Cub. 
                                    However, the biggest majority of clipped 
                                    Cubs are pretty easy to identify because the 
                                    builders seldom stop with trying to increase 
                                    their "stability" or cut down on the float. 
                                    These days, the Cub is like the 1932 Model B 
                                    Ford used to be, before the price went out 
                                    of sight. When I was a kid, if you could get 
                                    a fat motor under the hood, you put it under 
                                    the hood and, if it didn't fit, you moved 
                                    the firewall or left the hood off. Clipped 
                                    Cubs now fall into the same sort of street 
                                    rod category. The originals may have been 65 
                                    hp, but there are precious few of them still 
                                    flying on that few ponies. 85 hp is the 
                                    norm, with C-90s and 100 hp 0-200s being as 
                                    common as ladybugs.
                                    
                                    
                                    I guess I've 
                                    had my share of fun in Cubs, clipped and 
                                    otherwise. I've chased girls down river 
                                    banks, sneaked around ridges to surprise 
                                    coyotes and landed on top of moving trucks. 
                                    And, like everybody else, I've done probably 
                                    a thousand loops, two thousand rolls and a 
                                    million spins in Cubs. But that was a few 
                                    years back, more than I'd like to admit to. 
                                    Now, when I see a nice, stock looking, 
                                    yellow clipped Cub, I can't help but stop 
                                    and look at it. It can't hold a candle to a 
                                    Pitts in performance, but there is nothing 
                                    prettier than a well done clipped Cub. And 
                                    Joe Eubanks, of Daytona Beach, Florida, has 
                                    a well done clipped Cub.
                                    
                                    When I saw 
                                    Eubanks' Cub, I was in the process of 
                                    strapping on a Jungmann, but the urge was 
                                    still there to unbuckle and walk over to 
                                    look at it. My generation of pilot can trace 
                                    its roots right down to the Cub, and I can 
                                    trace my early aerobatics down to the same 
                                    source. So nostalgia may have a hand in 
                                    colouring the way many of us look at Cubs in 
                                    general and especially those of the clipped 
                                    variety.
                                    
                                    As it happens, 
                                    Joe Eubanks had just taken delivery of his 
                                    shiny yellow fabric toy and was looking for 
                                    any excuse to fly it. Give him a reason 
                                    ("Hey Joe, is the beach still there? Let's 
                                    go check."), and he's gone. I said something 
                                    like, "Boy, is that thing cute." He said, 
                                    "Right, let's go flying." Joe's a real 
                                    pushover.
                                    
                                    Joe's clipped 
                                    Cub is a classic example of what the breed 
                                    is all about. Except that it has a few 
                                    little tricks that developed fairly 
                                    recently, it could be sitting on the ramp in 
                                    front of Any-FBO, Inc., Small Town, Kansas, 
                                    circa, 1951. Many folks can look at a plane 
                                    like Eubanks' and not even realize it's a 
                                    wolf in sheep's clothing, or at least a 
                                    Pekinese in drag. It looks exactly like a 
                                    restored J-3 because it's hard to judge the 
                                    wing length without something to compare it 
                                    to. Black lightning bolt down the side, jugs 
                                    hanging out in the breeze, Cub decal on the 
                                    fin, fat bagel-like tires . . . it's all 
                                    Cub. Except it's not.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    What sets Joe's 
                                    airplane a little apart from the standard 
                                    Reed clipped Cub is its detailing and the 
                                    extra thought given to its new role as 
                                    acrobat. Rather than doing just the Reed 
                                    mods, who-ever built the airplane up 
                                    originally worked in all the details that 
                                    have been found to make clipped Cubs a 
                                    little better. One of these is doubling up 
                                    the ribs, putting an extra one between each 
                                    of the originals. This not only makes the 
                                    fabric panels smaller and stronger, but 
                                    eliminates the age-old (or is it old age) 
                                    clipped Cub problem of ribs which break. The 
                                    original rib spacing was just fine for 
                                    flying out of a farmer's field, but repeated 
                                    bashing at 4-5 gs would cause the aluminium 
                                    built-up ribs to break and you had to open 
                                    up the skin to repair them. Similarly, the 
                                    rib stitching is tighter, allowing a little 
                                    extra diving speed without popping some 
                                    fabric loose.
                                    
                                    These days, 
                                    it's possible to build a practically brand 
                                    new Cub, since Univair of Denver, Colorado 
                                    makes just about everything you'd need from 
                                    new cowling to ribs and landing gears. 
                                    Granted, Wag-Aero of Lyons, Wisconsin does 
                                    make a completely new J-3 kit, the CUBy, but 
                                    it's a homebuilt, and can't be licensed in 
                                    standard category. Also, none of the CUBy 
                                    parts can be used on a stock J-3 because 
                                    they don't have an FAA PMA (Parts 
                                    Manufacturing Approval) number. Univair's 
                                    stuff, on the other hand, carries the PMA 
                                    number because they bought the licensing 
                                    rights from Piper, so they are the 
                                    manufacturer of record. This is all 
                                    basically a crock, since the only real 
                                    difference is a rubber stamped number, but 
                                    that's the way the system works.
                                    
                                    The nice part 
                                    about having a supplier like Univair around 
                                    is that Cubs like Eubanks' can be built up 
                                    using brand new sheet metal. The cowling and 
                                    boot metal on Joe's airplane doesn't have so 
                                    much as a fingerprint on it, which makes for 
                                    a super sanitary appearance. Also, an 
                                    airplane like Joe's can be built using brand 
                                    new ribs and spars, something worth 
                                    considering if you're thinking about doing 
                                    aerobatics on parts that may be as much as 
                                    forty years old.
                                    
                                    Crawling on 
                                    board a Cub, clipped or otherwise, is a 
                                    great way to slip a disc. It makes everybody 
                                    look, and feel, like an arthritic giraffe, 
                                    because everything, the struts, the door and 
                                    the seats are carefully arranged so that 
                                    they get in the way, no matter how you 
                                    approach them. Then, once inside what look 
                                    like uncomfortable seats from the outside 
                                    turn out to be truly awful. The front seat 
                                    is okay, except the rudder pedals are so 
                                    close you find your knees in your shirt 
                                    pockets. The back seat, which is really just 
                                    a canvas sling, is akin to sitting in a 
                                    hammock at a 45 degree angle. And that back 
                                    seat, where you solo the airplane, is 
                                    usually beefed up with stronger canvas, 
                                    because more than one clipped J-3 akro pilot 
                                    has found his butt falling through a rapidly 
                                    widening rip in the bottom of the seat.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Joe's machine 
                                    has a 90 hp Continental with a pressure carb, 
                                    which used to be the hot setup and still 
                                    ain't bad. Because of the carb, Joe, who was 
                                    wedged in the front seat, had to work a 
                                    wobble pump a little to get the fuel 
                                    pressure up before somebody flipped the prop 
                                    through a couple times. "Switches on, brakes 
                                    and cracked!" I hollered. The prop was 
                                    flipped once more and the little Continental 
                                    started chortling away and off we went.
                                    
                                    Taxiing out to 
                                    the runway, I was once again reminded of the 
                                    incredibly bad brake system the Cub has. 
                                    I've always hated heel brakes and the Cub's 
                                    are the pits, because you can't reach them 
                                    when you need them and when you do, they 
                                    don't work worth a hoot.
                                    
                                    It's a good 
                                    thing a Cub is a Cub and you really don't 
                                    need brakes anyway. It's only the Cub's 
                                    gentle nature that kept an entire nation of 
                                    pilots from rising in a revolution and 
                                    forcing Piper to go to toe brakes, or at 
                                    least heel brakes that can be used.
                                    
                                    Of course, as a 
                                    trainer, the brakes were situated just fine. 
                                    Since a student could hardly reach them, he 
                                    seldom got himself in trouble with them. He 
                                    also learned to get himself back on the 
                                    straight and narrow with the rudder rather 
                                    than relying on brakes, such as they were.
                                    
                                    When it's 
                                    springtime in Florida, and it was, a Cub 
                                    might as well not even own a door, because 
                                    nobody in his right mind closes it. As I 
                                    lined up on the grass and started shoving 
                                    the throttle up, I gazed out the open door 
                                    and wondered how many thousands of pilots 
                                    and passengers have done the exact same 
                                    thing.
                                    
                                    The Cub isn't 
                                    the standard for docility and fun for 
                                    nothing. A couple of plaintive bleats from 
                                    the Continental, a few gentle suggestions 
                                    from my feet and we were off. But not in 
                                    much of a hurry. A 90 hp Cub in Florida with 
                                    two folks on board isn't going to win any 
                                    time-to-climb contests. About 600 fpm seems 
                                    to be average. That will go up to 800 fpm or 
                                    more with only one on board and a little 
                                    cooler temp. The clipped wings suck a little 
                                    out of the climb, but the 90 hp makes it all 
                                    back up. However, as a slight amount of 
                                    thermal turbulence started working us over, 
                                    it was obvious even to one who hadn't been 
                                    in a Cub for some time that losing nearly 
                                    seven foot of wing makes the Cub a lot more 
                                    sure footed in the bumps.
                                    
                                    At altitude, I 
                                    racked it around a bit, trying to get back 
                                    the feel of that tall stick and those so-so 
                                    ailerons. As it happens, Cub ailerons are 
                                    one of the areas that a lot of guys modify 
                                    when they go the hotrod route. Some seal 
                                    them, some servo them, but no matter what 
                                    you do, the roll rate is still some-what on 
                                    the leisurely side. It's a lot better than 
                                    stock, but it's not going to thrill the 
                                    underwear off a Pitts pilot.
                                    
                                    Satisfied we 
                                    were in that particular piece of airspace 
                                    all by ourselves, I ducked the nose down for 
                                    a second, got 110 mph on the gauge, pulled 
                                    the nose up and fed in aileron. Then I fed 
                                    in some more. Up and over the top, easy and 
                                    graceful, as a roll should be. The Cub had 
                                    no problems with the manoeuvre, but it was 
                                    obvious it wasn't going to go rushing 
                                    through it, no matter what I tried to make 
                                    it do.
                                    
                                    Aileron rolls, 
                                    barrel rolls, four points (sort of), and 
                                    slow snap rolls (not recommended without 
                                    good tailwires), we went right down the 
                                    menu. And it was fun. I think I had 
                                    forgotten what it was like to have to 
                                    actually "fly" an airplane through a 
                                    manoeuvre. I'm so used to just pointing the 
                                    nose, wiggling the stick and the Pitts does 
                                    the rest. Not so with the clipped Cub. If 
                                    it's going to do the manoeuvre at all, it 
                                    will be because you've carefully balanced 
                                    the dynamic and aerodynamic forces acting on 
                                    the machine and made its flight path teeter 
                                    along on the tightrope that is aerobatic 
                                    flight. Ease up for a second and the 
                                    manoeuvre just won't look good. Of course, 
                                    you can botch it up six ways from Sunday and 
                                    the clipped J-3 will just shrug its 
                                    shoulders, fall a little ways, (just to get 
                                    your attention) and then will sort things 
                                    out all by itself.
                                    
                                    Loops are the 
                                    clipped Cub's strong point. 110-120 mph 
                                    (redline) on the clock, an even, low G pull 
                                    and the nose easily climbs an invisible 
                                    rope, arching its way into the domain where 
                                    the blue is down, the green up. Gently 
                                    relaxing the pressure on the top rounds out 
                                    the loop, taking some of the "eggy-ness" out 
                                    of its shape. Then the nose is falling down 
                                    and it's time for a little more back 
                                    pressure to bring everything back into level 
                                    flight.
                                    
                                    I remember the 
                                    days when I thought nothing of honking a 
                                    clipped Cub around as if it was a 450 
                                    Stearman. It would do a fair to terrible 
                                    English bunt (half an outside loop from the 
                                    top) and would glide like a stone inverted, 
                                    gas running out of the cap all the time. 
                                    Eubanks' had a vented, inverted fuel cap and 
                                    the fuel injection would let it run a little 
                                    longer, but I somehow didn't feel like 
                                    playing those kind of games. I was a lot 
                                    younger in those days. So were the Cubs.
                                    
                                    Power back, 
                                    nose up. Bam! The stick comes back and a 
                                    rudder goes down. The Cub whips over into 
                                    the prettiest little spin any airplane can 
                                    do. One, two, three, four. Opposite rudder 
                                    and a slight relaxation on the back 
                                    pressure. No need to jam the stick forward. 
                                    The Cub will spin only if you hold it in. 
                                    Relax a little and it will pop out before 
                                    you're even ready for it. Since a Cub, even 
                                    a clipped one, will glide well enough to be 
                                    able to slope soar ridges in a strong wind 
                                    with absolutely no power, the best way to 
                                    lose altitude is in a spin. And that's 
                                    exactly what we were doing.
                                    
                                    It was on final 
                                    that I recalled the only really noticeable 
                                    difference between a stock J-3 and one 
                                    that's clipped: losing seven feet of wing is 
                                    bound to do things to your glide ratio. 
                                    Where a regular Cub will bob and weave on 
                                    final, threatening to keep on gliding past 
                                    Peoria, a clipped Cub, sits there like a 
                                    Mustang, riding a taut wire attached to the 
                                    ground. It usually surprises first-time 
                                    clipped Cub pilots to find themselves having 
                                    to use power on final. I personally like it. 
                                    It allows you to handle a lot more wind and 
                                    you can put the airplane right where you 
                                    want it.
                                    
                                    Once down into 
                                    ground effect, the clipped Cub still allows 
                                    you to make those beautifully soft, 
                                    whispering landings that grass runways and 
                                    Cubs were made for. A gentle whoosh and 
                                    you're down. There aren't many things in an 
                                    airplane that can beat that kind of feeling.
                                    
                                    Right now there 
                                    is a legion of clipped Cub fanatics who are 
                                    screaming that we didn't touch on this or 
                                    that detail. They're yelling that we missed 
                                    the importance of the larger lift strut fork 
                                    or the beefed up strut mod. We didn't talk 
                                    about aileron bracket problems, or threading 
                                    rudder cable through the struts as a safety. 
                                    They are right. There are a dozen things, 
                                    maybe a thousand, I've missed, but the best 
                                    way to learn all those is to start climbing 
                                    the aerobatic ladder the same way a lot of 
                                    us did. Go find a clipped Cub and an 
                                    instructor and have at it. You'll never 
                                    regret it.