What you are 
                                    about to read sounded like a good idea at 
                                    the time: We figured we'd do a comparison of 
                                    the first and the last of the Piper Cub 
                                    line. What we didn't bargain for was that 
                                    there would be so much difference there 
                                    really wasn't any thing to compare.
                                    Possibly what is most 
                                    noticeable and worth nothing is that the 
                                    time span between the two airplane designs 
                                    is only slightly over one decade and at 
                                    least half of that time was spent fighting a 
                                    world war.
                                    There were gigantic 
                                    progressions in powerplant design and 
                                    airframe refinements that resulted in 
                                    tremendous performance increases. Have we 
                                    seen anything similar from the major 
                                    aircraft manufacturers in the past decade? 
                                    In the past several decades.
                                    Nope!
                                    It makes you wonder.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    First of the 
                                    Line: the Piper J-2 Cub
                                    
                                    "Oh, man", I 
                                    heard myself say out loud, "Who's silly G-- 
                                    d------d idea was it to compare a J-2 Cub to 
                                    a Super Cub!!"
                                    I was just clearing the 
                                    end of the runway and had about 47 feet of 
                                    altitude. The trees were 45 feet tall. Maybe 
                                    46.
                                    Worse, yet, it was pretty 
                                    obvious the J-2 Cub I was desperately trying 
                                    to make climb by forcibly pulling up on the 
                                    stick, wasn't going to give me too much more 
                                    altitude. At least not soon enough to get me 
                                    over the 150 foot ridge that blocked my view 
                                    in all forward directions.
                                    My mind was racing a mile 
                                    a minute, which is another way of saying I 
                                    was moving much faster than the J-2 was. 
                                    That was the only saving grace of my 
                                    situation...it was all happening in super 
                                    slow motion. That is, if you don't count my 
                                    heart and respiratory rates.
                                    "The river! The river, is 
                                    it on this side of the ridge or the other?" 
                                    the logical part of my mind was screaming at 
                                    the illogical part, the part that put me in 
                                    this silly airplane in the first place.
                                    
                                    
                                    I knew there was a river 
                                    out there somewhere, but since I was so 
                                    close to the trees that even small arms fire 
                                    wouldn't have been able to find me, I 
                                    couldn't see it. I knew if the river was on 
                                    this side of the ridge I could count on the 
                                    water being lower than the ridge. Actually, 
                                    I would be happy just to have it lower than 
                                    the trees.
                                    The Cub was flying okay 
                                    and showed no indications of sinking, but I 
                                    also knew if a herd of pigeons flew in front 
                                    of me, their downwash would put me right 
                                    into the trees. I glanced out at the 
                                    "airspeed indicator" the windvane gizmo on 
                                    the left strut. It had barely moved off the 
                                    stop and was hovering on the number 50. What 
                                    optimism!
                                    I kept the throttle 
                                    nailed to the stop and started pulling 
                                    forward on the rope that was the trim 
                                    system. I knew, intellectually, that the 
                                    rope went back and wrapped around a screw 
                                    jack that moved the horizontal stabilizer 
                                    like any other Cub. I was glad I didn't have 
                                    the crank type trim system of the later J-3 
                                    Cub. I don't think the J-2 would have been 
                                    able to carry the weight of the crank.
                                    "Who's silly idea was 
                                    this, anyway?" Yeah, I know. It was mine, 
                                    but at that point, I was wondering whether 
                                    the river was going to show up and save my 
                                    butt or not, so placing blame seemed a 
                                    little irrelevant.
                                    Suddenly, there it 
                                    was...the river. Yeah! I was saved! The 
                                    altitude gain of leaving the trees for the 
                                    water put me at a solid 75-100 feet and I 
                                    felt great! I was entering the river on a 
                                    fairly sharp bend, but at what I figured to 
                                    be 45-50 mph airspeed, making the turn 
                                    didn't present any problem.
                                    The bridge that blocked 
                                    my path, after making turn...now that was 
                                    another matter.
                                    I suppose I should have 
                                    felt a little fear. But I didn't. For some 
                                    reason, although I expected that puny little 
                                    40 horse, flathead Continental A-40 to quit 
                                    clattering any second, I wasn't really 
                                    concerned. At that speed, I could put it 
                                    nose into the river bank and only have to 
                                    worry about my first line to Matt Burril, 
                                    the airplane's owner, after walking back to 
                                    the airport wringing wet.
                                    How about, "Matt, I 
                                    decided I needed the exercise so I swam 
                                    back," or "Hey, did you know your airplane 
                                    won't float?"
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Without boring 
                                    you with the details, obviously I survived, 
                                    but not without flying for at least 6 miles 
                                    right in the middle of a very twisty river 
                                    to avoid the banks. Then, I realized I 
                                    didn't know where the airport was, because I 
                                    couldn't get high enough to see over the 
                                    trees.
                                    Okay, so maybe I will 
                                    bore you with the details.
                                    I had the navigational 
                                    problem back to the airport whipped. All I 
                                    had to do was turn around, no big deal, 
                                    since the river was widening into a lake and 
                                    at that speed I could turn on a dime. Then, 
                                    I'd just waddle back down to the bridge, 
                                    which was off the end of the runway and I 
                                    was home free.
                                    As I was trundling along 
                                    in the middle of the river, being careful to 
                                    watch for wires and trees, I had time to 
                                    experiment with getting the airplane to 
                                    climb. It became obvious immediately after 
                                    takeoff that this was not an airplane that 
                                    took kindly to angle of attack changes. Not 
                                    any that could be measured, anyway. I'd try 
                                    squeaking the nose up and the rpm, all 2,400 
                                    of them (I never did bend my left elbow) 
                                    would start disappearing at an alarming 
                                    rate.
                                    
                                    
                                    Eventually I found, if I 
                                    held what looked like a level attitude plus 
                                    a gnat's whisker (a very small gnat) the 
                                    airplane would levitate upwards at something 
                                    like, well, like...I don't know. I wasn't 
                                    concerned about measuring rate of climb, 
                                    since anything positive was a God send, as 
                                    far as I was concerned.
                                    I was gauging my altitude 
                                    strictly by where the river banks 
                                    intersected my peripheral vision. For a 
                                    long, long time, there was no daylight 
                                    between the tops of the trees on the banks 
                                    and the bottom of the wings, so I really 
                                    didn't care what the non-sensitive altimeter 
                                    said. The smallest mark was 100 feet, and I 
                                    knew I didn't have that much because the 
                                    spruce altimeters under me said so.
                                    Since I had lots of time 
                                    to evaluate my situation, I busied myself 
                                    picking out which boat I was going to ditch 
                                    next to. I even wondered if it made sense to 
                                    land on the tow rope of a skier. Nah! The 
                                    skier was moving so much faster than I would 
                                    be at touch down they'd run off and leave 
                                    me. I decided to point it right at the 
                                    closest boat and put the nose in the water 
                                    just ahead of its bow.
                                    Just my luck, I'd 
                                    misjudge and sink the boat.
                                    By the time I made it 
                                    back to the bridge (several lifetimes and an 
                                    eternity or two later) I had coaxed enough 
                                    altitude out of it that I was able to see 
                                    over the trees on the banks. Actually, I 
                                    sensed that I hadn't coaxed anything out of 
                                    it. I noticed that the closer I got to the 
                                    banks, there was some sort of weak thermal 
                                    that would lift the airplane slightly.
                                    Okay, now that I was high 
                                    enough to actually see the runway, I aimed 
                                    for a dark field next to it. As soon as I 
                                    hit the field, the airplane actually began 
                                    to thermal upwards until, by the time I was 
                                    abeam the runway, I had probably 400 feet, 
                                    which at that point felt like I was high 
                                    enough to be in positive controlled 
                                    airspace.
                                    I think it was at that 
                                    point I finally replaced the breath I had 
                                    taken right after takeoff with a fresh one. 
                                    Or two.
                                    The landing was 
                                    anticlimatic. More or less. I knew the 
                                    airplane was going to slow down the second I 
                                    brought the nose up, so I just motored 
                                    around base and on to final with probably 
                                    3/4 throttle, keeping the nose down and the 
                                    speed (speed? Who's kidding whom? What 
                                    speed!) up.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
      
                                    Over the end of the grass 
                                    runway I killed the power and flaired the 
                                    airplane, looking for the steepish three 
                                    point attitude I'd seen on takeoff. At that 
                                    point it was like any other Cub, only 
                                    slower.
                                    The airplane rolled onto 
                                    the grass, taking only a slight, very 
                                    lethargic hop off the top of a hump in the 
                                    runway before slowing quickly. Then I heard 
                                    the sound of something rumpling and the 
                                    airplane slowly turned off heading, as it 
                                    came to a halt without me having to touch 
                                    anything. I didn't even have to turn my head 
                                    to know the left tire was flat.
                                    It seemed like an apropos 
                                    ending for the flight.
                                    Matt says flat tires are 
                                    a chronic problem with the airplane because 
                                    the low pressure tires and tube will slide 
                                    on the rim, which snips the valve stem off 
                                    the tube.
                                    What did I learn about 
                                    the J-2 and it's place as the progenitor of 
                                    a long line of enclosed Cubs (the E-2 was 
                                    actually first and was semi-open cockpit 
                                    since it had no windows)? For one thing, I 
                                    decided a comparison between it and the 
                                    Super Cub is ludicrous! What a dumb idea I 
                                    had. I flew the Super Cub the same afternoon 
                                    as the J-2 and it was like comparing a 
                                    Shelby Cobra to a '49 Buick Dyna-flow.
                                    The second thing I 
                                    decided was that the most important thing to 
                                    happen to the Cub line, and probably light 
                                    aviation in general, was the invention of 
                                    the Continental A-65. The J-2 is a fine 
                                    flying airplane, if a little heavy on the 
                                    controls, but the average hair dryer puts 
                                    out more power than the A-40. No wonder Matt 
                                    says most of the J-2s built have been 
                                    wrecked at least once.
                                    What a great airplane for 
                                    someplace like Nebraska. What a lousy 
                                    airplane to be flying where we were, on the 
                                    edge of the North Carolina mountains. Matt 
                                    has more faith in that airplane than I do.
                                    When Piper went to the 
                                    J-3 model Cub, there were only minor 
                                    changes, like a different vertical 
                                    stabilizer, a real airspeed indicator and a 
                                    crank trim system. However, the most 
                                    important change was the engine. With 65 
                                    real horses, the airplane became a legend.
                                    If the A-65 hadn't come 
                                    along, we'd all be wondering what ever 
                                    happened to that new fangled invention, the 
                                    airplane. And trivia cards would have the 
                                    question "Who was Bill Piper and what did he 
                                    build?"
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Last of the Line: PA-18 Super Cub
                                    
                                    Super Cub! What 
                                    a perfectly named machine. The ever popular, 
                                    always expensive Super Cub is just that...A 
                                    Cub on steroids.
                                    Although there is the 
                                    misconception that the Super Cub is nothing 
                                    but a J-3 with an 0-320 in the nose, that is 
                                    a long ways from being the truth. But maybe 
                                    not that far.
                                    The structure is 
                                    basically the same, as is the airfoil. And 
                                    they are both taildraggers. However, between 
                                    the J-2/3 and the PA-18, about a thousand 
                                    changes, ranging from nit picking details to 
                                    total concept changes, were made.
                                    The steel tube fuselage, 
                                    for instance is much, much bigger than the 
                                    J-3, making both seats quite comfortable. 
                                    Also, the wing fittings on the earlier Cubs 
                                    join in a central truss right in the middle 
                                    of the cabin roof. This creates a blind spot 
                                    and cuts down head room for the front pilot. 
                                    The Super Cub wings hang on a set of 
                                    fittings which are welded to the outside of 
                                    the fuselage truss.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    The big wing 
                                    has plenty of lift to begin with, but then 
                                    they hung a set of simple, hinged flaps on 
                                    it which cover about half their length. The 
                                    flaps are actuated by a lever on the pilot's 
                                    left. The pilot, by the way, sits up front 
                                    in the Super Cub, rather than in the rear as 
                                    in earlier Cubs.
                                    Shortly after climbing 
                                    out of Matt Burril's J-2 Cub, Tom Hampton 
                                    from Charlotte offered me his newly restored 
                                    PA-18 as a comparison, which we knew didn't 
                                    really exist. Talk about being on opposite 
                                    ends of every extreme you can think of!
                                    Tom had just gotten his 
                                    airplane totally restored by Dale Lunsford 
                                    at Shiftlet Field in Marion, North Carolina, 
                                    where we were doing our flying. Dale's shop 
                                    took the airplane down to its underwear and 
                                    brought it back up, replacing and 
                                    refinishing, as he went. The result is a ten 
                                    point airplane that's far nicer than it was 
                                    when it left the factory and nothing at all 
                                    like the blue collar Super Cubs we see up 
                                    north. This was sort of a gentleman's bush 
                                    plane: Capable of STOL operations, but 
                                    please don't take it anywhere dirty.
                                    On saddling up in Tom's 
                                    airplane, I tossed the Arizona Redhead in 
                                    the back and headed for the front. Getting 
                                    in the back is a matter of standing on the 
                                    step and leaning most of the way into the 
                                    front seat before stepping inside to settle 
                                    into the back seat. The front seat requires 
                                    a few gymnastics, including standing on the 
                                    tire, sitting on the door sill and swinging 
                                    both feet inside.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Once inside, I had to glance around to 
                                    figure out where everything was, since I 
                                    hadn't flown one of those critters for 15 
                                    years or so. I had forgotten how much more 
                                    sophisticated they are than other Piper 
                                    products. The airplane actually has a master 
                                    switch and individual switches for the mags 
                                    along with circuit breakers and such. All 
                                    the electrical stuff is mounted in the 
                                    wingroots.
                                    
      
      
                                    
                                    Looking around, I 
                                    hollered "clear", pushed the mixture in and 
                                    mashed the starter button. Instantly the 150 
                                    horses in the nose started waking up.
                                    As I taxied out, I 
                                    glanced around and marvelled at the degree 
                                    of finish in the airplane. It's beautiful! 
                                    Even the floor boards are shiny, clear 
                                    urethane.
                                    On the ground, the 
                                    airplane handled as good as it looked. I 
                                    messed around doing a bunch of "S" turns 
                                    (totally unnecessary for visibility) to get 
                                    a feel of the tailwheel and found it to be 
                                    perfectly ratioed...it is neither too 
                                    sensitive nor too slow. It just does what 
                                    you ask it too.
                                    I wanted to spend a 
                                    little time playing with different flap 
                                    settings and speeds in the airplane, so I 
                                    left the flaps up, checked the mags and 
                                    rolled out into the centre of Shiflet's 
                                    4,000 by 150 foot grass runway. What a 
                                    luxury, to have that much grass at your 
                                    finger tips! I'm seriously jealous.
                                    Bringing the power up, 
                                    the airplane quickly gathered its wits about 
                                    itself and started getting with the program. 
                                    I immediately brought the tail up, but not 
                                    before noting where the nose was going to 
                                    have to be, when I came back to three-point 
                                    it. Even before bringing the tail up, I 
                                    could stretch and see clear over the nose. 
                                    Tom has installed a super fat, super soft 
                                    front seat cushion, so there is nothing that 
                                    can hide from him on the runway.
                                    Once I had the tail up, I 
                                    had a C-172 type view of the runway and a 
                                    gentle nudge on the rudder kept things 
                                    square with the world. The runway had some 
                                    gentle bumps in it and, although the 
                                    oversized tires rolled right over them, I 
                                    could feel the tires trying to rebound and 
                                    pick the airplane up. They didn't, but they 
                                    felt that way.
                                    I loaded the stick aft, 
                                    just a bit to keep a positive angle of 
                                    attack and, when it started skipping off the 
                                    tires I picked it up. Again, I could feel 
                                    the tires. Normally, the airplane would have 
                                    flown off smoothly by itself, but the tires 
                                    made me feel as if I should get it off the 
                                    ground a little sooner.
                                    Once off the ground, I 
                                    let it accelerate to 65 mph as I was 
                                    bringing the nose up. What a change! We went 
                                    over the bridge that had loomed large in the 
                                    J-2's windshield with probably 500 feet to 
                                    spare.
                                    Super Cubs feel like 
                                    tight J-3s. They aren't particularly heavy 
                                    on the controls, but the response is so much 
                                    better than a J-3's that it's easy to think 
                                    the controls are lighter, when they probably 
                                    aren't.
                                    Besides the fact that we 
                                    were climbing at about 800 fpm and I was 
                                    totally in control of the situation, the 
                                    most noticeable thing the PA-18 brought to 
                                    the Cub line is creature comfort. The 
                                    cockpit in any Super Cub is reasonably well 
                                    finished and the pilot is sitting up there 
                                    in a real seat where he can really see what 
                                    is going on. Considering that its primary 
                                    mission is getting in and out short, the 
                                    airplane is actually quite comfortable. 
                                    There is an optional high back fish spotters 
                                    seat a lot of guys install to make long 
                                    range running even more comfortable. There 
                                    are all sorts of tank options for the 
                                    airplane that can give it a ridiculous 
                                    range. By the way, there is no "both" 
                                    position on the fuel valve.
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Since my passenger had never been through a 
                                    stall series, I didn't go up high enough to 
                                    try what I knew was a futile exercise. Super 
                                    Cubs are like the rest of the series...you 
                                    have to crowd it really hard to get the 
                                    stall to break. Otherwise it just mushes and 
                                    any relaxation of the stick gets it flying 
                                    immediately. With 150 hp, the Super Cub can 
                                    be flown at speeds that look to be under 
                                    stall, although that's probably not actually 
                                    the case because of airspeed error. However, 
                                    when the power is brought up, the airplane 
                                    will really hang in there. That's something 
                                    that makes it so useful to the bush guys who 
                                    want to drag it into a short strip.
                                    
      
                                    I made the first landing 
                                    clean with about 65 mph on the clock. At 
                                    that speed, it felt as if I had a little too 
                                    much left in the flair, as it didn't want to 
                                    come down. When it did settle on, I had to 
                                    work to keep from kissing the big main tires 
                                    since they were so much bigger than stock 
                                    600 x 6s. They also have a lot more bounce. 
                                    On roll-out, it wanted to rebound off every 
                                    bump.
                                    The roll-out was totally 
                                    uneventful with my feet being redundant to 
                                    the operation. What wind there was was 
                                    directly on the nose, so the airplane showed 
                                    no urge to do anything stupid.
                                    This time, I dropped a 
                                    notch of flaps and went for a soft field 
                                    type of takeoff. Power up, I horsed the tail 
                                    off the ground as soon as possible and tried 
                                    to hold the tailwheel just off the grass for 
                                    a max angle of attack. The airplane waddled 
                                    into the air at something like 40 mph, and 
                                    actually got launched by the tires bounding 
                                    off a hump.
                                    The airplane feel so 
                                    solid at almost any speed, I had to remember 
                                    to get the nose down and go for more speed 
                                    so we could climb.
                                    On this landing I went 
                                    for half flaps and found that even the first 
                                    notch of flaps made an entirely different 
                                    airplane out of it. When clean, I had to 
                                    slip to get it to come down, with one notch, 
                                    the nose was low enough that we were coming 
                                    right on down. This time I used 60 as an 
                                    approach speed and it came down relatively 
                                    quickly, with no where near as much float.
                                    
      
                                    
                                    
                                    On the last 
                                    landing, I used full flaps and 55 mph and 
                                    found I was close to running out of enough 
                                    elevator to flair it with. I bled too much 
                                    speed off too early and kissed off the 
                                    mains, giving myself a rather embarrassing 
                                    dribble down the runway.
                                    I had forgotten how 
                                    enjoyable Super Cubs are to fly, but it only 
                                    takes a minute or two nosing through 
                                    Trade-a-Plane to know why I have no over 
                                    whelming urge to own one. Like the Cessna 
                                    180, this is a utility airplane that 
                                    absolutely never loses value. A small engine 
                                    PA-18, like 90 or 105 hp, will run in the 
                                    mid-$20,000 range. Skip over the 135 hp to 
                                    the 150 hp jobs and you immediately jump to 
                                    a minimum of $35,000 with many of the cream 
                                    puffs hitting $60,000 plus. And then there 
                                    are the modified 180 hp super Super Cubs! 
                                    Just name your price and there's a Cub at 
                                    that price.
                                    It's pretty amazing to 
                                    think that a 40 year old, two-place, rag and 
                                    tube airplane can easily fetch $45,000! 
                                    That's because this is an airplane that can 
                                    and, in all likelihood, will work for a 
                                    living. So, its an investment. More 
                                    important, it's an investment that's a hell 
                                    of a lot of fun to fly.