Not wanting to 
                                    rely on either memory or hearsay, I 
                                    contacted the Foundation to see about 
                                    getting several flights in Luscombes of 
                                    different models. I wanted not only to do 
                                    some comparisons, but to actually develop a 
                                    feel for the airplane.
                                    First we went out in the 
                                    8A they had just finish restoring for Fred 
                                    Voltz of Copple, Texas. It was so fresh, it 
                                    even smelled new. The airplane was sans 
                                    electrical but incorporated most of the 
                                    Foundation mods including their fine- tuning 
                                    of the control system.
                                    "All we actually do is 
                                    replace the older pulleys with modern ball 
                                    bearing ones and make sure fairleads are 
                                    lined up," Combs says. In other words, they 
                                    take it back to new configuration.
                                    To anyone who remembers 
                                    Luscombes in their "dog days", the 
                                    difference in control feel approaches 
                                    astounding. The high-friction feeling of 
                                    sawing wood with the aileron cables is 
                                    replaced by a slick, syrupy feel that is 
                                    delightful before even firing up.
                                    Although a Luscombe's 
                                    fuselage is narrow, for some reason the 
                                    cockpit isn't noticeably tight for "normal" 
                                    sized people. I'm FAA-normal. The floor is 
                                    flat, so your feet stick ahead of you to the 
                                    little rubber rudder pedals, that look like 
                                    old MG brake pedals. They are located just a 
                                    little off-centre and close together and I 
                                    had to keep my feet down to keep from 
                                    touching something above them with my toes. 
                                    But, then, I was wearing cowboy boots, so 
                                    that's hardly a criticism. The heel brakes 
                                    are back and more centred and, at first, you 
                                    have to think to keep your feet clear of 
                                    them. A few minutes in the cockpit, however, 
                                    and you don't notice anything unusual.
                                    Although you're sitting 
                                    well back in the wing, you're sitting fairly 
                                    high in the fuselage, so your line of sight 
                                    is clear of the nose. Just a little 
                                    stretching drops the nose completely out of 
                                    your vision.
                                    The ergonomic 
                                    relationship between the stick, throttle and 
                                    seat is much better than many airplanes of 
                                    the period which makes transitioning into 
                                    the airplane much easier because you're 
                                    comfortable and aren't reaching for 
                                    anything.
                                    As we taxied out I messed 
                                    around with the rudders and I could 
                                    immediately see why the airplane has a 
                                    reputation for it's ground handling: The 
                                    airplane goes exactly where your feet ask it 
                                    to and some pilots aren't used to that. As I 
                                    was to later confirm on a bunch of takeoffs 
                                    and landings, the Luscombe isn't even close 
                                    to being directionally unstable. But a lot 
                                    of pilots are.
                                    If you move your right 
                                    foot a little bit, the airplane turns right 
                                    a little. Move your foot a lot and it turns 
                                    a lot. Jab at it and the airplane jumps in 
                                    that direction.
                                    Any complaint about the 
                                    airplane's directional control on the ground 
                                    would be the same as someone transitioning 
                                    from a Buick station wagon into a Miata or 
                                    similar sports car: There's nothing wrong 
                                    with the way the little cars handle, but the 
                                    driver has to get used to a car that isn't 
                                    lethargic.
                                    The Luscombe responds 
                                    proportional to rudder inputs while 
                                    airplanes like Cubs and Champs don't. They 
                                    have a measurable lag and the Luscombe 
                                    doesn't. Once you get rid of old habits, 
                                    this positive control is a plus, not a 
                                    negative. Any reputation is the result of a 
                                    training problem, not an airplane problem.
                                    On my first takeoff in 
                                    the 65 hp 8A I was pleased to see how easy 
                                    it was to hold both an attitude and 
                                    direction while running on the mains. The 
                                    gear is really stiff, so you can tell 
                                    exactly what the airplane is doing and 
                                    correct accordingly. The secret to 
                                    corrections, since it does exactly what's 
                                    ask of it, is "measured response." Don't 
                                    over do it and start chasing your feet. 
                                    Apparently that happens a lot with Luscombes.
                                    With those long wings, 
                                    the airplane is eager to fly and there's no 
                                    doubt that it's flying on the wing, not the 
                                    engine. That's even more evident on 
                                    climb-out. We were two average people on an 
                                    80 degree day at 1500 ft MSL and 400-500 fpm 
                                    rate of climb was the best we were going to 
                                    get. The Luscombe's climb rate was about par 
                                    with it's similarly powered contemporaries.
                                    I was not prepared to 
                                    like the airplane's handling as much as I 
                                    did. The slicked up controls really help, 
                                    especially in roll. In yaw, the rudders feel 
                                    light but that's because they have very 
                                    little centreing pressure. You have to rely 
                                    on your butt or the skid ball to see how 
                                    you're doing at first. The airplane has a 
                                    lot of adverse yaw, when measured by modern 
                                    standards, but it's about the same as a 
                                    Champ and easily handled with a little 
                                    rudder.
                                    I don't know what prop 
                                    was on this airplane, but it settled down to 
                                    about 100 mph indicated at 2450 rpm, and I 
                                    knew we were burning about 4-4.5 gallons per 
                                    hour. How's that for fuel economy?
                                    Stalls with that much 
                                    wing happen around 40 mph and are 
                                    anticlimactic, but I could see where it 
                                    wouldn't take much rudder to kick it into a 
                                    nice spin. Incidentally, a lot of people 
                                    think the Luscombe would be a great 
                                    aerobatic trainer, and, in fact many people 
                                    do use the airplane for aerobatics. It may 
                                    be time, however, for us to re-evaluate that 
                                    kind of thinking. Yes, it will do loop, roll 
                                    and spin type of manoeuvres, but we're 
                                    talking about airplanes that are 50-60 years 
                                    old. Most have never been completely gone 
                                    through and the airplane has a lot of 
                                    boxed-in areas that can't be easily 
                                    inspected for corrosion. Personally, I'd 
                                    never aerobat a Luscombe that hasn't had 
                                    both the wings and the tail completely 
                                    opened up and inspected.
                                    One thing I was concerned 
                                    about on the landing was getting it to come 
                                    down. I expect it to be a real glider. The 
                                    Luscombe surprised me, however, because 
                                    although it glided like crazy, it was still 
                                    coming down faster than something like the 
                                    Cessna 140. This is a welcomed 
                                    characteristic.
                                    What I liked much more 
                                    was the way the airplane slipped. At first I 
                                    just nibbled at the slip, but soon was 
                                    perfectly happy to bottom the rudder and lay 
                                    the aileron over to watch the numbers coming 
                                    up at us. The nose has only a slight 
                                    tendency to come up in the slip and the 
                                    entire thing was not only easily controlled, 
                                    but a real hoot to do. Eventually, I got to 
                                    where I was comfortable slipping hard and 
                                    then bleeding out the slip a little at a 
                                    time until flaring. For a long winged 
                                    airplane, the Luscombe knows how to come 
                                    down, when you want it to.
                                    Understandably, the 
                                    airplane likes to float, but not much worse 
                                    than a Cub and no where nearly as bad as a 
                                    Taylorcraft. In the same situation, it 
                                    floats only slightly more than a flaps-up 
                                    C-150. This gives you all day to work at 
                                    finding the runway and getting the attitude 
                                    right.
                                    Feeling for the runway in 
                                    ground effect is another place where 
                                    "measured response" is called for. The 
                                    airplane moves when you asked it to, so it 
                                    helps to visually fixate on the edges of the 
                                    runway and use small, quick inputs to keep 
                                    it straight, not drifting and in the 
                                    three-point attitude. On at least several of 
                                    those first landings we had a little 
                                    crosswind and the airplane handled it easily 
                                    as long as I did my part.
                                    I could see where heavy 
                                    turbulence and gusts would keep you working 
                                    because of the light wing loading, but the 
                                    airplane has the control authority to handle 
                                    it, if the pilot has the same authority and 
                                    confidence.
                                    Wheel landings with that 
                                    rigid gear were a simple matter of flying it 
                                    down and pinning it on, although I did get 
                                    at least one ugly one. The trick is not to 
                                    anticipate the touch down. Work at 
                                    decreasing the wheel-to-runway distance 
                                    gradually and let the touch down surprise 
                                    you. Once pinned, even on one wheel, it was 
                                    easy to control.
                                    Visibility throughout the 
                                    approach is excellent. At no time, including 
                                    during flare, does the runway hide behind 
                                    the nose. In fact, the nose is just 
                                    noticeable enough to act as a reference in 
                                    setting up the three-point attitude.
                                    Later I flew with Doug in 
                                    the 85 hp, 8E the Foundation was raffling 
                                    off. This would be their fourth raffle 
                                    airplane. This airplane had complete 
                                    electrical, paint and about half tanks. On 
                                    my first takeoff it was only seconds before 
                                    I could feel the difference 85 hp makes. 
                                    Where the 65 hp was happy to get off and 
                                    slow to climb, the 85 was anxious to get off 
                                    and showed us a solid 800 fpm at 75-80 mph. 
                                    It had much better performance than the 8A, 
                                    although it was less than 5 mph faster. 
                                    Again, I don't know what the prop pitch was 
                                    but the bigger engine really made an 
                                    airplane out of it.
                                    Doug showed me how he 
                                    usually has transitioning students raise the 
                                    tail to at least level or higher attitude on 
                                    take off, which makes the airplane extremely 
                                    stable on the mains. He says many accidents 
                                    involve over-controlling on takeoff and 
                                    getting the tail that high helps stabilize 
                                    the airplane.
                                    On approach we were using 
                                    a de-accelerating approach starting at 80 
                                    mph and working down to 70 over the numbers. 
                                    I'm certain that given a little more time, I 
                                    would have used 65 mph or so at the end to 
                                    kill some of the float. On final I was 
                                    surprised to see how quickly the airplane 
                                    picked up speed if I let the nose slide down 
                                    even a little.
                                    One thing I did not fall 
                                    in love with in the pattern is the trim 
                                    system. It's a horizontal crank facing 
                                    forwards at the front edge of the seat 
                                    between the two occupants' hips. First, I 
                                    could never remember which way to trim it 
                                    and I could never actually trim out the 
                                    pressures on final. Most of the time, I just 
                                    ignored the trim, set it neutral and over 
                                    powered the pressures.
                                    Is the Luscombe a 
                                    difficult airplane to fly? Absolutely not. 
                                    In reality, because it reacts so positively 
                                    and has so much control authority, it is 
                                    probably safer and eventually easier than 
                                    many of its peer group. That however demands 
                                    the pilot learn to control himself first and 
                                    then the airplane.
                                    Based on my experiences 
                                    years ago with less-than-wonderful Luscombes, 
                                    I was prepared to be unimpressed. Just the 
                                    opposite was true. I loved it. A great 
                                    combination would be a rag wing Luscombe 
                                    with both wing tanks, a C-90 and no 
                                    electrical. Low weight, lots of power, good 
                                    controls...what could be better?