Thanks mar, I really like that bird of yours. Flew '7's too, they were fast, but that engine was a nightmare.
Speaking of FE's, where do you get a good engineer these days? Do you have pilots doing it or are they for real? A good man in that seat was worth his weight in gold. Kept me out of all sorts of trouble. For a while at Z they were training new hire pilots to be FE's. They survived, but it quadrupled my work load. Nothing like having an eager beaver shut down all four by agressive use of carb heat.
Know what you mean about "cold yokes". I've had them peel all the skin off my hands when I wasn't smart enough to wear gloves.
I always wondered about all those heaters. Seemed strange to set the wings, the tail and the fuselage on fire all at the same time. And then those buttons for fire control -- even after years I had a hard time trying to remember which one I had to push. More than once I dumped both banks into the wrong heater compartment (in the sim) and got my wrists slapped. Still a great bird though. I like Douglas airplanes.
On the F27 - Those pneumatics are fun. Especially if you don't get the seals winterized and you go from warm wx to very cold ops. For awhile there we'd blow every seal with each attempt to retract the gear, until we got the Canadians to install the right seals for winter ops. Goose Bay is not the greatest place to be stuck and for that matter, neither is Gander.
Another thing I hated were those pitch locks on the Dowty- Rotols. Never had one try to run away but sure hung a lot of 'em. I often wished the Brits had stayed out of the prop business and I still wish that the Prince of Darkness (Lucas) would stay out of electrics (but that's another airplane). I never really missed that airplane, although I did get to take it to some interesting places.
Between the Fokker and that thing built in Bavaria, you've had your hands full, Smoking Man?