GAMA/Build A Plane Aviation Design Challenge Winners Build Glasair Sportsman

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017

WASHINGTON, DC – Students and their teacher from Olney High School in Olney, Texas, won an all-expenses-paid trip to Glasair Aviation in Arlington, Washington, to spend two weeks building a Glasair Sportsman airplane, as the winners of the GAMA/Build A Plane 2017 Aviation Design Challenge. The winning team arrived in Arlington, Washington, on June 18 and departed on July 1, finishing the plane a day early.

The students assembled the Sportsman as part of the fifth annual Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) competition. The airplane’s owner, Ken Baur, and his son, Mike, worked alongside the students to build the airplane. GAMA President and CEO Pete Bunce, former Jeppesen CEO Mark Van Tine, and other staff from GAMA and Jeppesen helped oversee the construction, led by Glasair Aviation staff. Additionally, Siemens Government Technologies CEO Barbara Humpton and a team from Click Bond visited the plant during the building project. The Sportsman is a kit airplane that can be assembled in two weeks through Glasair’s “Two Weeks To Taxi” program.

The 2017 Aviation Design Challenge is sponsored by Air Tractor, BBA Aviation, Bose Corporation, Click Bond, Embraer, Garmin International, Glasair Aviation, Gulfstream Aerospace, Jeppesen, Jet Aviation, JSSI, Redbird Flight Simulations, Siemens, Textron Aviation and Wipaire Inc.

To learn more about the organizations involved in the project, visit gama.aero, buildaplane.com, glasairaviation.com and flytolearn.com.

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Western Michigan University Celebrates Launch of Punta Gorda Aviation Program

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

PUNTA GORDA, FLA. – Western Michigan University’s (WMU) leadership and community officials gathered April 13, 2017, to celebrate WMU’s Charlotte County Aviation Collective and the launch of its aviation flight science program in Florida this fall.

WMU’s Charlotte County Aviation Collective was developed to guide the university’s College of Aviation expansion into Southwest Florida, and includes leadership from the WMU College of Aviation, Charlotte County Airport Authority, City of Punta Gorda, Charlotte County and the Enterprise Charlotte Economic Council.

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High School Focuses Curriculum Around Flying

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

FAIRFAX, Minn., July 6, 2017 – The new Ross Shaw Sterling Aviation High School in Houston offers students the opportunity to attend a high school that focuses its curriculum around flying, including a chance to get flight certified. The new hangar holds the school’s two aircraft behind a bifold liftstrap door from Schweiss Doors.

In 2014, staff, students and the community took part in the planning and design of the new Sterling Aviation High School. According to high school principal, Justin Fuentes, there aren’t many high schools in the United States that offer this type of education, especially to the extent his school does.

“We are one of the few schools, if not the only school, that does the actual pilot certifications,” Fuentes says. “Two years ago, we had a graduate who was accepted into the Naval Academy. We do have a Naval Junior ROTC program here.”

Sterling’s Naval Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (NJROTC) detachment was first established on campus in May 1970. Graduating cadets incur no military service obligation, however, many have chosen to serve, covering every branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

The new hangar is set up to hold two aircraft owned by the school. One of the Cessna aircraft is flyable; the other could be flyable in the future, but is used for students to learn the mechanics, repair and maintenance of the plane.

Thinking to the future and possible growth, the hangar design called for a door larger than presently needed. The bifold liftstrap aluminum frame door measures 49 feet,

6 inches wide by 20 feet, 2 inches high. It operates on a 460v 3-phase system with a top-drive motor. It has galvanized wind rails and side rails, a keyed switch entry system, electric photo eye sensors and is wind-rated for 120 mph. Two rows of six windows on each half of the door lets in an ample amount of daylight. Cadence McShane Construction of Addison, Texas, served as the general contractor on the project.

“It’s opening up to a new type of education,” Fuentes says. “It’s gigantic, truly massive, and how it folds up, I hadn’t expected that. I like the access it gives and think people will come just to see the door. People talked a lot about it during our grand opening, when masses of people walked into the building.”

Plans for the new hangar area may include technical labs along the side looking out into the hangar. Students can be in the classroom, work in the lab space and do work inside the hangar, which is very different from any other school Fuentes has seen.

“Opposite of the door is a glass wall, so anybody entering our building, the first thing they see are the airplanes in the hangar and the door behind them and the classrooms alongside,” Fuentes says. “So it’s really a showpiece for our school and what we are trying to do for our students.”

About 40 percent of Sterling graduates go directly into the workforce. The remainder go into the military or to universities and colleges. In 2015, the open enrollment school serving grade 9-12 registered 1,133 students, of which 99 percent were minority students. Fuentes estimates that 5-10 percent attend Sterling because of the flight program. He projects higher enrollment in the future.

In the high school aviation magnet program, students must take Federal Aviation Administration-approved base courses before being eligible to take up to 30 hours of flight time. Students may then take the FAA written examination.

“We do the training for the students to take the FAA examination, and then they do their actual piloting at a local vendor at Ellington Air Force Base,” Fuentes says. “In our classrooms, we have two moving flight simulators. One of them is a Redbird MCX full-motion simulator and we have several desktop simulators as well. By the time a student enters 11th grade, providing they pass the FAA exams, they start flying.”

The school’s control tower is not operational, yet, but Fuentes says plans are to have it linked to airwaves at William P. Hobby International Airport, located about a mile from the school. Currently, students can listen to control tower communications and see aircraft landing and taking off.

Schweiss Doors is the premier manufacturer of hydraulic and bifold liftstrap doors, headquartered in Fairfax, Minn. Doors are custom made to any size for any type of new or existing building for architects and builders. Schweiss also offers a cable-to-liftstrap conversion package. For more information, visit www.bifold.com

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Students Experience Principles of Flight At Minnesota High School

by Roger Bovee
Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

To invent an airplane is nothing. To build one is something. To fly is everything.” Otto Lilienthal

St. Michael-Albertville (STMA) high school students in St. Michael, Minnesota, understand Otto Lilienthal’s words more than most students. STMA’s Aviation Program follows this statement quite accurately as students learn about aviation in the two courses offered: Aviation 1 and Aviation 2.

“To invent an airplane is nothing.”

The history of the airplane from idea to flight is taught early in the Aviation 1 course to give students the perspective of the early pioneers of aviation, such as Leonardo da Vinci, the Montgolfier Brothers, Sir George Caylee, Otto Lilienthal, and the Wright Brothers. When learning about the accomplishments of Caylee and his flying tub, students are often surprised to learn that a flying apparatus existed 54 years prior to the Wright Brothers’ historic flight, which was piloted by a 10-year-old boy!

Hands-on education is stressed in STMA’s Technical Education Department and the Aviation classes are no exception. The first project in the class is to design and test an airfoil in the wind tunnel. Students sketch airfoil shapes, cut from balsa sheeting and use cyanoacrylate (super glue) to assemble wing sections. After the wing sections are covered by tissue, they are tested in the wind tunnel for lift efficiency. Prior to this activity, the instructor shares many stories regarding exacto knife and super glue incidents from past classes in order to avoid possible mishaps. Regardless, their inexperience using super glue will cause some students to ‘get attached’ to their projects. While the students think they are recreating the Wright Brothers’ airfoil design research, the instructor has a hidden objective: teach students how to build a model with exacto knives, balsa, tissue, and super glue.

“To build one is something.”

With their newly found model building skills, students are ready to construct a rubberband-powered balsa airplane. To assist in the build process and provide a foundational design for a possible successful flight, the instructor provides airplane plans complete with laser cut ribs and formers. The airplane project gives students the opportunity to observe the four forces of flight: lift, thrust, drag, and weight, and how they affect each other. The design allows for students to adjust the wing placement for a perfectly balanced airplane. In addition, students need to incorporate a downward force on the empennage to create inherent longitudinal stability. For lateral stability, students need to incorporate an effective dihedral. Straight and level is the goal, and the best airplanes to accomplish this goal are built with acute attention to detail, due diligence, and patience.

“To fly is everything.”

Fly day consists of reserving the gymnasium for a flight from the top of the bleachers to the other side. Grading is based on distance traveled across the gymnasium. To achieve the best grade, students need to have the aircraft finely tuned for the straightest and most level flight possible. Students are reminded that as soon as the airplane leaves their hand, it relies on their efforts to tune and adjust the flight controls for a straight and level flight. The reward can be large for the best flights as students can earn significant extra credit for reaching the bleachers on the other side. While students are naturally competitive with each other, the class always cheers the loudest when an aircraft gently powers through the air in a glide ratio that flies to victory!

After the excitement of fly day has passed, students finish the trimester learning about general aviation topics related to becoming a private pilot. They study airport markings and layout as they draw an airport diagram. Included in the drawing, students must have accurate runway numbers in reference to a north symbol, runway markings for instruments, a crosswind runway, taxiways, a windsock, a PAPI/VASI, and all legs of a traffic pattern. A sectional chart reading exercise has them learning latitude and longitude, determining headings and distances with a plotter, and identifying airport information and other chart symbols. Students also practice flight planning and get a quick lesson in airspace as they prepare for a real flight… virtually speaking. Flight simulation provides students the opportunity to fly cross country from Bemidji (KBJI) to Brainerd (KBRD) to Duluth (KDLH) and back to Bemidji. A quick preview of the sectional gives them some pilotage information for the flight and they rely on their newly acquired plotting skills for dead reckoning.

Roughly one half of the students enrolled in Aviation 1 enroll in the Aviation 2 course. This course focuses on one task: building a radio-controlled airplane from scratch. After a few remedial presentations on aerodynamics and stable flight control characteristics, students work in pairs to begin the arduous journey of building a radio-controlled airplane. Similar to the rubberband-powered airplane, a few items are provided, such as the airfoil, fuselage formers, and basic plans. Students are given lessons on radio-controlled radio systems operation, LiPo battery safety, electric motor/speed controller functioning, and servo linkage connection. Given this introductory information and basic part supplies, students are left to problem solve the final aspects of design, such as radio installation structure, battery compartment access, engine cowling and paint scheme.

Since most of the students enrolled in this class are seniors and have taken various technical education classes, the technical skills of these students are excellent. Some students design the paint scheme with CorelDraw and cut stencils using the laser cutter. Other students use the 3D printer to design engine cowlings or canopies, and some braze wire together for lightweight landing gear. One group chose the old-school method to create an engine canopy by carving and sanding balsa wood. All airplanes incorporate group collaboration, problem-solving skills, and hard work to complete the flying machine within the time constraints.

After a detailed checklist has been implemented, an airworthiness certificate is administered by the FAA, otherwise known as the instructor. Photos are taken and the class heads out to the flying field, also known as the soccer field. Flying skills among the students are various and most groups usually request the instructor to fly their plane around the patch to trim the controls. Some students, feeling confident from weeks of practice on the RealFlight RC flight simulator, will take their turns at the controls. All students revel in the joy of flight by any model as they recognize the hard work and dreams precariously bouncing through the sky. It is then that they truly understand Otto Lilienthal’s words from long ago – “To invent an airplane is nothing. To build one is something. To fly is everything.”

Over the past 20-plus years, the STMA Aviation Program has evolved and improved to include more private pilot ground school topics, improved model airplane designs for more consistent success, and incorporated outside resources, such as tours of the Minnesota National Guards St. Cloud Army Aviation Support Facility at St. Cloud Regional Airport, St. Cloud, Minnesota (KSTC), and West Metro Aviation in Buffalo, Minnesota (KCFE), hosted by Michael Wiskus. Today, the STMA Aviation Program currently boasts two students who have soloed, three students in the University of North Dakota Aviation Program, and one student attending the Aviation Maintenance Program at Northland Community & Technical College. Many former students throughout the programs history have also found wonderful careers in the military and air traffic control.

One thing is for certain: the program will continue to change and improve. As Helen Keller once said, “A bend in the road is not the end of the road… unless you fail to make the turn.” Even though there may not be any roads in the sky, the STMA Aviation Program will always be looking to improve its aviation education to inspire students.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Roger Bovee has been a technical education and engineering instructor at St. Michael-Albertville High School for the past 18 years, and a classroom teacher for 25 years. He holds a Private Pilot Certificate and is currently working on his Instrument Rating. Roger Bovee is a member of the Delta Aviation Flying Club in Buffalo, Minnesota (rogerb@stma.k12.mn.us).

1-800-959-6282 www.northlandaerospace.com


Posted in Aug/Sept 2017, Columns, Minnesota Education Section | Tagged , , | 9 Comments

William T. Piper Scholarship Recipient Selected

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

VERO BEACH, FLA. – Piper Aircraft has announced that Vero Beach High School senior, Lorena Molina of Vero Beach, Florida, has received the annual William T. Piper Scholarship.

For more than 20 years, the William T. Piper Scholarship has been offered annually to a graduating high school senior. Today, the scholarship is available to a graduating senior of Vero Beach High School, Sebastian River High School, or Indian River Charter High School in Florida.

The scholarship award is for $1,000 per year and is renewable for up to four years. Applicants must demonstrate strong academics, exhibit leadership abilities, be able to show involvement in the community, and have extra-curricular activities. Additionally, applicants must submit an essay describing their greatest success in life thus far.

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Wisconsin Aviation Celebrates 36 Years In Business

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

WATERTOWN, WIS. – Wisconsin Aviation, Inc. is celebrating 36 years in business in 2017, and they started during difficult times. Interest rates were at 21 percent in 1981, and the country was facing one of the worst recessions ever. But two years later in 1983, Wisconsin Aviation was growing, it opened its second operation at Dodge County Airport in Juneau, Wisconsin, and on January 1, 1994, the company bought Four Lakes Aviation on the east ramp at Dane County Regional Airport in Madison, Wis., and Coldstream Aviation on the south ramp a year later. In 1998, Wisconsin Aviation added avionics at Madison, and interior repair and installation at Watertown. In December 2002, Wisconsin Aviation dedicated its new $2.5 million, state-of-the-art general aviation terminal in Madison, and in 2008, Wisconsin Aviation added a new avionics hangar in its technical services complex.

Today, Wisconsin Aviation is capable of providing a complete line of aviation-oriented services to include private aircraft charter, corporate aircraft management, aircraft maintenance, avionics, aircraft rental, aircraft sales and flight training from Private Pilot through the Airline Transport Pilot Certificate. Aircraft hangar rental and fueling services are available at all three locations.

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Eagle River Hosts Field Trip For Pre-K Kids!

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

EAGLE RIVER, WIS. – Rob Hom, airport manager at Eagle River Union Airport in Eagle River, Wisconsin, welcomed children of Northland Pines Elementary School Pre-Kindergarten and their families to the airport on May 26, 2017 for an annual fieldtrip. The children watched airplanes take-off and land, looked inside of airplanes, toured the terminal building and flight planning room, explored the Civil Air Patrol hangar and its Cessna 172 Skyhawk, got up close to a corporate jet and Hom’s own 1946 Taylorcraft BC12D, and of course, visited the maintenance shop with all of its large snow removal equipment. “Big trucks with big tires are always impressive to 4 and 5-year-olds,” says Hom. The field trip has been an annual event for five years (www.erairport.com).

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Faribault Municipal Airport Renamed Liz Wall Strohfus Field

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

FARIBAULT, MINN. – The Faribault City Council renamed Faribault Municipal Airport “Faribault Municipal Airport – Liz Wall Strohfus Field” in memory of World War II Women Airforce Service Pilot (WASP), Elizabeth Wall Strohfus.

The dedication ceremony was held Saturday, June 24, 2017. To learn more about Elizabeth Wall Strohfus, go to www.midwestflyer.com and type in the name “Strohfus” in the search box.

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Online Registration Open For 2017 Skydiving Hall of Fame

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

ROCHELLE, ILL. – Registration is now open for the 2017 International Skydiving Hall of Fame Celebration, September 21 – 23, at Chicagoland Skydiving Center (CSC) in Rochelle, Illinois. The annual weekend fundraiser of jumping, celebration, catching up with old friends and making new ones, and chatting with skydiving’s legends, has become the go-to event for the skydiving community. Online registration is now available at Online Registration.

After a weekend of skydiving activities, the International Skydiving Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will take center stage continuing the tradition of honoring skydiving legends, leaders and pioneers. This year’s inductees include Richard “Buzz” Bennett of Gibsons, BC, Canada; Roy C. Johnson (posthumous), formerly of Cape Coral, Florida; General John “Jack” Singlaub of Franklin, Tennessee; Graeme K. Windsor of Canberra, Australia; and Pat Works (posthumous), formerly of Fullerton, California.

More than 300 skydiving enthusiasts from around the world will be in attendance at the fundraiser, which is expected to raise more than $100,000 for the museum.

For more information about the International Skydiving Museum & Hall of Fame, visit www.skydivingmuseum.org or contact museum administrator, Nancy Kemble, at 540-604-9745 or nkemble@skydivingmuseum.org.

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Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees

Published in Midwest Flyer – August/September 2017 issue

BLOOMINGTON, MINN. – The Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame board of directors have selected six aviators to be inducted at its 2018 ceremonies to be held April 21, 2018 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Bloomington, Minnesota.

Inductees will include Darrell E. Bolduc, aircraft engine specialist, seaplane pilot, educator and leader within the Minnesota aviation industry. Darrell Bolduc and his father, Wilmer, who was inducted in 2002, are the first father and son to be inducted.

Roland J. “Ron” Fagen, aerobatic pilot, prominent ethanol production businessman, Vietnam veteran, and aviation museum owner in Granite Falls, Minnesota, will also be inducted, as will Lt. Ralph D. Gracie, World War I fighter pilot and casualty, the first Minnesotan lost in aerial combat; Robert H. Jasperson, Vietnam air war veteran, F-4 Phantom weapons systems operator, and current Wings of the North museum director; Joseph E. Kilpatrick, who led the Honeywell team that developed the Ring Laser Gyro, among other navigational instruments used worldwide in today’s commercial and military aircraft, as well as the Space Shuttle; and popular fixed base operator, Robert O. Leaders of Clear Lake, Minnesota.

Registration information will be announced in January on the Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame website: www.mnaviationhalloffame.org, and in future issues of Midwest Flyer Magazine.

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