Cornucopia Airport Now Open to the Public

by Hal Davis
Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

2019 Sostice Fly-In, Cornucopia Airport (23W), Bell, Wisconsin.
Photo by Rich Wellner, Courtesy of the Recreational Aviation Foundation

After many years of hard work by a group of dedicated volunteers, Cornucopia Airport (23W) is now officially open to the public! The airport is located near the shores of Lake Superior along the western side of the Bayfield Peninsula, making it the most northerly public-use airport in the state. Owned by the Town of Bell, the airport has a single turf runway which measures 1,920’ by 80’. The threshold for runway 05 has been displaced 635’.

The airport features a small pilot shelter outfitted with courtesy bikes for the 1.5-mile ride into town. There you can enjoy great restaurants, shops, and lodging. The Apostle Islands National Lakeshore is a convenient 4 miles away while scenic Bayfield is about a 30-minute drive. Visit www.visitcornucopia.com to find out more about the area.
June 17-19, 2022 the airport will be hosting its 3rd annual Solstice Fly-in. Attendees are invited to camp under their wing, socialize, and take part in the many outdoor activities the area has to offer. Advanced registration for the event is required. To register and to find out more about the airport, visit the airport’s Facebook page at: www.facebook.com/CornyAirport.

As a public use airport, Cornucopia Airport is now part of the Fly Wisconsin Airport Passport Program, so plan your trip to get your stamp today!

Keep the Lights On

At night and during periods of poor visibility, airport lights of any type can be invaluable aids to pilots. That’s why Wisconsin Administrative Code requires airports that have received state funding for airport improvements to operate the following minimum airfield lighting during periods of darkness, when such lighting exists:
1. Low-intensity lighting on one runway,
2. Airport beacon,
3. Windsock lighting, and
4. Obstruction lighting.

Many airports have pilot-controlled lighting capabilities; however, this is not an acceptable substitute for compliance. To aid aircraft that might not be equipped with a radio or may be experiencing radio failure, at least one runway needs to be set to low-intensity at night, even if it is pilot-controlled. For questions or concerns about this requirement, please contact me at howard.davis@dot.wi.gov or 608-267-2142.

2021 Airport Rates & Charges Report

The Airport Rates & Charges Report for calendar year 2021 is now available. Each year, BOA surveys Wisconsin airports for information relating to aeronautical services such as fuel prices, hangar rental rates and ground lease rates. The survey results serve as a comparative tool to help airports gauge financial practices and needs. Pilots, consultants and other users of Wisconsin airports can also benefit from the data collected. View the report and the data on our web site at: https://wisconsindot.gov/av-pubs.

New Wisconsin Aeronautical Chart

The 2022-2023 Wisconsin Aeronautical Chart is now available as well! As before, the chart includes an expanded airport information and points of interest section to make it easier to determine what types of amenities and attractions can be found at an airport. Aircraft owners registered in Wisconsin should receive a copy of the 2022-2023 Wisconsin Aeronautical Chart in the mail. Charts are also available at your local airport, digitally on our website, or contact our office at 608-266-3351 to request one in the mail.

Meet BOA Staff At AirVenture

Come meet BOA staff in person at EAA AirVenture 2022. Our booth will be in Exhibit Hall A, just across the street from the air traffic control tower. We will also have a tent located near the base of the air traffic control tower. At BOA, there’s nothing we enjoy more than talking about Wisconsin airports, so bring all your questions and comments. While you are there, you’ll be able to pick up complementary Wisconsin aeronautical charts and roadmaps, information about Wisconsin seaplane bases, Wisconsin airport points of interest, children’s aviation coloring books and much more!

If you won’t be attending AirVenture this year, you can still meet us in person. To set up a meeting with any of our staff members call 608-266-3351.

Posted in Columns, Columns, Columns, JuneJuly 2022, Wisconsin Aeronautics Report | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

JetBlue Further Expands to Midwest with Daily Nonstop Service to Milwaukee from Boston and New York

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

MILWAUKEE, WIS. – JetBlue (NASDAQ:JBLU) has announced it has officially launched service from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) to Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport (MKE). With daily nonstop flights from New York and Boston, JetBlue continues to advance its growth strategy in the Northeast and introduce the airline’s award-winning service and low fares to new customers in the Midwest.

Enabled by JetBlue’s Northeast Alliance (NEA), Milwaukee service expands the airline’s presence in the Midwest, while diversifying and advancing its New York and Boston focus city strategy. Milwaukee is one of more than half a dozen new cities recently added to JetBlue’s route map. In 2022, the NEA will offer nearly 500 daily departures from New York’s three major airports and 200 daily departures from Boston.

Located on the scenic shore of Lake Michigan, Milwaukee offers an exceptional blend of stunning natural beauty, big city arts and entertainment, and Midwest charm. A downtown RiverWalk connects German heritage-inspired Old World Third Street to the Historic Third Ward with its shops and art galleries and Milwaukee Public Market. Milwaukee is a city of colorful, walk-around neighborhoods, acclaimed culinary scene, and entrepreneurial spirit, where exciting attractions like the Milwaukee Art Museum meet brewery tours, excursion boats, professional sports, and a summer-long schedule of lakefront festivals.

“Milwaukee County is thrilled that JetBlue will bring more tourists and business travelers from New York and Boston to Milwaukee and beyond. Our amazing lakefront, cultural attractions, restaurants, and breweries are just some of the ways that Milwaukee offers guests a world-class experience,” said Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley. “I commend the airport team for successfully recruiting JetBlue to MKE. We are excited to use the new service!”

Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport (KMKE) currently offers nonstop flights to 35-plus destinations coast-to-coast, and more than 200 international destinations are available with just one connection. Earlier this month, KMKE received an Airport Service Quality (ASQ) Best Airport – North America award from Airports Council International, one of just eight U.S. airports to receive this honor.

“JetBlue’s outstanding customer service and in-flight product will be a big hit for Milwaukee travelers,” said Airport Director Brian Dranzik, who also serves on the VISIT Milwaukee Board of Directors. “Many people have been asking when JetBlue would come to Milwaukee. I’m glad that day has arrived. With our community’s support, JetBlue will do well here and carry many travelers to New York and Boston.”

For scheduled flights to and from Milwaukee, visit www.jetblue.com.

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Portable Radios, Carb Heat, Backseat Drivers & More!

by Pete Schoeninger
© Copyright 2022. All rights reserved!
Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

Q: What do you hear about the current airplane market?
A: My spies ALL tell me the market is still strong, especially for middle-aged singles, as I write this in mid-April 2022. Prices for the piston twin market are starting to move up as well. As an example, year 2000 model 58 Beech Barons are up to $530K vs $440K a year ago.

Q: What do you know about portable radios? Are they a good idea, how much range, cost, etc.?
A: For almost all pilots, I think they are a good idea. They can be used for backup in flight communications, some offer navigation displays, and all can be used for getting information before engine start, and even sitting at home listening and learning about aviation activities at your local airport. Radios range in price from $200.00, up to $800.00, depending on features.
In my experience, expect a range between 5 to 10 miles with a whip antenna inside the cockpit, but if you or your radio shop can connect you to an external antenna, you may get much more. After you get your radio, try it out and see how far away you can talk to your favorite tower, unicom, etc.
If you are counting on your portable radio to be your primary emergency-only radio, then I suggest you keep it very simple and buy one for a few hundred bucks. My suggestion for something very simple is because if you need to talk urgently and quickly, simple is better, especially if you have not used that radio in a while.
A good video with more information can be found by doing an internet search for “Portable Aviation Radios – How to Choose the Right One” by Sporty’s Pilot Shop.

Q: I am finishing up my private pilot certificate in a 1980 Cessna 172. Because it is over 40 years old, I can accept the ancient engine technology, including the need for carb heat, engine preheat when cold, etc. A friend has a 2015 C172, and that engine has fuel injection, eliminating carb ice, but it is sometimes difficult to start, especially when hot. Just like my old engine, it requires preheating during many winter days. When are the engine manufacturers going to catch up with current technology used in cars, motorcycles, etc.?
A: They could, but the cost would be astronomical because of the very small numbers of potential sales. Perhaps diesels or electric motors may come into the mainstream in a few years, and I think that is part of the reluctance to replace many legacy engines at this time.

Q: An old guy told me the glut of airplanes, called “the classics,” made right after World War II (J-3 Cubs, Champs, Taylorcrafts, Cessna 120s and 140s, Luscombes, etc.) rarely nose over by too much braking, but slightly newer taildraggers can nose over much easier with heavy braking? Also is it true that in general, taildraggers are more likely to nose over at low speeds?
A: Yes, the classics had pretty marginal brakes, which could barely hold the airplane still at a 1700 RPM mag check. Newer taildraggers have much better brakes, but too much braking at low speed can result in a nose-over. Nose-overs at low speed are more common than at faster speeds because at low speed, there is very little elevator airflow to stop a tip over once started. Nose damage is a massively expensive proposition, usually requiring a new prop, engine removal and tear down, possibly a new firewall, etc.

Q: At an antique airplane fly-in, I saw a guy turn a crank for about 20 seconds on an old low-wing airplane, and then his friend inside the cockpit of the airplane did something and the engine turned over and then started. What was that?
A: An inertia starter. They were fairly common in the 1930s and 1940s in airplanes without electric systems. You turned a crank faster and faster to get a flywheel spinning fast and then engage a clutch to have the inertia of the flywheel spin the engine over a few revolutions.

Q: Is there anything I can put on my airplane’s wheel pants to prevent staining from when 100LL fuel dribbles on it? Last summer, I had to have my main gear wheel pants repainted.
A: May I offer a different approach? If your fuel drain is leaking, have your mechanic fix it. More likely, you are venting fuel in warm temps as fuel expands in a full tank and it has to go somewhere, so if your tank is full, it vents overboard. I won’t comment on the brilliance of putting a fuel vent directly above a landing gear.
My simple suggestion would be to leave the fuel level down an inch or so from full when refueling your tanks. This will allow some room for heated fuel to expand without going overboard. If you need max fuel capacity, top off the tanks just before takeoff and fly a few minutes out of each one to give a little room for expansion.

Q: Recently in a rented 1983 Cessna 172, I experienced nose wheel shimmy on landing for the first time. I happened to be with an instructor who stopped me from slamming on the brakes – my first reaction to this surprise. What do you know about nose wheel shimmies?
A: When your nose wheel shimmies, something is not right that should be fixed, as the problem will almost always get worse. It is possible for a violent shimmy to cause an expensive nose collapse, with firewall damage, prop damage, and requiring an engine teardown.
There are many causes of nose gear shimmy, and most are fixed relatively easy. If the nose tire is very low on air, or cupped or otherwise damaged, that’s an easy fix. Getting a little more complex, if the airplane has a shimmy dampener (your C172 has one), perhaps that dampener needs servicing, rebuild, or replacement. (Hint: There are good replacement products available at less cost than OEM stuff.) The cause of a nosewheel shimmy should be addressed promptly and corrected to save massive problems later.

Q: At an airshow last summer, a guy parachuted out of a Piper J-3 Cub. When the airplane landed, I noted the pilot was flying from the front seat. I was certain all J-3 Cubs are placarded “solo, rear seat only” or something to that effect. Was the guy legal? Have you ever flown a J-3 Cub from the front seat solo?
A: You are correct about the placard. The type certificate for the last J-3 Cub built (there are three versions) is the model J-3 C-65 (Continental 65). Stated in the notes section of the aircraft’s operating manual, the airplane may be flown from the front seat IF weight and balance limitations are met. Remember, the fuel tank is in the nose of the airplane. In my experience with a fairly light pilot and fairly light fuel load, you might be OK. Yes, I have done it. I much prefer the way the airplane handles from the rear seat when solo, and there’s lots more room as well.
As far as legality of a type certificate vs a placard, I asked two different FAA inspectors many years ago and got two different answers. My advice is to always sit in the backseat when flying solo.

Q: I am considering buying an airplane, perhaps 30 years old, that could carry my family (me, my wife, and our three kids, ages 10, 12, and 15). Thus, I need more than a four-seater. I am looking at the Piper PA32 series, the Cessna 206 and 210s, and the Beech A36. I recently rode in an A36. It seemed quieter, more comfortable, and better built, compared to the others. What’s your opinion of them?
A: I think they are all very good airplanes, and very worthy of your consideration. They do fall short in that there is not a separate baggage compartment beyond the area which holds seats 5 and 6. If that is not a concern for you, go for it with the usual precautions of ALWAYS having a prepurchase inspection done by a mechanic who is knowledgeable of the make and model, and ALWAYS having a title search done. 1992 models are bringing around $300K for a good one in this current hot market.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Pete Schoeninger is a 40-year general aviation veteran, starting out as a line technician as a teenager, advancing through the ranks to become the co-owner and manager of a fixed base operation, and manager of an airport in a major metropolitan community. He welcomes questions and comments via email at PeterSchoeningerLLC@gmail.com.

DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this column is the expressed opinion of the author only, and readers are advised to seek the advice of others, and refer to aircraft owner manuals, manufacturer recommendations, the Federal Aviation Regulations, FAA Aeronautical Information Manual and instructional materials for guidance on aeronautical matters.

Posted in Ask Pete, Columns, Columns, Columns, June/July 2021 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Letter To The Editor From Joe Allen

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

Letter To The Editor:

Dean Zakos’ story “Pancake Breakfast” (April/May 2022 issue) was one of the best written general aviation “slice-of-life” stories I have read. What is disheartening to me is the utter lack of these kinds of stories in major national publications. Please encourage Mr. Zakos to submit his story to some of this country’s larger publishers, e.g. the WSJ, NY Times, Time magazine, and others.

It would be so nice to have the world of general aviation exposed to a larger portion of our countrymen and women. And thank you Mr. Zakos for sharing your excellent piece with Midwest Flyer Magazine readers.

Very kindly,
Joe Allen
Anoka County-Blaine Airport (KANE)
Blaine, Minnesota

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2022 Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame

Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame 2022 inductees: (L/R) Ray Johnson, Dale Klapmeier, Noel Allard (holding Ben Curry’s plaque), Kathy Vesely, Duane Edelman, Tim Callister, and Robin Knutson for her father, Martin Knutson. Max Haynes Photo

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

The 2022 Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame banquet was held April 23, 2022, at the InterContinental Minneapolis – St. Paul Airport (KMSP) Hotel, only six (6) months after the organization’s 2021 banquet, due to rescheduling in 2021 because of the pandemic. Inductees included Ray Johnson, Ezra Benham “Ben” Curry, Duane Edelman, Kathy Vesely, Dale Klapmeier, Martin Knutson, and Tim Callister.

Raymond W. Johnson was born and raised in Pine City, Minnesota. After high school he attended Gale Institute in Minneapolis, where he learned telegraphy and railroad communications. He furthered his education at Northwest Electronics in Minneapolis, receiving his Second-Class FCC license. He received an A&E from Vocational Training School in Janesville, Wisconsin. In 1951, Johnson went to work for the Union Pacific Railroad in Denver, Colorado as a telegraph operator and station agent. Serving in the U.S. Army from 1953-54, he had additional training in Morse Code. Following the service, he earned his Private Pilot Certificate in 1958, and his Instrument Rating at Embry-Riddle University in Miami, Florida. In 1958, Johnson went to work for Jamestown Flying Service as an Airframe & Powerplant Mechanic and flew powerline patrol and aerial application. He eventually ended up as a corporate pilot with Franklin Manufacturing, Sterner Lighting and finally, Kurt Manufacturing, where he spent 31 years (1966-97) flying nationally and internationally. Between his commercial flying as both a corporate pilot, and as a flight instructor at Minneapolis Crystal Airport and Buffalo Municipal Airport, and flying his own airplanes for recreation, Johnson amassed over 18,000 hours.

Ezra Benham “Ben” Curry (1896 – 1991) was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. He began his career as a railroad locomotive cleaner and was recruited as a civilian in 1917 by the Norton-Harjes Ambulance Service of France to drive battlefield ambulances. He had hoped to join the French Army but returned to St. Paul later that year when the ambulance service was disbanded. Curry then returned to St. Paul and enlisted in the U.S. Army Signal Corps Reserve, where he soloed a Curtiss Jenny in 1918 and served as an engineer.
In 1942, Curry was hired by Northwest Airlines and became the General Manager of Northwest Airlines’ Vandalia, Ohio B-24 Modification Center. In 1944, he was transferred to the Holman Field, St. Paul Modification Center. Under his supervision, B-24s were retrofitted with radar units, and converted to tankers and camera ships. In 1946, following the war, Curry worked for Northwest Airlines as the contract manager at the Boeing plant in Seattle to build B-377 Stratocruisers. When he returned to Minnesota, he became the supervisor of line maintenance, and in 1951, he became manager of the mechanical division. In 1952, Curry resigned to work at the family lodge in Brainerd.
Duane V. Edelman (1941 – ) grew up on a dairy farm near Clintonville, Wisconsin and enlisted in the U.S. Air Force straight out of high school in 1959. There, he became an aircraft crew chief, eventually maintaining F-100s for the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds demonstration team.

Edelman moved to Sioux City, Iowa to learn to fly and received his Commercial Pilot Certificate in 1964. He flew skydivers and made mortuary flights to build time, receiving his Airline Transport Pilot Certificate in 1966. He was hired by North Central Air Lines and flew DC-3s, the very aircraft and airline that had inspired him as a child. He lived in Minnesota and worked for the airline for 38 years through its mergers with Republic and Northwest, flying the Convair 440 and 580, DC-9, and Boeing 727, 757 and 747.
At the time of the Republic Airlines and Northwest Airlines merger, Edelman was Director of Flight Operations, while continuing to fly the line. Northwest then appointed him Director of Flight Technical, where he worked on the implementation of the electronic flight bag, electronic clearance, and taxi clearance. He was then appointed Temporary Vice President to become Chairman of the SAE S7 Committee for the International Air Transport Association (IATA), writing guidelines for international operations. For this work, Northwest Airlines awarded him the “President’s Award.”

After retiring from Northwest Airlines, Edelman started his own company, Aircraft Data Fusion. The company worked on launch and recoverable space vehicles for the X-Prize competition, and with Honeywell on human factors. He worked on the concept of Free Flight, which would allow aircraft to control themselves to separate from other traffic, and the integration of supersonic aircraft into an airline operation (www.aircraftdf.com).

Kathleen R. Vesely (1954 – ) of Golden Valley, Minnesota, was born in Bemidji, Minnesota. She got her first airplane ride from an itinerant seaplane pilot at the city’s seaplane docks on Lake Bemidji in 1964. She went to college in Bemidji, where she studied Geology and Geography, and Planning and Environmental Studies. She began her career working for the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MNDOT) in Bemidji on highway construction planning and surveying, and later transferred to MNDOT’s St. Paul office.

In 2002, after 20 years working on roads, she transferred to the Aeronautics Office where her knowledge of geology, geography and environmental issues made her a natural for the job. Vesely was able to guide airport operators with their planning and compliance with MNDOT funding requirements. Her skills in coordinating the two elements – funding and airport needs – were central to her ability to get things done. She emphasized long-range planning, allowing both funding agencies and airports to see 10 or 20 years into the future.

Vesely was appointed Assistant Aeronautics Director under Cassandra Isackson. She then canvassed every airport in Minnesota to help determine their future needs. The FAA was so impressed with her work that the agency allowed her to coordinate Minnesota airports with federal funding needs.

Vesely retired from MNDOT in 2020 after 41 years of service, including 18 years with the Minnesota Office of Aeronautics. She and her husband own and fly a Cessna Cardinal.

Born in DeKalb, Illinois, Dale E. Klapmeier (1961 – ) attended the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, graduating with degrees in Business Administration and Economics. Growing up he built model airplanes, frequented the local airport, and dreamed of designing his own airplane. He started flying at age 15 in a Cessna 140 he and his brother, Alan, bought together. The brothers then rebuilt a wrecked Aeronca Champion and built a Glasair homebuilt aircraft.

In 1984, the Klapmeier brothers founded Cirrus Design Corporation in the lower level of their parents’ rural dairy barn. Their first design was the VK30, a pusher-type aircraft, which they built at their Baraboo, Wisconsin facilities. Along with their aircraft designs, the Klapmeiers pioneered an emergency parachute recovery system for aircraft, designed to lower a nonfunctioning aircraft to the ground, saving the lives of its occupants. The concept has also become a major marketing tool.

In 1998, the Cirrus SR20 was certified, followed by the SR22 in 2000. The company soon outgrew their Baraboo, Wisconsin facilities and moved to Duluth International Airport in Minnesota, and later established another facility in Grand Forks, North Dakota. The SR20 and SR22 feature all-composite airframes, full glass cockpits and side-stick controls. By 2003, the SR22 had become the top-selling general aviation aircraft in the world! The company’s most recent design – the SF50 Vision Jet – was certified in 2016. In 2011, Cirrus was sold to China Aviation Industry General Aircraft (CAIGA), but Dale Klapmeier remained the company’s CEO until 2019.

Martin Knutson (1930 – 2013) was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He graduated from St. Louis Park High School and attended the University of Minnesota, majoring in Electrical Engineering in the Navy’s Holloway Plan, which was a program that paid for college while the student served in the military. While working in the Pacific Fleet during the summer of 1949, Knutson took his first airplane ride in the ball turret of a Grumman TBM Avenger. It was after that flight that Knutson decided it would be better to be in the cockpit where the controls were.

In 1950, Knutson transferred to the Air Force for flight training, where he trained in the T-28 and F-80A. Upon graduation, he was assigned to a jet fighter squadron and deployed to Korea where he flew combat missions in the F-80 and F-86. Following Korea, Knutson was assigned to the Strategic Air Command (SAC) as a fighter pilot stationed at Turner AFB, Georgia, where he flew the Republic F-84, training for long-range nuclear strike missions. In 1955, Knutson volunteered for assignment to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) where he participated in the flight testing of the Lockheed U-2, nicknamed “Dragon Lady,” a single-engine, high-altitude jet reconnaissance aircraft. He was then deployed to Europe and flew missions over the Soviet Union. Knutson continued to fly covert missions over ‘denied territory’ throughout the world until his retirement from the Air Force in 1970.

Following his retirement, Knutson joined the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Ames Research Center in California as Manager of Earth Resources Projects. There he helped develop airborne remote sensing equipment for observation satellites. He helped modify U-2 aircraft for earth-sensing missions regarding sea and land ice, wildlife habitat, ozone depletion, air pollution, typhoon dynamic structure, and other environmental projects.

Knutson moved on to become the NASA Site Manager at the Dryden Test Flight Facility. This was during the beginning of the Space Shuttle program when most of the Shuttle landings were made at Edwards Air Force Base. At Dryden, he participated in many unique test programs and was responsible for NASA obtaining three SR-71 aircraft for environmental missions, after the Air Force had retired them. At the age of 67, Knutson flew an SR-71 to a speed of Mach 3.275. He retired from NASA in 1997. Knutson served a combined 47 years with the Air Force, CIA, and NASA. He amassed over 4000 flight hours in the U-2 during his 29 years flying the aircraft.

A native Minnesotan, Timothy C. Callister (1947 – ) was born in Owatonna and raised on a farm in West Concord. At the age of 7, he decided he wanted to be an airline pilot. As a gift from his parents, he experienced his first airplane ride on a North Central Airlines flight from Minneapolis to Rochester. Callister later decided he wanted to become a Department of Natural Resources Conservation Officer; however, world events disrupted that plan. The U.S. involvement in Vietnam was escalating and in 1968, Callister joined the U.S. Army. As a Warrant Officer, he served in the 189th Assault Helicopter Company in Vietnam. During his time in Vietnam, Callister was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his heroic actions in suppressing heavy enemy fire during a rescue mission. He was also awarded the Bronze Star and the Air Medal.

Following his service in Vietnam, Callister returned to Minnesota and attended St. Cloud State, graduating with a degree in Transportation and Urban Planning. While attending the university, he joined the Minnesota Army National Guard and became a helicopter instructor for the 47th Aviation Battalion, St. Paul, and as a member of the 2-147th Aviation Battalion, State Area Readiness Command. He retired from the National Guard in 1991.

In 1974, Callister joined the Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC) and interned in the planning and engineering department, eventually becoming the Manager of the Reliever Airport System, responsible for six general aviation airports, with 750,000 operations a year. In 1986, he became the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport Assistant Airport Director. In 1996, Callister moved into the Airport Director’s position, overseeing 250 airport staffers, and was involved in planning, designing and implementation of a $3.1 billion expansion and upgrade to the airport.

In 2004, Callister retired from the Metropolitan Airports Commission and joined Mead & Hunt as a Senior Project Planner for Aviation Services. He also cofounded the Minnesota Council of Airports (MCOA). Callister is also a member of the American Association of Airport Executives (AAAE), and the Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association in which he served as President of the Upper Midwest Chapter from 2019 to 2020.
Tim Callister has spent his retirement promoting airport matters in Minnesota by speaking on their behalf, serving as an airport tour guide, and mentoring aviation students in finding careers in the airport industry.

Prior to the induction ceremonies, several scholarships were presented, including two “Sherm Booen Legacy Scholarships” in the amount of $5,000.00 each, sponsored by Academy College, located in Bloomington, Minnesota. Recipients included Robert Ezike and McKenna Gordon.

To hear the McKenna Gordon and Robert Ezike podcast on the “World of Aviation,” go to: https://am1280thepatriot.com/radioshow/world-of-aviation

Other scholarships included the “Gift of Wings, Elizabeth Betty Wall Strohfus Aviation Scholarship” presented to Samantha Naples; “Hinz Family Red Tail Scholarship” presented to Jessica Stelton; “Brig. Gen. George Schulstad Scholarship” presented to Jacob Helvick; “Kenneth Dahlberg Family Scholarship” presented to Shoua Vang; and “Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame Scholarship” presented to Anjhain Ryan.
The master of ceremonies for the event was Al Malmberg, host of the radio program “World of Aviation.” The program is sponsored by Academy College and Thunderbird Aviation and is heard each Sunday morning at 10:05 a.m. (CT) on am1280ThePatriot.com (www.academycollege.edu and www.thunderbirdaviation.com). MAHF Board

Member Stan Ross narrated each recipient’s audio visual.

The MAHF Board of Directors include Noel Allard, Chairman; Terry Baker, Vice Chairman; Carol Cansdale, Secretary; Amelia Halsted, Treasurer; Tim Barzen; Thomas Lymburn; Brandon Montanye; Cheri Rohlfing; Stan Ross; Tom Schellinger; Jim Hanson; and Mary Alverson.

Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame sponsors include the MSP Airport Foundation (Foundation Sponsor), Delta Air Lines (Forever In-Flight Sponsor), Cirrus Aircraft and Signature Flight Support (Jet-Setters Sponsors), Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association (AOPA) and Wipaire, Inc. (Pioneer Sponsors), and JETPUBS, Inc. and Wings of the North (In-Kind Contributors).

The 2023 Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame will be held in April 2023 (www.mnaviationhalloffame.org).

Any photos without credit are those of Randy Arneson/Midwest Flyer Magazine.

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AOPA Hosts Sixth Annual Hoover Awards Gala

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

WASHINGTON, DC – The Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association (AOPA) hosted its sixth annual “Bob” Hoover Trophy Reception, March 23, 2022, at the Signature Flight Support General Aviation Terminal at Reagan National Airport in Washington, DC.
Receiving the 2021 trophy was Wally Funk, who is best known for her 2021 journey into space on a Blue Origin rocket. Not only has Funk accumulated 19,600 flight hours, but she has also been a prolific CFI, air race champion, NTSB investigator, and inspiration to generations of aviators.

Other awards included the second annual Brigadier General Charles E. McGee Aviation Inspiration Award presented to Glenn Gonzales, founder, and CEO of Jet It.

The AOPA GA Safety Award was presented to Garmin Autonomí.

The 2021 Sharples Award was presented to Anthony “Tony” Restaino, President, Florida Aero Club and an AOPA Airport Support Network Volunteer, for his efforts to preserve North Perry Airport (KHWO), Pembroke Pines, Fla.

Receiving the 2020 Sharples Award was Dewey Davenport, First Officer at NetJets and a barnstormer.

The 2021 Hartranft Award was presented to Congressman Rick Larsen (D-WA 2nd District), Chairman of the House Aviation Subcommittee.

Posted in AOPA, April/May 2022, Awards & Recognitions, JuneJuly 2022, Sections, Sections | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

New Director Appointed At St. Louis Regional Airport

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

BETHALTO, ILL. – The St. Louis Regional Airport Authority has appointed Daniel Adams its new director effective April 4. Adams, a native St. Louisan, is returning to the area after a decade working in airport operations in Augusta, Georgia and Columbus, Ohio.

“Dan’s proven airport operations experience, coupled with his energetic leadership attitude, will be a huge asset for our airport and our communities,” said Airport Authority Chairman Wendell Ross.

“I’m truly excited about the opportunity to come back home, lead the airport and become a part of the community,” said Adams. “The airport is the crown jewel of the area and has tremendous potential for growth and economic development. I look forward to the challenge.”

St. Louis Regional Airport provides more than 1500 jobs with an annual economic impact of $480 million, serving a diverse clientele from private aviators to Fortune 500 companies, the U.S. military, and regional aircraft maintenance, repair, and overhaul customers.

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What shape are you in?

by Bob Worthington
© Copyright 2022. All rights reserved!
Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

The average age of today’s student pilot is 33. The average age of pilots in general is 44. Obviously, pilots are not young whipper snappers. To be able to legally fly, a pilot must be current and meet physical standards, that is, be in decent shape.

Unfortunately, 42.4% of adults in America are obese. This could lead to heart disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke, or some forms of cancer, all of which could result in a medical disqualification to fly. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommends that each adult do 150 minutes of moderate activity a week (such as brisk walking) and participate in muscle strengthening activity twice a week. Only 25% of American adults meet these guidelines.

I am a poster child for what not to do. As a writer I experience a sedentary lifestyle. Additionally, I am lazy. I know better. I used to be a professional athlete in my 20s… I am now 85. I also used to teach classes in exercise physiology, mental conditioning, and weight control as a sport psychologist. I have all my hair (it’s still brown), all my teeth and don’t need glasses. But as I confessed, I am lazy and overweight. My gym is just an 8-minute walk away, but my usage is infrequent.

My legs don’t work very well, either, because all my bones below my waist have been broken from motorcycle accidents, an Army parachute jump and gunshot wounds. Also, exposure to Agent Orange while serving in Vietnam destroyed my heart, but a few surgeries (and plenty of meds) have me still vertical and mobile. See, I have plenty of reasons not to exercise.

How does my lifestyle match yours? Statistically, the chances are what we do or fail to do is quite similar. But I learned how to change that, in a manner that even defeats my laziness.

A few weeks ago, I tuned in my favorite TV cowboy channel looking for Roy Rogers or Gene Autry westerns (both were pilots, by the way). Being late at night, there were no movies, but there was an infomercial about some exercise equipment for home use. I was ready to turn it off when a phrase caught my attention: “As little as 10 minutes a day can improve your physical condition.” No, I thought, this is just another scam to get me to buy something. But my curiosity got the best of me, so I sat down to watch the entire show. With my background in exercising, I began to think, “this equipment may have merit.” The next day I began my research and decided this equipment could become an easy way to exercise and meet the CDC guidelines on physical activity. Thus, I ordered one from Amazon.

Slim Cycle

This column is not a paid advertisement, but rather I wish to share my experience using the exercise equipment called “Slim Cycle.” As I write this column, I have had my Slim Cycle for a month and here is what I have discovered.

Again, adults should spend 150 minutes a week doing aerobic and strength conditioning exercises. Aerobic (or cardiovascular) exercises include running, walking, swimming, or cycling. Strength exercises involve lifting weights, using resistance bands, or using your body weight doing push-ups, sit-ups, etc. Slim Cycle allows you to do both at the same time.

Bob Worthington doing his workout on his Slim Cycle.

The Slim Cycle is a sturdy stationary bike with weight resistance cords. The cycle can be set up as a stationary bike or lowered to become a recumbent bike. It costs $200.00 (but Amazon sells like-new cycles for less) and comes disassembled. Assembly is easy (it took two of us less than an hour, not rushing) and all tools are included. A how-to-do-it video is available on the Slim Cycle website: slim-cycle.com. The bike occupies a space of 21 by 46 inches, weighs about 45 pounds, and can hold a 300-pound person. It also folds up and has rollers for easy storage in a closet, for instance. Just don’t make the mistake and leave it there.

The Slim Cycle is comfortable (extra padding for the seat is available) and operates as a typical stationary bike. The difference is where the front handlebars meet the bike frame, there are two resistance band handles to grasp while doing the strength exercises using the arms. Both the pedaling and strength bands are adjustable for resistance.

A common question for conditioning experts is which is the best exercise…fewer reps and more weights or more reps with less weights. There is no right response. Less reps with more weights increase muscle mass and strength, while more reps with less weights are best for overall endurance. But most pilots do not want to emulate Arnold Schwarzenegger, just increase, or maintain their endurance, so the Slim Cycle resistance bands are best for that.

A second query is, which is more beneficial…one long exercise session or more but shorter sessions? Several studies have concluded that more frequent but shorter exercise workouts are better for the heart and weight loss than doing it all at once. One main reason for favoring this usage is that most people avoid exercising if it is inconvenient. Shorter workouts are less intrusive for busy people and easier to engage in. This convenience of exercising encourages more workouts.

The bike also has a battery-operated computer system (control panel) to provide feedback on your usage. It functions as a scanning display or can focus on one item. It shows the time in use (which I reset to zero after each workout), speed pedaling in mph, distance covered in miles, calories expended, total miles of all workouts, and pulse rate (measured by holding the heart monitor grips on the handlebars). Workout videos and apps are available, but I have not needed them.

Consider this. The life expectancy of industrialized countries is increasing. Americans are living longer. Medical science and health care allows us to be active longer. Pilots today are continuing to fly into their 70s and 80s. To do this they must remain healthy and fit to pass their FAA medical exams. That requires healthy diets and exercise. The Slim Cycle is an easy and convenient way for pilots to remain fit.

My first day, I worked out for 5 minutes, and all went well. The next day, 10 minutes; the next, 15 minutes, which I continued for a week. The next week I went twice a day, 10 minutes each, for seven days. I am now up to 30 minutes a day (cycling twice a day). The Slim Cycle is only 20 steps from my computer. It is so convenient that even I can no longer find excuses not to exercise. I can take breaks during the day to achieve 30 minutes. I have my Slim Cycle in my bedroom, but it can be used anywhere. One could pop off 15 minutes before going to work and another 15 minutes after dinner. The Slim Cycle easily fits into a den or office or can be readily rolled into a living room to use.

But the big question is, does it work? My normal heart rate is 60 beats per minute. Initially, at the end of a 15-minute session, my heart rate went into the high 80s and low 90s per minute. A month later the high heart rate is in the low 70s and returns to 60 in a minute. I expend over 230 calories each day (at 30 minutes) cycling over six miles. In the first four weeks, I have lost 3.2 pounds (but for half that time, I was not yet on daily 30-minute workouts, and I never changed my diet). My muscles are larger, and my walking has improved slightly. Most improved is the vascular system in my legs. Before Slim Cycle, I wore compression hose to reduce swelling in my feet, ankles, and lower legs. In four weeks, the swelling is gone, and compression hoses are no longer needed.

I am convinced. Using the Slim Cycle has made exercising for me easier than ever before! It is convenient and a short workout has done wonders to my body. Go to www.slim-cycle.com and check it out yourself. This has been the best exercise decision I have ever made!

DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this column is the expressed opinion of the author only and is not intended to be health advice. Readers are urged to seek the advice of others, including their health care professional, before exercising. Neither the author, Midwest Flyer Magazine, Flyer Publications, Inc., or their staffs, employees or advertisers assume any liability for the accuracy or content of this column or any other column or article in this publication.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Pilot, Viet Nam veteran and former university professor, Bob Worthington of Las Cruces, New Mexico, is the author of “Under Fire with ARVN Infantry” (https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/Under-Fire-with-ARVN-Infantry/), and producer of the 2019 film “Combat Advisor in Vietnam” (www.borderlandsmedia.com). Facebook: Bob Worthington Writer. Website: www.BobWorthingtonWriter.com. Bob Worthington has placed excerpts about combat flying in Vietnam (from his books) on his website. Here is a direct link to those excerpts: www.BobWorthingtonWriter.com/combat-flying-in-vietnam/. Every couple of months, he adds another excerpt.

Posted in Columns, Columns, Columns, JuneJuly 2022, The Left Seat | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Genesis For Schweiss Doors Began On A Dance Floor Four Decades Ago!

Schweiss Doors founder, Mike Schweiss, stands in front of a large bifold liftstrap door. These doors have come a long way since the company was established in 1980. Thousands of bifold and hydraulic doors are now shipped worldwide from their factory in Minnesota.

by Pat Schmidt
Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

Everybody seems to ask me how Schweiss Doors got started. It was 1980 at a wedding dance,” said company founder, Mike Schweiss. “I still remember that night at the Gibbon Ballroom where a gentleman asked me, ‘Mike, you build lots of different things. Are you willing to look at manufacturing bifold doors?’ I said sure! He told me to stop in and see him the following week. I never got the chance; the man died of a heart attack that evening on the dance floor. But his idea didn’t!”

Since the inception of Schweiss Doors over 40 years ago, the factory has grown exponentially from a family farm operation, to what it is today. A few years ago, a new 80 x 250 ft. state-of-the-art factory electrical facility and loading dock was added.

Never one to sit on his laurels or be labeled a “laid back” kind of a guy, Mike grew up on his family dairy farm, where the huge Schweiss Doors factory is now located, between Hector and Fairfax, Minnesota, about a two-hour drive southwest of Minneapolis.

Schweiss started off manufacturing and selling farm equipment, such as the “Schweiss Chicken Plucker!” It was the Schweiss Chicken Plucker that gave Schweiss name recognition. At that time, it was just Mike and three employees working at the plant.

As a licensed pilot and farmer, Mike knows what many of his customers are looking for in a door, but the market has grown beyond airports and agriculture.

“One of our first challenges was understanding the marketplace and where these doors could be used,” said Mike. “We found out the uses were endless, with opportunities for all sizes of doors – big, small, and heavy duty.”

The first Schweiss door manufactured was a 12 x 12 ft. bifold installed on a county highway department shed. The door is still in operation, and today, Schweiss Doors are the most recognized brand name in the hydraulic and bifold door industry.

“We now cover the entire gamut of the door building business including preparing bifold and hydraulic designer doors to accept many decorative finishes, including glass. These doors are appealing to look at and customers, builders and architects are loving them,” said Mike.

Quality Control Tells It All

Schweiss manufactures its doors in one location, and doors are the company’s only product and they do it well. They know if a company builds only a few doors on the side of another business, they just never get good at it. Other manufacturers brag about the number of doors they sell and how many employees they have. “We like to brag about the quality of our doors,” said Mike.

A lot of the design ideas customers provide, Schweiss can execute under its controlled environment without handing the job over to different weld shops in hopes they follow the plans correctly. “Before you know it, these shops are no longer in business,” said Mike, “so the customer is left hanging with no one to service the door following its installation.” Quality control is high on our list and our service is impeccable, resulting in the best quality. Our entire Schweiss team is building more doors better and stronger every day!”

Marketing Is Where It Is At

Mike will tell you that marketing is where it is at. The company website explains this and has helped to expand sales worldwide. Some of these locations are in Europe, Asia, South America, Saudi Arabia, Costa Rico, Australia, Canada, and Mexico.

Today, Schweiss manufactures three styles of doors – the one-piece hydraulic door, the bifold liftstrap door, and designer doors which cater to businesses, municipalities, sporting venues, museums, and high-end residences.

You’ll see Schweiss doors at many prominent locations throughout the country including professional and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) sports facilities, restaurants, museums, and churches.

Production at Schweiss expanded when requests started coming in for elaborate, custom-made specialty doors, which is now the Schweiss Designer Door Division. Schweiss Designer Doors can be seen on multi-million-dollar homes, numerous museums, the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis, Cape Canaveral, the Red Bull Headquarters, New York Yankees stadium, the new Columbus, Ohio crew soccer stadium, AT&T “Giants” baseball stadium, Stanford University, Napa Valley vineyards in California, Cycle City in Hawaii, the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Shanghai, Old Navy and Under Armour, to name a few well-known sites.

The Designer line of commercial and residential doors has taken Schweiss Doors to another level of engineering expertise. The very notable Sacramento Kings Golden 1 Center has five bifold, strap latch main entrance doors made with a combination of steel and aluminum frames. Three of the doors measure 29 x 41.5 ft., and the other two are 29.4 x 41.5 ft.

The biggest square foot bifold door to date is a massive 90 ft. wide x 61 ft. tall door delivered to Cape Canaveral in Florida for its space rocket assembly plant. Hydraulic and bifold hangar doors have exceeded 115 ft. in width. The largest single bifold door project was delivered to Bult Field near Chicago, a privately-owned airfield, for an order of 145 t-hangar doors, all 12 x 40 ft.

Schweiss Doors has revolutionized the bifold door industry with the patented and famous Lift Straps and Strap Auto-Latch systems. Cable-lift bifold door owners, regardless of who manufactured their door, are asking Schweiss Doors to retrofit their higher maintenance cable doors with a lift strap conversion. Since then, many other improvements, upgrades and patents have been added to both styles of doors over the years.

Dealer & Installer Base Keeps Growing

“We have thousands of dealers positioned throughout the United States, noted Mike. “Over the years, word of mouth has sold 99 percent of our 70,000 hydraulic and bifold doors. Once a customer sees or buys our doors, they encourage and send more customers our way.

“We also have experienced in-house install teams and strategically located installers throughout the U.S. and abroad who can install, service, and take care of customers miles from the factory.”

Schweiss Doors Is A Family-Run Business

Mike Beranek stands by the new CNC plasma cutter that has made his job easier and more efficient than previous, more labor-intensive methods. When he first started working at Schweiss, many of the same type parts were manually cut with a chop saw, and then later with a band saw, before the first plasma cutter was installed.

Schweiss Doors is acutely aware that a successful company is only as good as the people who work there to ensure one-stop, one-call, fast-door delivery. Schweiss realized early on that to be the best, you must have highly skilled and committed employees, and sometimes these employees are family members or employees who become like family.

“We take pride in the fact we have a design team ready to deliver doors of any size, no matter where our customers are,” said Mike. “We have the solutions to make every door project a success.”

Skilled programmers, and inventory and quality control managers at Schweiss developed a unique computer program that details steel door components, right down to the heavy-duty hydraulic hinges, nuts, bolts, and total hardware of each door. Detailed hydraulic door and bifold door quotes and AutoCad specs can be sent out in a matter of minutes to building contractors, architects, and end users.

Here’s a quick look at the duties some of the key people at Schweiss accomplish day-in and day-out:

Mike’s brother, Dave Schweiss, has been with the company since its inception and continues to be a driving force guiding and overseeing many of its various departments. You can see Dave at many trade shows throughout the United States, especially those centering on agriculture and aircraft hangar doors. Dave is a question-and-answer man, and maintenance expert who in many cases can deliver a solution over the telephone, and if need be, a personal visit. He can guide a door installation, physically help with an installation, measure up door openings or give advice on structural headers to support doors.

Julie Schweiss knows the business inside and out and has dealt with many loyal customers over the years. Her expertise has guided the production department by providing door quotes, while educating and advising potential buyers, keeping their best door solutions in mind.

Mike’s daughter, Lark Schweiss, will soon be joining the Schweiss marketing team.

Brook Schweiss Mead is one of the highly knowledgeable salespeople who responds to inquiries. Brook has been at Schweiss Doors for nearly 20 years coordinating timely shipments and ensuring fast two-to-three-week turnaround delivery times of doors shipped across the country and overseas She also handles accounts receivables, and schedules company airline flights.

One of Schweiss Doors’ newest employees is Corey Mead, a licensed electrician with over 20 years of experience. His duties as a job supervisor at Schweiss is to oversee all aspects of the door building and daily manufacturing process. He is well versed in the operation of every piece of equipment, from the Plasma cutter table to robotics, making sure all door parts are in stock.

What’s Really Important

“As owner of the company, part of our success is because day-by-day, I’m in the trenches with my employees, always the eyes and ears to new suggestions. The culture that fuels our company has always been to have happy customers…we’re not about the money. Our product sells itself. We’ve got numerous patents to back up our product; innovation that illustrates we are totally ahead of the power curve on design and are leaders in the fast-moving door market.

“Schweiss Doors takes pride in the fact that over the past four decades we have learned that listening to our customers has been a stellar source of new and better ideas. Our company now employs over 50 skilled people who are good thinkers and hard workers,” noted Mike.

“Schweiss has an unparalleled history of successful projects ranging from modest garages and large-scale manufacturing warehouse operations to airplane hangars, boat marina storage facilities, and residences. We have architects, dealers and building suppliers calling us and ordering our doors because they know when they see a Schweiss bifold or hydraulic door, IT’S ALL ABOUT QUALITY!

“We’ll put the “WOW” factor in your doors. There’s simply no other company better equipped to handle your upcoming door project, which is why when you’re looking for quality – looking for price – you’ll WANT a Schweiss door on your building!”
For additional information, go to https://www.bifold.com/

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Wisconsin Aviation Expands Its Aircraft Maintenance Services With The Acquisition of Beaver Aviation’s Assets

Published in Midwest Flyer Magazine June/July 2022 Digital Issue

(L/R) Beaver Aviation President and Owner Charles Swain, and Wisconsin Aviation President and CEO Jeff Baum, shake hands after the acquisition closing.
Jane Seeber Photo

WATERTOWN, WIS. – Wisconsin Aviation, Inc., announces the expansion of its aircraft maintenance department with the acquisition of the assets of Beaver Aviation, Inc., at the Dodge County Airport in Juneau, Wisconsin.

Beaver Aviation, an aircraft maintenance facility established in 1946 and owned by Charles Swain since 1975, has been a great asset to pilots and aircraft owners in the Dodge County area. By retaining Beaver Aviation’s experienced personnel, Wisconsin Aviation ensures a smooth transition of ownership and a continuance of Beaver’s exceptional aircraft maintenance service, plus more! With this acquisition, expanded services will now be available at all three Wisconsin Aviation locations: Madison, Watertown, and now Dodge County Airport in Juneau, Wisconsin.

Wisconsin Aviation President and CEO Jeff Baum expressed his excitement about this addition: “Beaver Aviation’s longtime relationship with Wisconsin Aviation and their excellent reputation in the aircraft maintenance arena made this an easy decision. This was a great opportunity to continue growing the business Chuck Swain and Eric Nelson have nurtured over the past several decades.”

Wisconsin Aviation offers a complete line of general aviation services including private air charter, aircraft maintenance, avionics repair and installation, aircraft interiors, flight training, aircraft rental, aircraft management and sales, fueling and other ramp services.
For more information about Wisconsin Aviation, visit their website at WisconsinAviation.com, or contact Jeff Baum at 920-261-4567 or email JeffB@WisAv.com.

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