Great Lakes Aviation Conference 2009
This is a regular blog post. Check out show notes and links to show audio in the other posts.
I spent Friday and Saturday at the Great Lakes Aviation Conference in Novi, Michigan hitting lectures, checking out products, and running into new and old friends on the show floor.
As shown above, I got to meet Jack Lousma, one of the “Original 19” astronauts. The Original 19 was the fifth group, so named tongue-in-cheek because of the size of the class and the perceived lack of novelty of a new astronaut class. The Original 19 would more than prove themselves, not least by preceding many members of Class 4, who were scientists and took additional time to become jet qualified, whereas most, if not all, of the Original 19 were jet qualified from early in their military careers.
Lousma was the pilot for Skylab 3 and commander of STS-3. He has logged more than 7,000 hours of flight time, including 700 hours in general aviation aircraft, 1619 hours in space, 4,500 hours in jet aircraft, and 240 hours in helicopters. And I should mention that he’s as approachable as anyone you’d ever want to meet at your local airport.

There were four aircraft on the floor – The Robinson R44 shown here and fixed-wing aircraft (or mockups thereof) from FlightDesign, Cirrus, and Orion.

Attendance was pretty thin. This is my first time attending. I’ve registered and paid for three years, but was unable to attend the last two years because work dragged me back to the office instead. But it seemed pretty thin both Friday and Saturday. This picture isn’t necessarily indicative – things were a little busier than this, but not a lot more. GA is having its issues all over the country, and I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that it would get the double whammy by being in southeast Michigan.

CAP was there in force, which was great. I got the chance to see Capt Mike Sandstrom, former Swedish Air Force pilot and currently public affairs officer and mission pilot of the Kellogg Senior Squadron.

Particularly nice was getting to see James Schebner of Hillsdale Aero. Hillsdale Aero is a distributor of the FlightDesign CT, pictured above. James was instrumental in answering questions about the CT when there was a real possibility of repositioning a listener’s new aircraft from Ohio to Idaho or Arizona this fall. It would have been an epic series of episodes, but the listener elected not to go through with the purchase. Can’t blame him, given the economy and the outlook at the time.
I’ve decided to head to Hillsdale this summer and get some time in the CT. For a couple of reasons. First, I’ve never flown a light sport aircraft and the CT is a very capable LSA and probably indicative of the high end of the LSA offerings. It would be a great opportunity to report firsthand on LSAs. Second, and maybe more importantly, the fact that all of the newer CTs sport BRS ballistic parachute systems might be the thing that gets Mary to let me fly Cole. Hillsdale Aero’s trainer at the moment doesn’t have a chute, but the company gets new aircraft in from time to time. I’m thinking about getting the required five hours in and then, if Mary green-lights it, taking Cole to Hillsdale when they get a BRS-equipped aircraft on the line.
I talked it over with chief flight instructor Ginger Moore and she seemed to think that that might be a good plan. Besides, visibility in the CT is excellent and it’d let Cole see better during the flight. And, yeah, if we get up, he’s getting stick time. Closely-supervised stick time with me on the controls simultaneously, but stick time nevertheless. Yeah!
More Film Music Coming from Scott Cannizzaro’s Mixing Console
I love it when I see that I have an e-mail from audio wizard Scott Cannizzaro. It usually means that he’s made progress on a mix of the audio for the show or for the soundtrack of A Pilot’s Story. I got just such an e-mail this morning.
Scott is re-mixing Theme From Milliways (Go for TMI) for use in the upcoming film, A Pilot’s Story from Wilco Films. Airspeed listeners will remember the music from the Airspeed episode First Solo from October of 2006. It was my first big sprawling narrative and I recorded the tune especially for the episode.
It had its genesis when I was in law school. I played a lot of guitar during breaks in studying and I had (still have) a Martin Backpacker that I used a lot. The Backbacker has no truss rod and the intonation higher up the fretboard is awful. So I tuned it DADGAD and played it mostly open. It sounded really good for playing Stan Rogers songs.
The piece evolved and is named for my law mentor Sam Simpson’s place up north, which is itself names for the restaurant at the end of the universe of Douglas Adams fame.
The “Go for TMI” part came when I decided that the piece (played up-tempo) would be the piece of my space-folk album that would cover the big burn from low Earth orbit to head for Mars. (TMI = “Trans-Mars Injection,” just like TLI or Trans-Lunar Injection was the big burn that Apollo missions used when leaving local Earth space for the Moon.)
Anyway, Scott has done a wonderful job so far and he’s still tweaking it. He has added some high and low string voices to the 12-string guitar, mandolin, and (really horrible) violin tracks that I initially recorded. He has also stretched out the last pause to allow the dramatic “Steve, Cessna 152, July 14, 2001” at the end. Close listeners to the episode could probably tell that I had to stretch it by brute force in post because I didn’t leave enough time.
Anyway, Will has been having his interview subjects for the film each say their first names, the aircraft, and the date of their first solos and he’s considering doing a part of the film on the first-solo experience. I’ve seen an early cut and it looks great. (USAF Thunderbird No. 5, Maj Samantha Weeks did hers in the Cessna T-37 Tweet!) If he does it, I think this is the music he’s going to use. And, if I manage to get into the film, that’s the part I most want to be in.
More recording soon, I hope. Jim Kreucher and I will likely go back into the studio for a couple of days for an album project and I have to get my second MacDowell piece written and the basic instrumental tracks recorded soon, too.
Stay tuned!
How CAP Does MLK Day – CAPFLIGHT 2028 Style
This is a regular blog post. Please check the other entries if you’re looking for show notes or links to show audio.
I heeded the call to devote today to service by getting up and doing some currency flying with the Civil Air Patrol. Cross-country Ann Arbor (KARB) to Battle Creek (KBTL). 2.1 hours with ILS 23 at KBTL and VOR 24 KARB.
In the other seat was 1Lt Norm Malek. I flew with Norm late last year and had a good time and Norm had the excellent idea of taking this morning to get up again and knock some of the rust off. We launched into 2,000-ft ceilings with five miles and haze, but it cleared up shortly outside of Ann Arbor’s Class D and we headed up to 4,500. We got over the scattered to broken layer by 1,000 feet and it was CAVU by the time we got to Battle Creek.
I shot the ILS in to 23 and did a fair job of it. The runway had about an inch of packed snow on it, but it’s 10,000 feet long and I just let the aircraft roll out as long as it wanted to. The tower asked me about braking action and I confessed that I hadn’t touched the brakes. I’m willing to fly Citabrias upside down, but wasn’t about to touch the brakes on that runway until I was down to taxi speed.
Kind of interesting. The last time I was on 5/23 at Battle Creek was in the back of an F-16D.
It was slow in the tower and we made some chit-chat. I got a few shots of the Blue Angels going by the tower at the Battle Creek airshow in 2007 and sent a 20 x 30 blow-up of one of them to the tower crew. It turned out that the guy on duty had it in his office. Never, ever miss a chance to suck up to ATC.

My uncle, Dennis Reed, lives near Battle Creek. He flew air cav in Viet Nam and then flew the executive jets for Kellogg’s for decades. He’s retired now and I called him up last week to see if he might be interested in meeting up with us. We hooked up at Century Aviation, got a cup of coffee, and let him inspect the aircraft. When he was an instructor in the 1960s, he could fly the pattern in a Cherokee without touching the yoke. Throttle, trim, and rudder only. He’s thinking about going in on an experimental or light sport with a friend and I could see the gleam in his eye when he talked about it.
Uncle Denny is the only other aviator in the family. Our particular branches of the family don’t get together too much (not that we don’t like each other- it’s just a logistical nightmare), so most of my aviation has taken place in a vacuum as far as the family has been concerned. So it was really, really, nice to fly in and see Uncle Denny in an aviation context. He just pops a little more when he’s standing on the ramp. I think the sun hits him a little differently there as opposed to anywhere else. Let’s make no mistakes. I flew in, but I was standing on his ramp.
In fact, I stand on his ramp in a lot of places, and not just at Battle Creek and not just when he’s around. We all owe him and men like him our gratitude and respect. Showing up in a zoom bag as a pilot after flying across the state and greasing the landing brought a couple of things full circle today. Really cool.
The trip back was fine until just after Jackson (KJXN). We flew at 5,500 feet, about 1,000 feet over a scattered, then broken layer. The haze made the horizon hard to make out at times, although the ground was readily visible up until about 18 miles west of Ann Arbor. So we got a pop-up IFR clearance and shot the VOR 24 in to Ann Arbor.
I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again. If you’re a pilot and you’re not in the Civil Air Patrol, what the heck are you thinking? Cherry, well-maintained aircraft. Great people with whom to fly. And you get to serve your community and country while you’re at it.
Happy birthday, Dr. King. This CAP pilot is current and proficient. I stand ready to help CAP perform it missions for America.
And you can, too! Check out http://www.cap.gov/.