Running Away to Join the Circus – TICO 2012, Day 1

It’s late.  I have to be up early.  But it’s been a great day and I can’t help but write a quick post.

I’m in Titusville, Florida for the next couple of days for the Valiant Air Command TICO Warbird Airshow.  This is my second year attending and I thought I’d use the opportunity to learn a few things by digging even deeper into the airshow culture.

I’m here as crew for Mark Sorenson and Tiger Airshows.  Mark flies a Yak 55M, a single-seat, fully aerobatic Eastern Bloc low-wing monoplane.  His aircraft, “Titus, the Tumbling Tiger,” is painted like a Bengal tiger.  Mark’s Pyro team lights off a concoction of hydrocarbons that creates huge ascending smoke rings that Mark flies around and through.

It’s part of a larger master plan of Mark’s, called The Ringmasters.  A kid-friendly one and two-ship demo that uses circus themes and some of the best ideas from Mark’s observations of countless airshow performers.

I’m putting cameras all over the aircraft.  A frame grab from the rear-facing camera leads this post.  I’ll eventually be putting these together to make a promotional video for Mark.

But the drill is a little more in-depth this time.  I’m embedding with Mark’s crew.  When it comes time for Mark to fly, I’ll be setting the cameras, then I’ll be heading out to show center with the pyro unit to help blow some smoke.  Mostly, I’ll have one of the big fire extinguishers or the little fire extinguisher.  The big fire extinguishers are used to put out grass fires that occasionally result from the use of the smoke ring generator.  The little fire extinguisher is used to put out members of the pyro crew.  The big ones have been used with some frequency.  The little one not so much.  And I aim to keep it that way.

In addition to that, I’ll be shooting such stills and video as I can.  But the idea is to embed for a few days with the crew to see what it’s really like to show up at an airshow and perform.  Genuine scurrying, prop blast, and sunburn with an aircrew tag dangling from my belt.  Show time is early tomorrow, so I’m not going to write much more at this point.  But there’s definitely an episode in all of this!

 

It’s About Aircrew

The low clouds and snow flurries retreated today and, as luck would have it, Capt Norm Malek and I had scheduled the G1000-equipped CAP C-182 all afternoon.  So we launched around 1:00 and wrung out the aircraft for a total of 3.3 Hobbs hours.

As of this morning, all of my approaches for instrument currency dated from October, which means that they’re going to expire next month.  So I clearly needed some approaches.  Capt Malek didn’t need as many, having recently flown some single-pilot actual as part of some aircraft repositioning work this week.

So I rocked out a hold on a DME fix about 18 miles sooutheast of Flint, then went in for the ILS 27, the RNAV 18, the ILS 27 again, and the VOR 18 before landing and switching pilots.  2.0 ASEL high-performance and 1.6 of it under the hood.  We had some VFR traffic around NUPUE, my intended IAF, and I volunteered to be vectored to JUBER instead, so there was some fast fingerwork on the G1000.  But no worries. [Read more...]

Indoc in the Schweizer SGM 2-37

I love Twitter.  Not necessarily for the hours of timesuck that it has represented over the course of the three an a half years and 10,000+ tweets.  I love it because every once in awhile, you tweet that you’re getting a haircut and you end up getting to fly a really cool aircraft.

Yesterday, I tweeted that I was heading downtown Saturday morning to get a haircut from Vic, a commercial pilot who’s also my barber of some 15 years.  John Harte responded, suggesting that he might be able to get me up in a motorglider if I could make it over to Detroit City Airport while I was downtown.

The motorglider in question is a Schweizer SGM 2-37, registered under tail number N26AF.  Only 12 were made, nine (including this one) of which went to the US Air Force Academy under the designation T-G 7A and flew at the academy until 2003.

Schweizer designed the aircraft at the request of the USAF to allow flight training in both powered and glider roles.  For that reason, it’s a bit of a mutt. The nose, cowling, and engine installation are adapted from the Piper PA-38 Tomahawk.  The wings are adapted from the Schweizer SGS 1-36 Sprite, including extensions that stretch the wings to 59.5 feet and leading edge cuffs to make it spin-resistant.  Those who know and love the Schweizer SGS 2-32 will recognize the tail section.

6AF, like all nine of the USAFA models, has aLycoming O-235-L2C four-cylinder engine that puts out 112 hp and gets the 1,850 MTOW aircraft up into the air with reasonable aplomb and allows the aircraft to cruise somewhere around 110 KIAS. [Read more...]

Airplanes 50¢

I spent part of this afternoon at Marvin’s Magnificent Mechanical Museum in Farmington Hills.  It’s tucked in behind a strip shopping center and you probably wouldn’t know it was there despite the big sign.  Inside, in addition to the pinball machines and video games, is one of the largest collections of old-style automated arcade attractions I think I’ve ever seen outside of Cedar Point.

But the coolest thing is when I detected movement above my head.  The ceiling is pretty busy with stuff attached to it.  But, running around the place is a conveyor system with dozens of model aircraft attached to it.  The conveyor system is static most of the time but there’s a box next to the door that says “Airplanes 50¢.”  If you put a couple of quarters into the box, the conveyor system starts and the airplanes make circuits of the place.

Really cool.  Worth a couple of quarters any day!  I especially appreciate that several of the aerobatic aircraft are inverted.

I shot the above video on my iPhone and then stitched it together this afternoon.  Enjoy!

 

Like a Boss

You’re seen the whole “what my wife/boss/etc. thinks I do” meme, right?  I couldn’t resist putting together an Airspeed take on it.