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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On May 22, 5:27*pm, Andrew Sarangan wrote:
Class D tower is the highest I've seen at GA airports, and even there it appears to be mostly due to historic reasons (ie it used to be a military field or used to have airline traffic some time in the past). Some airports operate their class D tower only when scheduled airlines are expected to arrive and depart. The need for a tower is based on the number or volume of A/C movements. Also, keep in mind that it takes special authorization for a 121 carrier to operate IFR in uncontroller airspace. |
#12
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
Robert Moore wrote:
Steven, what constitutes "air traffic control service"? "Air traffic control service" is defined in ICAO Annex 11 as "a service provided for the purpose of: a) preventing collisions: 1) between aircraft, and 2) on the manoeuvring area between aircraft and obstructions; and b) expediting and maintaining an orderly flow of air traffic." |
#13
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On May 23, 12:32 pm, "F. Baum" wrote:
On May 22, 5:27 pm, Andrew Sarangan wrote: Class D tower is the highest I've seen at GA airports, and even there it appears to be mostly due to historic reasons (ie it used to be a military field or used to have airline traffic some time in the past). Some airports operate their class D tower only when scheduled airlines are expected to arrive and depart. The need for a tower is based on the number or volume of A/C movements. Also, keep in mind that it takes special authorization for a 121 carrier to operate IFR in uncontroller airspace. I would be interested to know how many ATC towers have been built for reasons other than serving 121 carriers or military. Oshkosh is one example, but are there more? |
#14
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
Andrew Sarangan wrote:
I would be interested to know how many ATC towers have been built for reasons other than serving 121 carriers or military. Oshkosh is one example, but are there more? Oshkosh is NOT one of them. Oshkosh tower was established about eight years before the EAA moved it's convention from Rockford, North Central Airlines was providing scheduled service. |
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On May 23, 3:36*pm, Andrew Sarangan wrote:
I would be interested to know how many ATC towers have been built for reasons other than serving 121 carriers or military. *Oshkosh is one example, but are there more? There is a whole bunch of them out west at busy GA airports. |
#16
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
In article
, Andrew Sarangan wrote: On May 23, 12:32 pm, "F. Baum" wrote: On May 22, 5:27 pm, Andrew Sarangan wrote: Class D tower is the highest I've seen at GA airports, and even there it appears to be mostly due to historic reasons (ie it used to be a military field or used to have airline traffic some time in the past). Some airports operate their class D tower only when scheduled airlines are expected to arrive and depart. The need for a tower is based on the number or volume of A/C movements. Also, keep in mind that it takes special authorization for a 121 carrier to operate IFR in uncontroller airspace. I would be interested to know how many ATC towers have been built for reasons other than serving 121 carriers or military. Oshkosh is one example, but are there more? New Smyrna Beach (EVB), Ormond Beach (ORM) to serve Embry-Riddle University. Also talk abour one at DeLand (DED), too. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
#17
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On Fri, 23 May 2008 09:13:59 -0700 (PDT), "F. Baum"
wrote in : On May 22, 9:14*am, Larry Dighera wrote: The airline industry is terrified. They've got more aircraft than they know what to do with, and even more on order. Passengers are unhappy with the airline travel experience, and their numbers threaten to dwindle as a result. High revenue travelers are increasingly turning to part 135 biz-jet transport to escape the moronic security measures imposed on airline travelers. Competition among air carriers is fierce as market consolidation threatens to swallow them whole. Air Traffic Control contractors are lobbying franticly to wrest FAA fiscal oversight from Congress, so thy can sell their marginally engineered products to our government. And anyone naive enough to believes light GA won't be affected by the clash of these titanic combatants is not paying attention. This is the way I see it. *Opposing views are welcome. WOW, thats some pretty one sided stuff. I get a chukle when you ask posters (On other threads) to provide the results of their research to support their opinoin. I'm happy to attempt to support my views with as objective research as I'm able to find if you are able to provide specific views I have stated above with which you disagree. Why dont you provide some reseach for your baseless assumptions ? To which particular alleged "baseless assumptions" are you referring? Dont take any of this personally, I won't as long as you don't attempt to make it personal, and address the subject and not me. I realize it's difficult to do that with an opinion piece like this, but we can try. but you kinda remind me of Phil Boyer or Bower (Sorry, dont recall the name), over at AOPA when he gave his testimony to congress that was fraught with (baseless) assumptions and factual errors. Perhaps you would be good enough to quote the utterances of AOPA president, Boyer that you believe were baseless assumptions. Here's the transcript: http://bulk.resource.org/gpo.gov/hea...106s/80849.pdf NOMINATIONS TO THE FEDERAL AVIATION MANAGEMENT ADVISORY COUNCIL HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED SIXTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION MAY 4, 2000 JOHN MCCAIN, Arizona, Chairman In this posters opinion he made GA look bad. I hope you are incorrect, and welcome being enlightened in this matter. Have you any idea what airlines actually pay in fees taxes and leases ? In my opinion, the airlines have caused to be created this wonderful ATC system by virtue of their need to safely serve the public with their business ventures. An ATC system as fine as that which operates the NAS would surely not have been created by the US government solely for the use of single-engine recips, and we both know it. For that reason, I see no reason that air carriers should not fund that which they mandated. GA clearly benefits from the ATC system, but it is not so dependent on it, that it would cease to exist without it as are the air carriers. |
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On May 24, 10:33*am, Larry Dighera wrote:
In my opinion, the airlines have caused to be created this wonderful ATC system by virtue of their need to safely serve the public with their business ventures. *An ATC system as fine as that which operates the NAS would surely not have been created by the US government solely for the use of single-engine recips, and we both know it. My point exactly. GA would not exist if it werent for the airlines. Set aside the us against them mentality for a minute and think about where the money to fund all of this comes from. Unfortunatly, the FAA has to go to congress and fight for a budget every year. User fees (Which originated within the Bush administration ) were just one funding alternative . The airlines , contrary to AOPA and Avnet, are not anti GA . I think they would like to see other users pay their share. Take a look at airports for a minute. Airlines pay to lease gates, landing fees, per pax handling fees, and in many metripolitan areas, like LAX, a dispraportionate amount of the budget goes to fund releiver or satalite airports that the airlines dont use. I am not a big fan of user fees but many if not most GA airports do not make money, also the sooner the better for things like Next Gen NAS and other tech advances. I think this will save way more $$$$ than it will cost in the short term. |
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
On May 24, 1:49 pm, "F. Baum" wrote:
On May 24, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: In my opinion, the airlines have caused to be created this wonderful ATC system by virtue of their need to safely serve the public with their business ventures. An ATC system as fine as that which operates the NAS would surely not have been created by the US government solely for the use of single-engine recips, and we both know it. My point exactly. GA would not exist if it werent for the airlines. Set aside the us against them mentality for a minute and think about where the money to fund all of this comes from. Unfortunatly, the FAA has to go to congress and fight for a budget every year. User fees (Which originated within the Bush administration ) were just one funding alternative . The airlines , contrary to AOPA and Avnet, are not anti GA . I think they would like to see other users pay their share. Take a look at airports for a minute. Airlines pay to lease gates, landing fees, per pax handling fees, and in many metripolitan areas, like LAX, a dispraportionate amount of the budget goes to fund releiver or satalite airports that the airlines dont use. I am not a big fan of user fees but many if not most GA airports do not make money, also the sooner the better for things like Next Gen NAS and other tech advances. I think this will save way more $$$$ than it will cost in the short term. The terms "reliever" and "satellite" begs the question what are they relieving, and what are they satellites of? |
#20
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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
I must confess, that I am a bit disappointed by your response. I saw in the articles you authored, a reasonable person, employed in the airline industry, with the potential to bring a fresh point of view to this argument. I was hoping to be made more deeply aware of the air carriers' point of view, so that I could better understand the basis upon which it rests. I'm still hopeful, but ... On Sat, 24 May 2008 10:49:24 -0700 (PDT), "F. Baum" wrote in : On May 24, 10:33*am, Larry Dighera wrote: As you failed to mention the assertion you made on Fri, 23 May 2008 09:13:59 -0700 (PDT) in Message-ID: , that Phil Boyer made GA look bad during the Congressional MAC hearings presided over by McCain, I'll assume you have reversed your opinion on that matter. In my opinion, the airlines have caused to be created this wonderful ATC system by virtue of their need to safely serve the public with their business ventures. *An ATC system as fine as that which operates the NAS would surely not have been created by the US government solely for the use of single-engine recips, and we both know it. My point exactly. GA would not exist if it werent for the airlines. That's an interesting, if outrageous, assumption. Are you able to cite any credible source that supports the notion that GA would not exist without ATC or the airlines? Because I can go out to an uncontrolled field, and depart, fly to another such airport, and never avail myself of _ANY_ ATC facilities, I believe that if ATC (and/or the airlines) were to disappear tomorrow, GA would do fine, and air carriers would be out of business. Air carriers demand ATC, or they would be falling out of the sky like hail in Arkansas; GA does not. It appears that we are at opposite ends of the spectrum on this subject. Set aside the us against them mentality for a minute and think about where the money to fund all of this comes from. The money to fund private aviation comes out of the owners' pockets, or wasn't that the 'this' to which you were referring? Unfortunatly, the FAA has to go to congress and fight for a budget every year. What makes the FAA having to justify their budget to Congress unfortunate in your opinion? User fees (Which originated within the Bush administration ) were just one funding alternative . The airlines , contrary to AOPA and Avnet, are not anti GA . I think they would like to see other users pay their share. If you believe the air carriers aren't anti-GA, you haven't been listening to the anti-GA diatribe emanating from Northwest Airlines former CEO, Richard Anderson, now Delta's CEO. Here's some information about one instance. http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite..._editorial.pdf ... Private aircraft operators also do not pay ticket taxes to fund the FAA. Last year the FAA spent $6 billion operating the Air Traffic Control system in the U.S. This service is free of charge for private aircraft operators. Why? Because the commercial airlines pay taxes collected from you to pay for the operation of a system that all air travelers use. Private aviation operators do pay fuel excise tax, as do all commercial airlines--but that is about the extent of private aviation's funding for airports. At NWA, We believe an airport's operating costs should be borne by all who use them, including those who travel by private aircraft. http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...04-2-025x.html Apr. 15, 2004 — AOPA on Thursday defended general aviation against a USA Today editorial that claims airline passengers "subsidize" general aviation. In an opposing view piece published alongside the paper's editorial, AOPA President Phil Boyer explained to USA Today readers that the current system is a single structure, designed for the airlines. "Our elected representatives in Congress wisely created a national air transportation system," Boyer wrote. And just as trucks — which place a greater strain on the national highway system — pay higher taxes and fees than family cars, the airlines must carry a greater portion of the financial burden for the nation's air traffic control system. The USA Today editorial was prompted by and uses much of the same rhetoric as an editorial that Northwest Airlines CEO Richard Anderson wrote for his airline's in-flight magazine. Virtually all of the problems with the air traffic control system cited in the USA Today editorial are problems of the airlines' own making. The delays that the FAA and the airlines are already forecasting for this summer are largely due to the hub-and-spoke system that the major airlines rely on. The hub-and-spoke system creates unrealistic arrival and departure schedules at the major hub airports. Summertime storms only compound the problem. The USA Today editorial claims incorrectly that most GA flights use air traffic control separation services. In fact, the vast majority of GA flights are conducted under visual flight rules, requiring only minimal contact with controllers and placing almost no direct burden on the system. "The air traffic control system is designed to serve the airlines," wrote Boyer in USA Today. "Most small planes use few, if any, of these services. "The airlines pay a modest federal fuel tax of four cents a gallon. Conversely, general aviation flights fund their use of the system through a fuel tax five times what the airlines pay." http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite.../04-1-140.html ... "Mr. Anderson's editorial contains numerous misleading or seriously flawed statements about GA's financial contributions to the national air transportation system," said Boyer. "It has angered GA pilots and aviation enthusiasts. But AOPA has deliberately withheld its rebuttal to the editorial, working instead for constructive discussions with Northwest." Since first learning of the editorial, AOPA has focused on setting up a meeting between Boyer and Anderson in order to clear the air. AOPA refrained from calling for a public letter-writing campaign while efforts to set up the meeting were under way. Pilots and aviation enthusiasts wrote anyway. They spontaneously began besieging Northwest Airlines with letters and e-mails protesting the tone and the misstatements in the editorial. Anderson has now agreed to a meeting on April 2 to explain his concerns. "That's fine," replied Boyer, "I plan to discuss our concerns and find some common ground in our respective views." This all stems from a dispute between Northwest and the airport authority at Minneapolis/St. Paul International Airport (MSP). The Metropolitan Airport Commission also runs six reliever airports that improve efficiency for Northwest at MSP by moving most GA traffic elsewhere, and uses some of the funds collected at MSP for improvements at the relievers. "Mr. Anderson's attack on general aviation is unfair, unwarranted, and, for the most part, untrue," said Boyer. "And by publishing his attack in so public a forum, he has raised what should have remained a regional skirmish into a nationwide battle. ... Do you still believe the air carriers aren't anti-GA? Perhaps the real problem in this airline v. GA argument stems from the ambiguity of the term GA. Airlines see GA as Part 135 operations. But the vast majority of GA operations are private reciprocating-engine aircraft. The airlines continue to fail to differentiate Part 135 operations from Part 91 operations. Part 135 operations are a small subset of GA operations, and the air carriers' failure to use the correct terminology is causing them to meet significant resistance to their proposals. Somebody needs to tell the Air Transport Association to substitute 'air-taxi' for GA in their press releases and lobbying. Take a look at airports for a minute. Airlines pay to lease gates, landing fees, per pax handling fees, and in many metripolitan areas, like LAX, a dispraportionate amount of the budget goes to fund releiver or satalite airports that the airlines dont use. The air carrier costs you mention seem equitable to me. With regard to "reliever or satellite airports," what do you believe they are designed to relieve? Has it occurred to you, that they are necessary because of air carrier operations? I am not a big fan of user fees but many if not most GA airports do not make money, That is poised to change. Metropolitan/GA airports are about to become a much more vital part of our nation's air travel infrastructure, just ask Cirrus co-founder, COB, and CEO Alan Klapmeier. His company is the parent of air-taxi startup SATSair.* They and DayJet are serving what amounts to a new air-travel market in the SE. A vital part of serving that market are metropolitan airports. The anticipated increased use of metropolitan airports should provide additional revenue generation opportunities for airport operators as well as local businesses in those cities. also the sooner the better for things like Next Gen NAS and other tech advances. NextGen is predicated on satellite communications. That is a potentially fatal flaw. In any event, GA doesn't need NextGen, and shouldn't have to pay for it. I think this will save way more $$$$ than it will cost in the short term. Please provide the reasoning behind that statement. Have you any idea of the cost to fund NextGen development, implementation, and operation? Now I'm a forward-thinking person who embraces new technology long before (some might argue prematurely) the general public, and I see NextGen, as I currently understand it from FAA information, to be a boondoggle imposed on our government, and hyped by the airline industry and their lobbyists. * http://www.aero-news.net/news/commbu...d2a4&Dynamic=1 Cirrus Acquires SATSair Air Taxi Sat, 05 Nov '05 Greenville, SC Firm Operates SR-22s Under Part 135 One of the most innovative air charter operators of the new century, SATSair Air Taxi of Greenville, SC, is going forward under a new banner. It's been acquired by one of the most innovative airframe manufacturers of the new century, Cirrus Design Corporation. SATSAir was a Cirrus customer beforehand, but now that it's reforming as a Cirrus subsidiary, it will be adding an additional 100 Cirrus SR22s. "SATSair" stands for Smart Air Travel Solutions Air, while at the same time making a nod towards NASA's SATS -- Small Aircraft Transportation System, the well-publicized research program into the future of light aircraft transportation. Cirrus President and CEO Alan Klapmeier said, "This acquisition follows Cirrus philosophy to engage in pursuits that ultimately grow the industry." Klapmeier has spoken passionately to us before about the need to bring the benefits of general aviation to new markets and new people -- people who aren't yet thinking of what GA can bring to their lives. An example of his attitude is the evident pride that Klapmeier takes in that subset of Cirrus customers who bought a Cirrus and learned to fly in it, with no prior aviation experience. "[W]e will focus on the continued expansion of the air taxi operation and development of a personal transportation network -- to include air-taxi service, leased aircraft and other areas in development," Klapmeier said. The other areas, Klapmeier hinted, may include expanding the SATSAir model with non-Cirrus aircraft, more likely as a complement to than a replacement for the SR-22. ... http://www.airportjournals.com/Displ...?varID=0701026 Alan founded Cirrus with his brother, Dale, company vice chairman. After building a Glasair kit aircraft in the early 1980s, the brothers built a kit aircraft of their own design, the VK-30, in their parents' barn. In 1984, they formed their company. Today, the siblings manufacture FAA-certified, composite, four-place, single-engine piston and turbo-powered aircraft. When Cirrus Design's first FAA-certified SR20 airplane appeared on the scene in 1998, it was described as futuristic—a sleek-looking design that had a parachute. No one knew what to make of the aircraft. From the start, Cirrus had designed its aircraft around technology that didn't yet exist within the general aviation industry. Behind the scenes, for the most part, Cirrus funded the R&D for a glass cockpit, working closely with avionics manufacturer Avidyne. In July 2002, Cirrus announced its all-glass cockpit, which first became available in its second model, the SR22. In 2003, the all-glass cockpit became standard on all its airplanes. The GA industry has largely adopted the Klapmeiers' all-glass cockpit design, which captures buyers from around the world. Other manufacturers today are starting to contemplate the idea of installing life-saving parachute recovery systems. TIME Magazine credited the Klapmeiers with "giving lift to the small-plane industry with an easy-to-fly design." Forbes Magazine has said Cirrus sells "meaning." Today, as one of the world's largest manufacturers of aircraft in its class, Cirrus is one of the great success stories of modern aviation. What the company has been able to pull off since its first aircraft delivery eight years ago is an incredible feat. Before the SR20 became certified, few in the industry believed the brothers could design, certify and produce technically advanced aircraft. In fact, many scoffed at their ideas. For their intense spirit of exploration and sheer devotion to making the GA industry safer and a more interesting and thrilling place for all of us, Airport Journals is proud to honor Alan and Dale Klapmeier as our 2006 Michael A. Chowdry Aviation Entrepreneur of the Year Award recipients. ... http://us.ft.com/ftgateway/superpage...1177126&page=2 ... |
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