Feb 03

Last night, I had the opportunity to visit the control tower at the Indianapolis International Airport (KIND) and let me tell you, it is very cool. I should mention that I was able to make this visit with a group from the Greenwood Airport Pilot’s Club. The club puts on monthly meetings and this month they scheduled a trip to the tower. It is likely the only way to get in. It is not, as they say, open to the public.

After being let into the controlled access parking lot, we went inside and checked in. Luckily it was not like boarding a commercial aircraft. We just signed our name. I guess there isn’t much risk in letting a bunch of pilots tour the tower. After a few words about the history of the country’s 3rd tallest tower, we were off.

The tower facility houses both the tower controllers (ground, take-off and landing, and clearance delivery) and the terminal radar area controllers (approach and departure). We split into two groups and my group headed up 300 feet or so to visit the tower controllers. It was dark both inside and outside. It is kept dark inside to help preserve the controllers night vision – which is a good thing. Basically, the only light was coming from the dozens of computer screens and radar displays in the circular room. It was not terribly busy when we were there so we actually got to talk to the controllers a little bit and ask questions about the gear and the job. Speaking of the gear, that building houses some of the most advanced gear I’ve ever seen. From a 10″ square box that controls dozens of phone lines and a dozen radio frequencies to touch screen monitors that control every light on the tarmac, everything up there is state of the art. However just a few minutes up there and you realize that as handy as all of the gear is, it really is up to one human talking to another human to make sure the hundreds of other people on the plane get where they’re going safely and on time.

This is where I would love to show you pictures, but for obvious reasons, no photography was allowed.

After 1/2 an hour or so, we headed back down and visited approach control for awhile. This room is also kept dark. Although current technology allows for there to be much more ambient light in the room while controllers work, force of habit keeps them in the dark. If you fly within 60 miles or so of the Indianapolis International Airport, you will likely be talking to the people in this room. They control all the airspace 13000 feet and below inside that ring. Anyone coming into or going out of KIND or low flying aircraft just passing through are all customers of these controllers.

The guys and gals in approach and departure control sit behind huge radar displays. Take 3 30″ computer monitors and stack them on top of each other and that’s the size of screen they look at. I can’t even begin to explain what it looks like – but I’ll try. The back ground is black and the dominant color on top of that is green. Green is used to indicate airports, runway, approach paths, terrain, towers – basically anything except airplanes. Blue hash marks are planes in the scope of the radar not being controlled by the KIND facility. Yellow hash marks with info tags are planes being controlled by KIND and white hash marks are planes that a particular controller is responsible for at any given moment.

It is incredible to watch. The amount of planning and math and knowledge required to perform the most basic of tasks is amazing. Say you have a Cessna 172 and a Boeing 747 coming in to land at roughly the same time. The Cessna is 9 miles out and traveling 90 knots and the 747 is 20 miles out and traveling 240 knots. Knowing you have to leave 3 miles between planes at touch down point, how much to you have to slow the 747? You have 3 seconds to do the math and tell the 747 – GO! (The numbers in that scenario are completely made up and are possibly not realistic – I’m just trying to illustrate a point.) :)

If you are a pilot or just want to learn more about air traffic control, I highly recommend you figure out a way to visit a tower. I’ve been to 2 towers and Chicago Center now and I’m still blown away by the system and the people who make it go. So next time your flight is delayed by 20 minutes, just remember it is only 1 of 85,000 or so that the controllers handle EVERY DAY – cut them a little slack :)

Cheers!!

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Nov 15

Today I managed to migrate my flight training blog over here to my WordPress blog. It will be nice to have everything in one place. You see a new link at the top which will take you to a page containing all the posts associated with my flight training. They are arranged from the beginning of the process to the end so you can read it like a little book (if you’re that bored) :-)

Please feel free to post comments on any of the posts!!

Cheers!

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Nov 05

So my pilot friend Stephanie and I went flying last night to maintain our night currency. It is a simple thing to do. In order to take passengers with you, you must have made 3 takeoffs and landings to a complete stop within the past 90 days (in an aircraft of the same category). Typically you can do this in an hour including pre-flight and everything. Well, we did it in about an hour, but there were some bumps along the way…

The AWOS was reporting winds from 280 @ 9 knots when we were ready to depart from runway 25. No problem with these winds, just a slight slight crosswind to watch out for and we’ve both flown in way worse conditions. Well, little did we know that just a few hundred feet above the ground winds were from 310 @ 29 knots…

It was crazy flying around the pattern. By the time we figured out what the winds were doing, it was too late. Our crosswind and downwind legs had been pushed out so far that it took us FOREVER to get back to the runway center line on the base leg. I was wondering if we were ever going to get there. The whole time we’re getting tossed around in our tiny little plane.

By my third time around, I had pretty much figured out what was going to happen, and was able to put in enough wind correction to fly a normal pattern. Still fighting that wind on base and final was rough. We were both ready to call it quits after fighting those kind of winds.

It was a good experience and now I’m current day and night until 2/2/2010.

Who wants to go flying with me?

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Nov 02

My vacation week has come and gone. It was a nice mix of productivity and worthlessness. It was heavy on the worthlessness, but that was the intent.

I did manage to rearrange and clean up the home office space upstairs. I incorporated the new 24″ monitor and, of course, built the new Hackintosh (which I’m using right now).

Other than a couple of short flights, I didn’t do a whole lot – and I enjoyed every minute of it.

I highly recommend a “stay-cation” to anyone.

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Sep 26

Tonight Lori and I played host to a couple of our friends – Stephanie and Denise. The menu was grilled steak with bacon alfredo whipped potatoes and broccoli sauteed in a lemon basil butter. I created those while Lori (in all of her “spare time”) managed to produce a fantastic apple tart with an orange-apricot glaze.

This meal was actually a bit of a turning point for me as I didn’t have a “recipe” for anything I made. I decided on the menu and just created it. I know I didn’t invent anything, but I also didn’t copy anyone word for word…. it was kind of nice. I’ve learned just enough about cooking to be dangerous.

This was also the first time I’ve grilled steak to different levels of doneness (is that even a word). Stephanie was a medium rare (which I managed more of a medium), I am a medium to medium well (which I nailed), Lori and Denise were medium well to well (which Denise claimed it was “perfect”). I used technology, of course. I have an instant digital thermometer that I use in beer making that works well for approximate levels of doneness for meat as well.

Anyway, I believe everything went over well and Lori’s tart was fantastic. That will be good for breakfast tomorrow!! Unfortunately, Lori had to leave to go visit some doggies right after dinner so she missed the good times that followed. Stephanie and I “helped” Denise study for her written private pilot exam that she is taking on Monday. I’m not sure that she’s any better off after our “study session” but it certainly was a lot of fun. The whiskey and rum helped in that department. I must say, you never know what you’re going to get when a group of pilots get together and then throw in the alcohol… good times, I say, good times…

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