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View Full Version : Who is going to 2016 Oshkosh?


twoplanekid
07-01-2016, 08:39 PM
While many people call it EAA AirVenture, it's just Oshkosh to me.

This will be my third time as an exhibitor selling pre & WWII sectional maps (Vintage Air Map) and promoting Grimes Field/MERFI/Champaign Aviation Museum in Urbana, Ohio.

This year I am in building D (4012) and will miss being across from the Pin Up girls. Please stop by for a chat to talk about the Villages and of course aircraft.

EAA AirVenture Oshkosh | Oshkosh, Wisconsin | Fly-In & Convention (http://www.eaa.org/en/airventure)

virgind
07-05-2016, 09:45 AM
Man that is so cool. Flew there in1986 with my brother. As we came in on approach I thought that all the planes on the ground were campers.Well they were camping but it was all airplanes. Unbelievable 100s of airplanes setting in row upon row. The warbird show was great,FIFI was there they all flew out about 50 or so miles and came back in formation. Really made you fill you were in the war. Loved the live bombing run. Do they still do that.

Buffalo Jim
07-05-2016, 10:32 AM
Very cool subject . Please keep sharing more info about this annual gathering .

John_W
07-05-2016, 02:14 PM
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/150724130803-oshkosh-air-traffic-control-tower-exlarge-169.jpg

For the week of the EAA event the Oshkosh Airport is the busiest airport in the world handling on an average day about 3,000 operations in 10 hours. The controllers who work that week are chosen like umpires for the World Series. The FAA picks 50 of the best from various facilities and sends them to Oshkosh.

When I started with the FAA I was at St. Pete/Clearwater Airport Tower in the 1970s's. That airport is on the edge of Tampa Bay nine miles west of Tampa Int'l Airport. It's was a very busy civilian airport of light aircraft and executive jets and Coast Guard Air Station and back in the 1970's when fuel was cheap we handled about 250,000 operations per year. I once tried to get to Oshkosk for that week, but they only selected from their region, the Great Lakes and I was in the Southeast Region.

At St. Pete/Clearwater in what we called our 'calm wind' setup, we operated traffic on all 3 intersecting runways at the same time. Oshkosk is able to run so many more operations because they have special procedures setup in advance and pilots are aware and the flow is almost automated. In the southeast corner of St. Pete/Clearwater airport you can see Airco Golf Course in the photo below. It opened in 1962 and is where I learned how to play golf. Unfortunately it was closed in 2011 because it was losing money for the county.

http://www.visitstpeteclearwater.com/sites/default/master/files/styles/social-share/public/hero/PIEAerial2013-06-13_064WEB.jpg?itok=x-HLBvVx

When I was in the Army I worked for a year at Hunter AAF in Savannah, Georgia. We had about 350 based Hueys and 700 Vientamese student pilots and our operations were over 2,000 a day, which was actually busier than O'Hare. We also had special procedures that the pilots all adhered to and were able to keep the traffic moving and separated by different altitudes inbound and outbound.

When the Vietnam War started winding down in late 1972 the Hueys were moved out. From the photo you can see a large ramp, it was actually very big. We once had twenty C-141's parked on that ramp at one time, the runway is 12,000 feet long (over 2 miles). At the far western end south of the runway was the Cobra AH-1 school. Army pilots transitioning into Cobra helicopters came there for a months worth of training.

http://savannahnow.com/sites/default/files/styles/slideshow__640x360/public/14368877.jpg?itok=ajh0zE5-

CFrance
07-05-2016, 10:33 PM
You always have something interesting to post, John W. Thanks for sharing that.

twoplanekid
07-25-2016, 09:24 PM
My booth (home for the week) at Oshkosh