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#11
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Look on the bright side: if the operation employs a rigger who can pack
round chutes it could end up making your life a little easier. |
#12
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We shared the airport in Monroe, Georgia with skydivers for many years. We
were there before them, and they are now gone--evicted for rent arrears, and too many dead bodies (one through the roof of an apartment bldg, and a couple more in back yards). A nasty divorce among the Principals contributed. The novice divers often had (and still have) problems avoiding the runway, and the old hands liked to jump through clouds. The FAA was no help! One of the management promised to correct the situation but these were false promises. The Pilots for the operation--King Air mostly--were arrogant and vindictive--blasting our gliders while turning around. Our single runway had no taxiway. When that management person left, and they got new pilots who were courteous and coooperative, things got much better. They still had no "defined" drop zone. One of them damaged the parked auto of one of our members..One severely damaged the wing of a Piper Cherokee by falling on it--he'll never do that (or anything else) again. After we got a real taxiway, things got much better but--glider launches are frequently delayed to allow jumpers to land. We don't take off if they are within 1000' of ground. Final glide to a "contest" finish for record flights is out of the question. Moving gliders on the ground requires real awareness of the jumpers. Expeditious clearing of the rumway is a must. Having a drop zone away from the glider runway would help a lot!. Minden-Tahoe airport is large enough to permit this. Radio contact on the CTAF with the jump plane is, amazingly, not required by ATC! A "2 min to jumpers away" and a "jumpers away" call helps a lot! Delicate diplomacy and courtesy go a long way to prevent a lot of the problems. Brute force does not. Don't involve the FAA unless desperate! -- Hartley Falbaum "bumper" wrote in message ... A Skydiving company has approached airport management, wanting to open a skydiving operation at Minden-Tahoe Airport, Nevada, USA. Minden, as you're probably aware, is considered by many to be one of the true soaring Mecca, with superb soaring conditions, beautiful scenery and much more. It also has a mix of powered aircraft traffic including business jets, with over half the airport operations being glider related. There are a number of other airports in the US, and probably elsewhere, that support both gliders and skydivers, though I'm not sure they have the same number of operations was KMEV (60 to 70K per year). Safety, is a primary concern, as is the potential for driving away soaring pilots. If you have any experience, good or bad, in sharing an airport with skydivers, please post. all the best, -- bumper ZZ (reverse all after @) "Dare to be different . . . circle in sink." |
#13
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snip Don't involve the FAA unless desperate! /snip
That is VERY good advice, and DO involve the United States Parachute Association before you get desperate! USPA has been historically responsive in mediating situations like this (it is part of their charter), and skydiving operations are smart to cooperate. (For insurance and other reasons, almost all jump operations are USPA group members, and must adhere to a minimum set of rules to maintain that membership.) ~ted/2NO |
#14
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The mix works well at Elsinore, and Dillingham, but I think there
might be problems at Minden. At Dillingham there's a unicom, and the jump operations are at opposite ends of a 9000' runway. When the winds shift the gliders and the jumpers swap ends of the field. At Elsinore when I was last there, the two operations again were opposite each other. Unfortunately the jumps don't always go as planned, and off field landings do occur. Also Dillingham doesn't see any corporate jet activity. It could work, but I fear at the expense of some airspace presently used for glider training and local flying. Rich |
#15
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Derek Copeland wrote:
People who throw themselves out of perfectly serviceable aeroplanes .... I jump pilot I know answers this quip with "well, you haven't seen the typical jump plane". The point being that the next venue for many jump planes is the scrap heap. For many years, The Greater Boston Soaring Club (http://soargbsc.com) co-existed at the Pepperell MA airport with the Pepperell Skydiving Center (http://www.skyjump.com/)in peace. They leased the airport and we were their tenants. At one point, when the runway needed resurfacing, the club financed the runway work in lieu of several years rent. But, at the end we parted company on unfriendly terms. I will only say that we thought that their demands became increasingly unreasonable - fully understanding that there are two sides to every story. Jumpers want to be on the upwind side of the field for exactly the same reasons that the glider pilots do. This will be a problem. Much depends on what kind of glider club you have. If a large portion of your operations are training flights there will be more conflicts than if your club does mostly XC, natch. Every one being on the radio is a big plus but even so, there WILL be conflicts. This can mean a jump pilot calling a glider with a request to move downwind or a jump pilot holding a jump until a conflict is resolved. The airport area was divided into a pie cut into six pieces - each with a letter designator. At the start of the day, they'd give us the letter of the pie wedge where they were getting out and we'd stay clear - mostly. If the wind changed..... well, you can figure it out. If every one stays on polite terms it CAN be done. There WILL be conflicts. There WILL be increase risk. We left for personal/political reasons not safety. In hindsight, life is much more relaxed without the jumpers. If your jump operation has the choice of moving elsewhere, encourage them to take it. Tony V. |
#16
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HL Falbaum wrote:
We shared the airport in Monroe, Georgia with skydivers for many years. We were there before them, and they are now gone--evicted for rent arrears, and too many dead bodies.... I have never jumped out of an airplane but believe that sky diving can be a safe sport. When my club co-existed with a large sky diving school, it got to the point that I no longer looked up when an ambulance rolled onto the field. If only the jumpers would make nice, stabilized, approaches to a landing - but that doesn't impress the ladies (and, yes, the "scenery" is MUCH better than at any soaring site). So, what you see is a lot of radical maneuvering close to the ground ("hook turns"?)- and some times they would miss-judge. One time, an ambulance was on the field and the next jumper tried to impress the ambulance crew. He got to ride in the ambulance too. Tony V. LS6-b |
#17
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We have 2 sky dive and 3 glider operations at our field.. and with the
support of airport management, the "drop zone" is 4 miles south of the runways. We have been very adamant about no drop zones on the airport. We have two parallel runways, 4500 and 3500, feet long and separated by 300ft centerline to centerline. Power aircraft operations are on the west runway (longer) and maintain their traffic pattern on that side. Glider operations are on the east (shorter) runway and maintain glider and tow plane operations on the east side. Our primary concern with the jump zone "on airport": If the jump plane calls 2 minutes to jump or even jumpers away and the glider is on the wrong side of the airport in serious sink, the glider cannot safely approach the airport and land without fear of striking someone in free fall or under canopy. Some glider with a radio failure would never hear the call. There is not a lot of "cleared landing area" safely away from runways, aircraft ramp parking or powerlines for a parachute operation, even though they say they can "hit a bullseye", because they land "off airport", we do not have statistics or witness to discredit their statements. We know when jump operations are in effect (sunrise to sunset 7 days a week) so we give the jump zone a 2nm radius clearance. Even then we have been at 10K MSL (7500AGL) well outside the 2nm ring and had meatballs in free fall pass within meters of the wing. Even though the Jump Master said they never jump more than 1500meters from the zone center. Meatballs in free fall can track a good horizontal distance out and return to the zone. As another mentioned, by Federal Airport Funding rules, you cannot keep a jump school off the airport, just the same as ultra lights. But be friendly, and negotiate a jump zone outside the airport traffic patterns by at least 2 nm for safety. The jump school will complain of the added cost of manning a off airport landing area and providing return transportation. But you need to market the increased volume of jumps possible because the jump master is not waiting for the airport to clear from a departing or a series of landing aircraft, whether they be gliders, powered.. or at MEV.. FIRE BOMBERS. BT "bumper" wrote in message ... A Skydiving company has approached airport management, wanting to open a skydiving operation at Minden-Tahoe Airport, Nevada, USA. Minden, as you're probably aware, is considered by many to be one of the true soaring Mecca, with superb soaring conditions, beautiful scenery and much more. It also has a mix of powered aircraft traffic including business jets, with over half the airport operations being glider related. There are a number of other airports in the US, and probably elsewhere, that support both gliders and skydivers, though I'm not sure they have the same number of operations was KMEV (60 to 70K per year). Safety, is a primary concern, as is the potential for driving away soaring pilots. If you have any experience, good or bad, in sharing an airport with skydivers, please post. all the best, -- bumper ZZ (reverse all after @) "Dare to be different . . . circle in sink." |
#18
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Bumper,
Please don't take anything Derek says as the truth. He is very anti, well everything! He has a big problem with 'the menace of parachutist' I fly from a club where we share an airfield with parachutist's. We have a set agrement with them and set the airfield up in the morning, and sometimes this does have to be changed in during the day. There has been one fatal accident a few years ago. But it was a accident. And we have all learnt from it. Other than that we get on very well. There is also another club very close by and I have flown there and all seems well with the set up. As for Derek saying they don't talk to us! They do!! I think its just a case of Derek does not listen! I have heard gliders call up and ask if they are active, and the drop zone are more that happy to talk to them. There are also many gliders that don't and are still flying in the drop zones, this is not helping the gliding movement and the case for the CAA making us all use transponders, even better! Sorry got a bit side tracked! Regards Damien Derek, Please don't waste your or my time by replying to this post! At 17:12 11 July 2006, Derek Copeland wrote: People who throw themselves out of perfectly serviceable aeroplanes at 15,000ft and then plummet almost vertically at over 100mph for 14,000ft are an absolute menace. If you are flying a glider or a light aircraft, you will almost certainly not see them coming and they have only very limited manoeuvrability to avoid you, even if they do see you. There have been a number of fatal collisions and very near misses between skydivers and gliders in the UK and Europe. One of the problems in the UK is that the Skydivers won't talk to the gliding movement and guard their 'drop zones' like dogs in a manger, even though they are often not being used. If you can get them to agree to set times and to inform pilots by radio or other means when they are about to jump, there may not be too much of a problem. I have flown at a site in Spain where the two sports do liase and there didn't seem to be a problem combining them there. Derek Copeland At 16:12 11 July 2006, Bumper wrote: A Skydiving company has approached airport management, wanting to open a skydiving operation at Minden-Tahoe Airport, Nevada, USA. Minden, as you're probably aware, is considered by many to be one of the true soaring Mecca, with superb soaring conditions, beautiful scenery and much more. It also has a mix of powered aircraft traffic including business jets, with over half the airport operations being glider related. There are a number of other airports in the US, and probably elsewhere, that support both gliders and skydivers, though I'm not sure they have the same number of operations was KMEV (60 to 70K per year). Safety, is a primary concern, as is the potential for driving away soaring pilots. If you have any experience, good or bad, in sharing an airport with skydivers, please post. all the best, -- bumper ZZ 'Dare to be different . . . circle in sink.' |
#19
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Damien is a member of a Gliding Club that shares an
airfield with major parachuting organisations, and as such is in a very different situation to me who flies from a gliding only site. I find it very difficult to find out if parachuting is taking place or not. In the absence of any information to the contrary, I have to assume that the drop zones are active, which cuts out lots of useful airspace in our crowded little country. The fact that you cannot get a radio reply from a parachute site is unfortunately no guarantee that they are not operating. Derek Copeland At 15:12 12 July 2006, Damien Dyer wrote: Bumper, Please don't take anything Derek says as the truth. He is very anti, well everything! He has a big problem with 'the menace of parachutist' I fly from a club where we share an airfield with parachutist's. We have a set agrement with them and set the airfield up in the morning, and sometimes this does have to be changed in during the day. There has been one fatal accident a few years ago. But it was a accident. And we have all learnt from it. Other than that we get on very well. There is also another club very close by and I have flown there and all seems well with the set up. As for Derek saying they don't talk to us! They do!! I think its just a case of Derek does not listen! I have heard gliders call up and ask if they are active, and the drop zone are more that happy to talk to them. There are also many gliders that don't and are still flying in the drop zones, this is not helping the gliding movement and the case for the CAA making us all use transponders, even better! Sorry got a bit side tracked! Regards Damien |
#20
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What Ray said +
I flew at North Raleigh for a short time. Practically all cc. Honestly I never felt comfortable with the whole operation (which Ray accurately described). Why? A little confusion on the part of a glider pilot relative to their position and they can be directly in the path of falling jumpers or the dreaded King Air in vertical descent. It was a primarily a jump airport, no doubt. They fall through cloud decks (broken or otherwise) and otherwise do their thing. The glider guys chase local thermals. Seemed like a matter of time before these 2 things would meet at this particular operation. It was just too tight with the drop zone being 1,000 feet or less away from mid-runway. And then I can remember using N. Raleigh as a turnpoint when flying out of other airports - what the hell was I thinking? However, a large airport like Minden is a different matter. The glider ops are well organized commercial enterprises. drop zones and glider ops can be separated. The old Bermuda High op out of Chester used to do the co-exist thing. It worked well at contests, I wonder how on normal weekends. Ray Lovinggood wrote: Bumper, I flew at a private airfield that was mainly a jump center and the gliders were just a little side business. My time there was from about 1990 through about 1994. When I started flying there, the jumpers used 182's (also used for tow plane) and Twin Beech's. Then, they moved up to Queen Air, then King Air, then CASA's. As they were moving to CASA's, I changed airports. Not because of the jumpers, but I wanted to move to a club that was based on a much larger and more open field. Anyway, all we were flying then were 2-33's, an L-13, and a 1-26. Basically, we were pretty much within the area where the skydivers were since we didn't go cross country. The gliders didn't have radios. We just kept up of where the jumpers were by checking to see where the jump plane was. If the jump plane was on the ground, you were safe from any collision from someone in free-fall: they were either on the ground or under canopy. If they were under canopy, they were easy to spot. We also knew each day where the drop zone would be, based on the winds. Once the jump plane started its climb out, again known by watchting the field (remember, we weren't flying cross country, but just around the airport), we knew to stay well away from the jump zone. The skydiving operation was, and probably still is, one of the largest around, at least in the Southeast. They lease out their King Airs, Twin Otters, and CASA's to other jump operations. We operated safely for the five years or so that I flew there. I would think with radio equipped gliders going cross country, there wouldn't be much problem at all. Just get to know and understand each other's operation and I think it will be fine. The airport is North Raleigh (00NC) and the business is Carolina Skydive (I think, it's been a while since I've been there.) You might find that there's usually a nice crowd of pretty women at jump centers, too! I'm used to NO women at our glider field. So, the scenery may improve even more than it naturally is at Minden! Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA LS1-d At 16:12 11 July 2006, Bumper wrote: A Skydiving company has approached airport management, wanting to open a skydiving operation at Minden-Tahoe Airport, Nevada, USA. Minden, as you're probably aware, is considered by many to be one of the true soaring Mecca, with superb soaring conditions, beautiful scenery and much more. It also has a mix of powered aircraft traffic including business jets, with over half the airport operations being glider related. There are a number of other airports in the US, and probably elsewhere, that support both gliders and skydivers, though I'm not sure they have the same number of operations was KMEV (60 to 70K per year). Safety, is a primary concern, as is the potential for driving away soaring pilots. If you have any experience, good or bad, in sharing an airport with skydivers, please post. all the best, -- bumper ZZ 'Dare to be different . . . circle in sink.' |
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