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Larry Dighera wrote in
: On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 08:26:10 -0800, ThomasH wrote in : Maybe some of you know what is going on with SJC? You'll find two Transient Parking areas depicted on this airport diagram: http://204.108.4.16/d-tpp/0711/00693AD.PDF Presumably there is not charge for tie down there. The only transient parking at SJC is at either the Jet Center or ACM Aviation. One guy, A. C. Markula (one of the early big shots at Apple Computer) owns ACM Aviation and 1/3 of the Jet Center. There is no difference is tie down or fuel prices. At one FAA Wings safety seminars, they even admitted as much, stating that the Jet Center called ACM every morning to set the fuel price. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#12
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ThomasH wrote in
: On 05-Nov-07 8:42, Marty Shapiro wrote: ThomasH wrote in : Hi: my friend from SoCal complained several times that every each time he lands in SJC to visit us, even if it is for 15min only to make a pickup, as soon he taxis to transient parking at the Jet Center, they charge him $40. I called Jet Center, but they decline to give any answer. I do not fly from SJC anymore. For 6-7 years this was my home base, I used to land on the old 30R and later on 29 literally hundreds of times, and this kind of news surprises me. Virtually the entire general aviation, small piton anyway, has been evicted and pushed away from SJC since, but there are still some remaining hangars with small aircraft. Maybe some of you know what is going on with SJC? Is it true with the $40, or is it merely a Jet Center rip-off? Thomas The $40 is the Jet Center's ramp fee. I haven't looked currently, but a few years ago their ramp fee ($40) for a short stop was higher than Signature's at SFO. There is no landing fee at SJC. Thanks Marty! Great, thus we have to discover how to park and avoid the "ramp fee," for whatever they charge it... I do not want drive to RHV to pickup my friend when he comes... Maybe the east parking at ACM would be an option. No, it is NOT an option. They charege the same $40 as the Jet Center. ACM Aviation was founded by A. C. Markula, one of the early big shots at Apple Computer. When the Jet Center was built, he owned a sizeable percentage of it as well. Eventually, both became part of SJJC Aviation Services, LLC. In June of this year, SJJC Aviation Services, LLC was purchased by Macquarie Infrastructure Company, which in April had purchased the Mercury Air Centers chain of FBOs. Let me tell a story: One upon a time, as the grass was green and small aircraft took off every minute from SJC, like in Van Nuys 16R... :-): On the east side is ACM aviation. We used to get fuel from them before the 30R got extended. My flight club was in the old terminal building east or 30L. Later we moved to the west parking and our runway of operation was the 29. Fuel service was than switched to Jet Center, if I recall, and our office was in the same building, in which they reside. A very nice pilot shop with a deli was operating at the entrance, turned now into a deli only and souvenir shop. There are no pilots anymore at SJC... I haven't been into the shop in several years. The last time I was, they still sold charts and a few pilot supplies, but were mainly a deli. I learned to fly at SJC and even soloed there. This was before the airspace became alphabet soup and SJC was an ARSA airport. They day I soloed, I was doing patterns on 29 with my instructor. He had me stop at the Jet Center to take a break. He sent me into the gift shop to get a sectional, telling me that I was going to start cross country lessons soon. When I came out of the gift shop, he told me he had endorsed my medical and go out and give him three patterns. As I walked out the door, he yelled at me that his flight bag was in the airplane and I should take care of it. I was also a member of the flying club you mentioned for several years. They had been operating at SJC for something like 30 years when the airport suddenly decided that the club rules were in violation of the airport rules and kicked them out. These were the same club rules the aiport approved when the club was first formed and allowed to base at SJC. The club is now at RHV. There are pilots at SJC, but they fly biz jets. The story of destruction of general aviation on this airport almost got on the One Six Right DVD, and was discussed by the AOPA a few times. The entire west side of the airport has been demolished and is destined to be a large jet business only. Tie down spots are deserted for some 2 years already. Finally they constructed at least one new hangar on the wasteland. The east side is for at least 15years a construction zone, never ending. Now they have finally started the new terminal building. This airport management is good only in legal games and keeping their jobs, but they are a horror with money management, planing, and of course, they forget that airport is for aircraft, not for parking lots and for abandoned land. Their concept is that all small craft will go to the "relieve airport Reid-Hillview," but this airport is one of the most aggressively contested airports for a closure, see http://www.reidhillview.com/, and the vicinity is, to be diplomatic, not high class. I was not at ease to leave behind by car for an overnighter over there. When they first opened, the San Jose Jet Center and the airport were not GA (read non-biz jet) hostile like they are today. Several flying clubs were based there over the years (Business Aircraft Center, American Flyers, Squadron Two Flying Club). Long ago, though, both turned hostile to GA unless it was the biz-jet crowed or air cargo. The Jet Center has even been hostile to Angel Flight. They did, in the past (but no longer) hassle some Angel Flight pilots over the ramp fee and I know of one Angel Flight camp mission for deaf children to Mariposa which had to move at the last minute from SJC to RHV because the Jet Center didn't want us there. The RHV airport staff was outstanding that day with they way they pitched in and assisted both the Angel Flight pilots and all the kids. RHV is not going to be closed. That was finally defeated several years ago and they have been making improvements. The idiots at the county have finally wised up and are fixing up the second floor of the terminal building and will have a restaurant there again (after over 20 years). No one would lease because the county would only give a month-to-month lease. Now they will give the restaurant a long term lease. They have also repaved the parking area, redone the gated entrance, and made some other improvements, using Federal grants, so they won't close it very soon. The current RHV airport manager is a good guy and straight shooter. BTW, SJC is owned and managed by the ****ty of San Jose. RHV, along with PAO and E16, are managed by Santa Clara County. The county owns RHV and E16, and manages PAO, which is owned by Palo Alto and leased to the county. We also have a colossus here, almost dormant, the Moffett Field. But city of Sunnyvale does not have any pilot lobby and they to not promote the plan to convert the still NASA field into a general aviation base for the south bay! Its not just nimby's in Scummyvale. It's also the nimby's in Mutton View which don't want GA at Moffett. But, NASA seems to have other ideas. The Google 767 files out of Moffett and they do permit some freight flights. I hope NASA lets in a lot of freight flights, especially in the big jets which SJC can't easily handle, like the 747F. Thanks for the diagrams in the other posting, but we do have all these, don't we? Thomas -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#13
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On Nov 5, 11:04 am, Larry Dighera wrote:
As long as they abide by FAA regulations, I suppose they are within their right. They can descriminate against GA by charging high fees. The FAA generally doesn't prohibit that. You're saying that the airport operator (SJ county?) does not permit aircraft, other than the one paying tie-down fees for a specific spot, to park in rented parking spots? That is very much true. The tie down is associated with the N number -Robert |
#14
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On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:23:37 -0000, "Robert M. Gary"
wrote in om: On Nov 5, 11:04 am, Larry Dighera wrote: As long as they abide by FAA regulations, I suppose they are within their right. They can descriminate against GA by charging high fees. The FAA generally doesn't prohibit that. There is something immoral about using public AIP funds to construct an airport at which a pilot MUST pay a private corporation for the right to use what his tax dollars have built. You're saying that the airport operator (SJ county?) does not permit aircraft, other than the one paying tie-down fees for a specific spot, to park in rented parking spots? That is very much true. The tie down is associated with the N number -Robert It would seem that the firm operating the airport is unnecessarily exposing itself to potential damage liabilities as a result of implementing that policy, but I suppose the lease agreement forces the lessee to give up those rights. |
#15
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"MS" == Marty Shapiro writes:
MS Several flying clubs were based there over the MS years (Business Aircraft Center, American Flyers, Squadron Two MS Flying Club). Also the Lockheed Flying club. I was a member of that during a student intern stint, soloed and got my license out of SJC....a long, long time ago. -- You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating the very phrases which our founding fathers used in the great struggle for independence. ~ Attributed to Charles Austin Beard |
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Bob Fry wrote in :
"MS" == Marty Shapiro writes: MS Several flying clubs were based there over the MS years (Business Aircraft Center, American Flyers, Squadron Two MS Flying Club). Also the Lockheed Flying club. I was a member of that during a student intern stint, soloed and got my license out of SJC....a long, long time ago. Were you in the Jet Center or the old GA terminal building? There were several other flying clubs at SJC which had lockers at the old GA terminal before it was torn down to expand 30R. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#17
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On Nov 5, 10:36 am, ThomasH wrote:
Actually 16R is mostly for kerosene burners too: bugsmashers are more commonly directed to the smaller 16L. Fortunately here in the valley we also have WHP, which doesn't attract the jet set at all. Let me tell a story: One upon a time, as the grass was green and small aircraft took off every minute from SJC, like in Van Nuys 16R... :-): |
#18
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"MS" == Marty Shapiro writes:
MS Were you in the Jet Center or the old GA terminal MS building? There were several other flying clubs at SJC which MS had lockers at the old GA terminal before it was torn down to MS expand 30R. I think the GA terminal, though at the time I didn't think of it as a "terminal". This was in 1975. I soloed the last day I was a teenager, and passed my flight test on the 199th anniversary of US independence, easy dates to remember. I think instruction was $8/hour and a C-150, wet, was $13. A lot of money for a student salary, but it was either that, or buy a good car. Being a geek I didn't care much about my vehicle...I wanted to learn to fly! Headphones and push-to-talk buttons belonged to pilots in crisp white dress shirts in big airplanes. It was a big advance for us to start buying and using the foam earplugs. Microphone and loudspeaker turned up to distortion were the norm. Even then SJC was busy so it was one hand on yoke, another on throttle, third hand holding the mic. -- The world is too dangerous to live in, not because of the people who do evil, but because of the people who sit and let it happen. ~ Albert Einstein |
#19
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Bob Fry wrote in :
"MS" == Marty Shapiro writes: MS Were you in the Jet Center or the old GA terminal MS building? There were several other flying clubs at SJC which MS had lockers at the old GA terminal before it was torn down to MS expand 30R. I think the GA terminal, though at the time I didn't think of it as a "terminal". This was in 1975. I soloed the last day I was a teenager, and passed my flight test on the 199th anniversary of US independence, easy dates to remember. I think instruction was $8/hour and a C-150, wet, was $13. A lot of money for a student salary, but it was either that, or buy a good car. Being a geek I didn't care much about my vehicle...I wanted to learn to fly! Headphones and push-to-talk buttons belonged to pilots in crisp white dress shirts in big airplanes. It was a big advance for us to start buying and using the foam earplugs. Microphone and loudspeaker turned up to distortion were the norm. Even then SJC was busy so it was one hand on yoke, another on throttle, third hand holding the mic. It was the original airline terminal and airport office for SJC. You could go up to the observation deck on the roof of the building and have a great view of the airliners landing on 30L. At some parties we would go up there and "rate" the landings. We could play the music as loud as we wanted with no complaints! "Mile High Club" flights ran out of that terminal as well. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#20
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"MS" == Marty Shapiro writes:
MS It was the original airline terminal and airport MS office for SJC. MS You could go up to the observation deck on the roof of MS the building and have a great view of the airliners landing on MS 30L. At some parties we would go up there and "rate" the MS landings. We could play the music as loud as we wanted with MS no complaints! "Mile High Club" flights ran out of that MS terminal as well. Gee, I woulda remembered that stuff at that age. The Lockheed club operated out of some nondescript building away from most others. -- You can pretend to be serious; you can't pretend to be witty. ~ Sacha Guitry |
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