Mr. Sweetie's Website

The unofficial and tongue-in-cheek website for general aviation in the tri-state area of Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin.

 

Home Page

Last update May 24, 2008 ...check back for improvements and updates!

 

Site Links

Home

Planning WX

VAD winds

Winds Aloft

 IAPs & Airports

Map Symbols

Prog Charts

NOTAMS

NOTAM Glossary

Other Links

http://www.faasafety.gov

http://www.DUATS.com

http://www.nws.noaa.gov/

 

The website's primary goal is to "pre-Google" some local interest aviation sites for general aviation pilots in the Tri-State area plus provide pertinent information about general aviation.

SOMETHING TO KEEP IN MIND: You may like your airplane...your airplane does not like you.

DID YOU KNOW OR DO YOU CARE?:  You have until March 31, 2010, to replace your cardboard pilot certificate with the new, tamper-resistant plastic laminated version.  The cost to do it now is $2.00.  If the proposed FAA funding bill passes as it's written, it won't include user fees but the fee for a new certificate will increase to $25.00.  FAA website

SOMETHING TO ENGAGE YOUR MIND:  Any group of pilots will contain that one person who commands center stage only to tell you how many whiskers Charles Lindbergh had on his left cheek. Now, maybe that's talking aviation, but it's a painful stretch.  Here's a real aviation related question for you:

What common FAR has a specific calendar day expiration limit as opposed to the more common "end of the month, XX months hence" expiration date such as those for your medical, biennial, or aircraft annual inspection?  (Click here for the answer)

CHECKLIST?  I DON'T NEED NO @*!? CHECKLIST!  The pre-take-off C.I.G.A.R. (Controls free, Instrument panel scanned and set, Gas, Attitude trim set, Run-up...or the more familiar GUMPF, are just two of the acronyms we use to remind ourselves to perform required cockpit tasks.  When we're on the ground and not moving, it's usually safe to divert your eyes from outside the aircraft to a written check list or airport diagram.  But what about those critical occasions when we're single pilot IFR or VFR and entering the pattern at an uncontrolled airport?  It's better for you (and the rest of us aviating in your vicinity) if you have a few mind-jogging acronyms developed for your airplane so you can keep your eyes scanning the needles in the IFR scenario or looking outside in VFR conditions.

HELP WITH THE CROSSWIND GO / NO GO.  How many times do you get the ASOS winds, "270 @ 12, peak gusts 24,...." as you're setting up to land on Runway 31.  Now, are you really going to whip out that crosswind component chart (you know the one with all the arcs, lines, and little teeny numbers along the edges) or are you going to do it like most of us, attempt the landing on Three-One by the Braille method and hope for the best?   How about something in between? Have a look at Mr. Sweetie's Simplified X-Wind Approximator, the product of a misspent technical education. Note: This is not intended for your flight bag, it's intended to go between your ears as a quick memory tool for calculating a working crosswind component using three simple rules. (Crosswind Memory Tool)           

ELT UPDATE.   After February 1, 2009, your 121.5 MHz ELT signal will not be monitored by satellite.  Unless you've upgraded recently, most of us still have that original orange box back there in the fuselage somewhere and, while that 121.5 MHz unit will keep you legal after that date, it will lose considerably more of its already limited effectiveness.  For more information, (click here)  

GPS SELECTIVE AVAILABILITY. New U.S. satellites being launched aren't designed to have their signals degraded by the Pentagon as were earlier units. Since 2000, the US military has ceased to degrade navigation satellite signals.  The reasons are several.  First, other countries have similar satellite constellations in place and the technology to access them has been available on the worldwide market for some time.  Turning off US satellites to disrupt guidance of hostile mischief simply wouldn't be as effective today.  Second, the FAA is implementing a GPS-dependent program to either scale down or eliminate ATC radar installations.  The goal is to have Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast equipment, ADS-B, replace many of today's radar installations.  ADS-B will depend on an on-board transponder that allows each aircraft to locate itself using GPS and then broadcast its position, speed, vertical speed, and aircraft ID to ground controllers and other airborne receivers.         

FSS BRIEFINGS.  The ultimate goal was to reduce the number of  Flight Service Stations from 58 down to 17 and that goal was reached December 22, 2007.  Of those seventeen remaining, three are in Alaska, one is in Puerto Rico, and one is in Hawaii.  One day we're going to have to accept lower-cost DUAT-style briefings, which are accessible now but, well, not something most of us are familiar with...and aren't about to get familiar with until it's forced on us.  The nudging has started.  For more information, click these links. http://www.afss.com/ or Then & Now

ON THIS PAGE       

Planning a local flight and need an airport identifier?  Click the little red button on the right for ASOS information by state.  It lists most airports with ASOS or AWOS observation equipment along with its identifier.  With the identifier found, click the "Calculators" button, and that website link will provide you with a "Distance Calculator" between any combination of two airports or navaids.

Check the Event Calendar page frequently to find places to fly that aluminum Wichita Buick of yours straight and level and eat pancakes in some smoke-filled hangar.  The site page links out to aviation event calendars as well as to ASOS information for Iowa, Wisconsin, and Illinois.

 

 

 

Test Questions

Event Calendar

Fuel Prices

All ASOS/AWOS

Flight Physicals

State of Iowa

ASOS Info

State of Wisconsin

ASOS Info

State of Illinois

ASOS Info

Distance between Airports

Calculators

For all you kids out there, don't try this one at home.

Video Clip

Flared out a little high there, Francois?

Video Clip

 

 

 

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