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		N13472(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 04, 2007 9:42 am    Post subject: Lakeland Fl. Newspaper story | 
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				To all what is the general feeling about these changes  at Sun n Fun.
   
   
  Published Thursday, December 28, 2006
 
  Sun 'n Fun Crowd to Get an Up-Close Look 
 By [url=javascript:NewWindow(376,130,\'/apps/pbcs.dll/personalia?ID=ricrou&category=STAFF\');]Rick  Rousos[/url]
 The Ledger
  LAKELAND - The Sun 'n Fun  Fly-In experience will improve immeasurably when the Fly-In opens its flight  line in April, at no extra charge, to all of its customers. The flight line  features the most enticing attractions.
 
 The majestic warbirds, mostly  fighter planes that date back as far as World War I, have always been one of Sun  'n Fun's most popular exhibits.
 
 The warbird area will be open to the  general public, along with "Choppertown," the vintage aircraft area and the  experimental, or homebuilt, area. The change will allow people to get closer to  planes on the runway. And because pilots tend to hang out by their planes, there  will be much more interaction between customers and pilots.
 
 Opening the  flight line was obviously a business decision for Sun 'n Fun. But Sun 'n Fun  President John Burton said it was also a common-sense decision.
 
 "Our  mission is to expose aviation to the general public," particularly children,  Burton said. "This was the way to do it."
 
 Wayne Boggs, Sun 'n Fun's  director of operations, put it another way. "If doing this attracts just one  child to a career in aviation, then it's worth it," he said.
 
 At past  Fly-Ins, only visitors who were members of the extended aviation family or the  Florida Air Museum on the Sun 'n Fun campus were given special armbands that  served as admission through the gates at the flight line, which were watched by  security guards.
 
 Or, members of the general public could take a  tractor-powered tram tour of the flight line for $3. But the tram doesn't get  people as close to the powered-off airplanes.
 
 The areas always open to  the general public included workshops, ultralights, aviation concessions, the  food court and a good, if not great, view of the daily air show.
 
 One of  the biggest gripes of people was that they couldn't get near the flight line,  with the complaints going something like this: "I'm paying all this money and  don't get to see the whole place."
 
 A general admission ticket in recent  years has gone for $30, $25 with an Experimental Aircraft Association or Air  Museum membership. Burton said ticket prices this year won't be raised. He said  there will be another incentive to attract local residents to the 2007 Fly-In,  but details haven't been finalized.
 
 There are a number of reasons Sun 'n  Fun had maintained a policy that kept the general public at a distance. The  first is safety and the second is "the belt buckle factor."
 
 Burton said  the safety concern of bigger crowds on the flight line has been about the  well-being of the public, the pilots and the airplanes.
 
 "But we've got  about 200 volunteers on the flight line," Burton said. He said those workers  will be instructed to keep customers out of danger and from getting too close to  the airplanes.
 
 That's where the belt buckle factor, sometimes known as  the suspender factor, comes in. Cockpits in airplanes can be very cool, but  quite high off the ground, and people want to see them. So they climb up on the  plane, Burton said, and scratch it with their belt buckle.
 
 The 2007  Fly-In is April 17-23.
 
 Rick Rousos can be reached at rick.rousos(at)theledger.com (rick.rousos(at)theledger.com) or  863-802-7516.
 
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  Tom Elliott  
 CJ-6 NX63727
 Sandy Valley  NV
 3L2
 702-723-1223
 
   [quote][b]
 
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		viperdoc(at)mindspring.co Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 04, 2007 10:51 am    Post subject: Lakeland Fl. Newspaper story | 
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				Well, that's special. Will they feel as open hearted after a "customer" FOD's a cockpit or the cute little 3 year "future in aviation" tears away from Momma's arms and races into a prop? Yes sir, one of those 200 volunteers will be there to catch them. 
  Set up a static display area but still cordon off the aircraft so those pilots that do not want people climbing over their planes even though they parked in the static display area. 
  I personally always enjoy shooing off the little body buiders that like to try to do chinups on my Pitot tube! Not to forget the syrupy ice cone that was dropped by Jr. on the taxiway by one of the customers allowed to wonder the flightline a recient airshow/fly-in I attended. I was thrill to find the purple and red goo under my belly after taxiing over melting pool. Of course there was also the couple that had to move out from under my wing serving as a shade tree for them so I could participate in the flyby. Guess they were not to happy either when they moved their lawn chairs to  rear of the airplane directly into the prop blast when the engine started. They were warned by the "volunteers" though. 
  I know, "Doc, your are being so "customer" unfriendly." Well it is my liablity insurance that will looked at by the lawyers looking for those with "deep pockets" when someone gets hurt by my airplane too.
  Doc
   
  
 
   
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