Born and educated in New York,he is a mechanical engineer,and was commissioned Second Lieutenant, US Air Force in 1964; h then earned an MSc in aerospace engineering. He has taught at the USAF Academy, served in Thailand and UK, and later was responsible for developing and executing the total support program for the F-1117 Stealth Fighter. (No jokes about Air Canada not being visible!)
Before joining Air Canada, Robin was with Control Data, heading up a Program Management Division.
Friday 24 July 1998
Drawn by Montreal's high-quality, multi-lingual work force, Air
France announced yesterday it will set up a new call centre in the
city to field its North American calls. 70 new jobs.
Wednesday Night #856
Most of Wednesday evening July 29, 1998 was taken up with Aviation, a subject close to the heart of the House and also of two welcome new participants, J. Robin Wohnsigl, VP Technical Operations of Air Canada and Carroll McCormick, a freelance writer on business and technical subjects, particularly air traffic control.
The evening began with a most complete and amusing video of aviation from the Tigger Moth to the 747 from the P51 to Stealth Bomber showing most of the aircraft captained by our guest Robin Wobnsigl in the USAF and/or our Host and chair David Nicholson in the RCAF and TCA.
[these videos, shown on Wednesday nights, are compiled for the evening from the over 5000 hours of tapes collected over the last ten years, on almost any subject, and copies can be made for use in schools etc.]
In this video we saw "The joy of flying in an Airline makes one want to buy an aircraft." Time sharing fuels jet sales Bombardier, Buffett players in market where firms, the wealthy buy part of private plane.
The heady growth of "time-sharing" programs that allow companies and wealthy individuals to buy only part of a private jet is helping fuel a boom in business aircraft sales, pitting Bombardier Inc. against U.S. tycoon Warren Buffett.
The Stealth Bomber
An interesting discussion took place on unclassified information relating to the Stealth Bomber. This aircraft derives its stealthiness from its material as opposed to its shape. For this reason any water or condensation on its exterior renders it visible to radar. The stealth fighter on the other hand, is invisible to radar by virtue of its shape and its stealthiness is hence unaffected by water.
Mirabel
Mirabel was built following a geometric projection of air traffic growth which never materialized. The oil crisis of the early 70's also contributed to a decline in international air traffic as costs rose to airlines and therefore to passengers. Frequencies diminished just as Mirabel came on-stream. Mirabel was also built at a time when new airports were being located far from city centres (i.e. Narita, Sao Paulo, Dallas-Fort Worth). This was in line with the need to lower noise levels in dormitory areas, although the greatest noise was generated by the older generation aircraft, not the new jumbos which were being introduced. Remote airports also allow for 24-hour operation which is particularly advantageous for all-cargo (freighter) aircraft. Today, however, close to 80% of cargo travels in bellies and on combi aircraft.
Unfortunately, neither the planned phasing in of connecting flights at Mirabel nor the high speed link with Dorval ever took place and Mirabel remained an unfulfilled promise as a total airport. Even if the high speed link had materialized, it is unlikely that it would have been popular with travellers who would have been forced to transfer from plane to bus or train and back to plane. It was almost inevitable that scheduled traffic be consolidated at one airport. The question is, is Dorval the right airport?
Montréal and Toronto are superb hubs for the Great Circle routes to the east, and Air Canada is eager to exploit this geographic advantage. Although thanks to the open skies policies, Montréal is poised to benefit from this advantage, it does not unfortunately, have sufficient originating and destination traffic unless it can feed in U.S. connecting passengers who require a full range of European destinations. "Open Skies" hasn't happened yet.
The Canadian government, in an effort to maintain the viability of both major Canadian carriers, has erected legislative barriers to achieving this. There appears to be a worry that Air Canada will swallow Canadian, but this would be detrimental to service. Despite the frequency of mega-mergers and strategic alliances in the air transportation industry, Canada should maintain two carriers in the interest of maintaining healthy competition.
Reported Problems with the Boeing 737:
We know that the plane stalled and spun, but as yet we cannot say with any certainty that this was the result of a faulty rudder. The search for the cause continues.
ATS and the Vienna Air Traffic Control Tower simulator:
ATS is a St-Bruno company that produces air traffic control simulators that provides a three hundred and sixty degree replication of conditions in an actual control tower. It can simulate up to 120 aircraft movements per hour, was produced for Vienna originally in 1994 and updated recently. The simulator can be used to train air traffic controllers without slowing down the operation of the tower or compromising safety. After training on the simulator, the controllers are prepared to work with a minimum of additional supervision, saving time while improving safety.
Unfortunately ATS is currently in debt under bankruptcy protection and has until August to present a restructuring plan. The calibre of their employees is so high that it is unlikely that many will still be without alternative employment even if such a plan is successfully presented on schedule. One of the major problems with the company is the need to tailor each simulator to meet the needs of the individual
customer. Very little if anything can be reused in another application.
Training Air Traffic Controllers In Virtual Airports by our guest Carroll McCormick, M.A.Communications Independent journalist
Burma and the World Court.
Should world democracies take a stand against the internal problems of a sovereign state?
The answer is a definite yes!
In the case of Burma, Canada has joined many nations in deploring the treatment of Aung San Suu Kyi. She was, after all, elected by 80% of the voters in an election whose results were over-turned by the military junta. The Government-in-exile resides in Washington. Democracy is a popular concept among the people of Burma. Canada and the U.S. have boycotts in place. It is the duty of human rights organizations such as the International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development to speak out against injustices.
Do see Warren Allmand ( on Myanmar ) Burma problem.