Truly loopy
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June Casagrande
From his earliest experiences riding in airplanes, upside down has
always seemed to make as much sense to Steve Andelin as right side up
or sideways.
“The very first airplane rides I took were with my father in his
Aronca Champ,” Andelin said. “He used to take us out to the hills and
do loops and rolls, and that’s what I thought flying was. I didn’t
think of it as straight and level.”
With that kind of introduction to flying, it’s no surprise that
Andelin became an aerobatics pilot -- a flyer trained to perform
difficult in-air maneuvers that are an airplane’s equivalent of
acrobatics. The 44-year-old Newport Beach resident is now ranked the
No. 3 aerobatics pilot in the nation. In 2001, he was No. 1.
This ranking has earned Andelin a spot on the U.S. Aerobatics
Team, which will compete against 14 other countries in Lakeland,
Fla., June 25 to July 4.
The 33-year-old competition, put on once every two years by the
International Aerobatics Club, starts with a qualifying round in
which each pilot from each country takes turns flying maneuvers
predetermined by the club. Then, the pilots get to fly maneuvers that
they choreographed for themselves in advance.
Then comes the hard part -- the routines pilots don’t know about
until the judges give them a sheet of paper describing the routine
the night before.
“No one gets a chance to fly it in advance,” Andelin said.
“Everyone’s time with that routine is their first time.”
Judges watch from the ground, where a “box” 1,000 meters by 1,000
meters is marked in white. It corresponds to the area in the air
within which pilots must perform their moves or lose points.
The moves themselves make this task so difficult. The maneuvers in
any routine could include loops in which pilots must fly in a perfect
circle in the air. There are “outside loops,” in which the top of the
plane forms the outside of the circle, and “inside loops,” in which
the belly of the plane forms the circle’s outside edge.
Then, there are “rolls,” with the planes rolling side-over-side
like a dog rolling over. If that’s not scary enough, there are tail
slides. Picture a plane shooting straight up in a perfect line toward
the heavens then quickly stopping all acceleration. The plane slows
to a complete stop before beginning to fall, tail first, toward the
ground. In a momentary, precision maneuver, pilots must turn the
plane so that its nose aims straight down.
“It’s challenging,” Andelin said. “You have to work at it all the
time to stay oriented, to know where the airplane is going to end
up.”
There are only a handful of plane designs allowed in the
international competition, all of them tiny prop planes specifically
designed for aerobatics. Andelin owns his own Vivko Edge 540, which
he will fly in the competition. The Russian-made Sukhoi SU-26 and the
French Cap-232 are the other types of planes seen in the competition.
“I think we have a good chance of winning this year, we have a
good team,” Andelin said.
The U.S. men’s team has won three times in the contest’s history,
as has the U.S. women’s team.
“It’s not the adrenaline. It’s the skill of knowing you can make a
plane do exactly what you want to do that’s so addicting. It’s not
like sky-diving. That’s an adrenaline rush.”
When he wants to, Andelin can easily straighten up and fly right.
His job depends on it. The father of twin 1-year-old boys is a pilot
for American Airlines.
And while you still may think Andelin is crazy, he’s certainly not
stupid.
“My wife Sheila and I have an understanding. I can fly aerobatics
competitions, but no air shows. Now that’s dangerous.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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