Over 200 Operations Per Hour Recorded By Temporary Control
Tower
Organizers of the U.S. Sport Aviation Expo at Sebring say that
they had record attendance for at least part of the four-day run of
the show. No official attendance figures have been announced, but a
headline from their blog dated Saturday proclaims "EXPO Breaks All
Attendance Records." Mike Willingham, Sebring Regional Airport
Director, said "This is the best attendance we've ever had on a
Thursday. And, we expect to break attendance records every day this
year." Over 300 people attended the annual LAMA dinner Thursday
night.
2010 Photo

The organizers also say they had a very busy Friday in terms of
airplane movements. Bert Simpson, FAA Staff Manager, North Florida
District, said “There were 1091 operations Friday. More than
any airport in the state of Florida. There were over 200 operations
in the first two hours on Saturday alone. That’s the same as
Atlanta Hartsfield or Chicago O’ Hare.” Simpson said
later that the airport became, for a time, the busiest in the
country, based solely on airplane movements.
Aero-Analysis
While the claim of record attendance figures may or may not
stand up, the feel of the show did not seem to be as busy as had
been noted in years past. Some exhibitors did seem to have fairly
good foot traffic, and several people looking at the various
aircraft and associated equipment. From personal observation, which
we'll admit is far from scientific, it just seemed like the Expo
had lost some of the momentum it had achieved last year.
There were no significant new product announcements made at
Sebring this year. Perhaps the comparison to previous years is
unfair because of the major announcements on the part of Piper for
the now-defunct Piper Sport were made at the Sebring show ...
introducing the plane in 2010 and the first delivery in 2011. But
overall, and we realize this is very subjective, it felt like there
were fewer people walking the airport grounds on the Friday and
Saturday we were in attendance.
The good news is, there was a significant amount of demo flying
going on. The Calidus autogyro flew nearly constantly through the
day on Saturday, as did the Pipistrel Virus, Kitfox, and several
others. And vendors we spoke to seemed to indicate they were having
a good show, though some were concerned about price increases for
their booth spaces. Still, with most of the airplanes that do not
come with the caveat "some assembly required" ringing the cash
register in the $85,000 to $150,000 range, the role of the LSA as
an entry-level aircraft is still very much an open question in
today’s economy.
The light-sport segment of the industry needs a show like
Sebring. It may well need more than one in different parts of the
country. Trade shows can certainly be an effective way to present
products to a large group of people, and the south-central Florida
location in January should be at least something of a draw. What's
difficult to know is how yeasty is the audience attending the show.
Is it an active, growing segment of pilots and potential pilots
which can help the industry rise, or is it the same
several-thousand people coming year after year because it’s a
warm place to go in January and be around airplanes? The answer may
be somewhere in the middle, but from our perspective, the
organizers, and the industry, need to be mindful that attendees
will likely quickly lose interest a show, and an industry, with
nothing much new to offer.