Minute Man Air Field

[1]

Minute Man Air Field

Aerial Photo of Minute Man Air Field
IATA: noneICAO: noneFAA LID: 6B6
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner Minute Man Airfield, Inc.
Operator Don McPherson
Serves Stow
Location Stow, Massachusetts
Elevation AMSL 268 ft / 82 m
Coordinates 42°27′38″N 071°31′04″W / 42.46056°N 71.51778°W / 42.46056; -71.51778
Website www.minutemanairfield.com
Map
6B6

Location of airport in Massachusetts

Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
3/21 2,770 844 Asphalt
12/30 1,600 488 Turf/Gravel
Statistics (2009)
Aircraft operations 48,095
Based aircraft 67

Minute Man Air Field (FAA LID: 6B6) is a public-use airport located at 302 Boxboro Road, Stow, Massachusetts, United States. The airport is privately owned by Minute Man Airfield, Inc.[2]

Started as a 1700 ft grass landing strip known as Erikson Field in 1963 by local pilots, the airport was purchased by Paul McPherson in 1966. Paul and his son, Don, paved and extended the 2000 foot runway, added a parallel taxiway, tie-downs for 50 planes, installed AVGAS pumps and constructed the Operations Building. The former grass strip was re-opened as Minute Man Air Field on July 1, 1969. Paul's wife and daughter also opened a small coffee shop on the field called "Peg's Place" later on.[3]

Over the decades, the airport has added aircraft maintenance and storage hangars, a runway extension, a second "cross-wind" runway, and aircraft parking aprons. In the early 1990s, 100 acres of land, was added to the field's land holdings instead of becoming a housing development. The open space is being farmed and serves as home to many species of wildlife.[3]

Minute Man now has a 2800-foot paved-lighted-instrumented runway and a 1600-foot gravel-visual runway.

The airfield is home to more than 60 based aircraft including 3 helicopters stored in four hangars and on tie-downs along the taxi-ways and aprons. In addition to Nancy's Air Field Café, reputed as a fly-in or drive-in destination for fine food and friendly service, the airport is home to numerous other businesses.

The airport is still owned and operated by Don McPherson, and the operations are overseen by a board of Airport Commissioners. The Board is made up of local business, government, and aviation professionals who voluntarily serve as Commissioners.

Facilities and aircraft

Minute Man Air Field covers an area of 225 acres (91 ha) which contains two runways:[2]

For 12-month period ending 08/01/2009 the airport had 48,095 aircraft operations, an average of 132 per day: 99% general aviation, <1% air taxi and <1% military. There are 67 aircraft based at this airport: 60 single engine, 1 multi engine, 3 helicopters and 3 ultralight.[2]

The runway was repaved (to meet FAA required standards for safety) in the summer of 2015. The work also included removing a small hill which was a danger to people in airplanes landing from the south.[4]

Flight School

Aptis Aviation is a part 61 flight school based on Minute Man Air Field. They are the only flight school on the airport, and have been in business since November 2014 taking over after Noble Airventures left the field. They operate 5 rental planes, 3 club planes, and one simulator. The school is staffed with 2 full time instructors, and a few part time instructors. Their Chief Flight Instructor, Devan Weibe, earned the FAA Gold Seal Flight Instructor Certificate in August 2015. In addition to offering Private, instrument, and commercial instruction, Aptis Aviation can facilitate the training required to obtain the Tail Wheel and Complex aircraft endorsements. Two ground schools are run through the school, one geared towards private pilot students and one for instrument students. These classes run on request of the students provided there is enough demand.

Fleet

Rental Aircraft[5]


Aptis Access Club

References

  1. "About Us". 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 FAA Airport Master Record for 6B6 (Form 5010 PDF), retrieved 2009-12-30
  3. 1 2 "About Us". Minute Man Air field. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  4. http://minutemanairfield.com/july-2015-notam/
  5. "Private Plane Rentals". Aptis Aviation. Retrieved 25 October 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.