Mike Pohl: Making Virtual Flying Realistically Profitable
So, who said you it was
impossible to make money in aviation? Mike Pohl of
St. Paul, Minnesota is one successful entrepreneur
that found a skyrocketing career in developing
aviation flight simulation platforms. Pohl builds
recreational fighter-jet simulators ? which he calls
AeroDomes ? for about $57,000 to $75,000, using
off-the-shelf PCs and other readily available parts.
However, his success story does not come without a
history of hard work and perseverance.
Pohl remembers vividly the
feeling of driving through the security gates and
into the sprawling campus at defense industry giant
Lockheed Martin with his wife, Kristi, and
5-year-old son Charlie. The former insurance
salesman was at the wheel of a rented truck,
personally hauling two flight simulators that he had
built in less than three months in his St. Paul
garage, using just wood, fiberglass and
off-the-shelf flight simulation programs. It was the
culmination of Pohl's lengthy and aggressive journey
to get a piece, albeit a very small one, of the
mammoth defense industry?s pie.
"I felt like Jed Clampett
arriving in Beverly Hills," he vividly remembers.
Lockheed Martin bought two of
his machines in May. The price was in the low six
figures, Pohl said. When you realize that most
simulators run in the millions, that's a potentially
huge bargain for military flight trainers if the
AeroDomes prove effective.
Growing From Small Virtual Beginnings
The Lockheed Martin defense
contract is a small coup for Pohl and his tiny firm
? not that he necessarily needs the government
business to stay afloat. Pohl has been doing
profitable, if not spectacular, business renting
rides in four of his own AeroDomes to wannabe
fighter aces at a St. Paul, Minn. strip-mall
storefront he opened in 1996 and dubbed the
ACES Flight Simulation Center. Even at its low
point following Sept. 11, 2001 ? when many
associated such businesses with
terrorism-in-training ? ACES managed to clear
$1,500, Pohl said.
The AeroDomes, which get their
names from dome-shaped enclosures that serve as
panoramic projection screens, are virtually (pun
intended) scratch-built machines running software
similar to the fighter-jet games used the
run-of-the-mill PC. However, the experience is so
realistic that, Pohl claims, it provides a
significant degree of actual flight instruction. He
said he found this out for himself when he snagged a
ride on a Russian L-39 jet trainer and was able to
execute such maneuvers as a roll and a split-S with
relatively little guidance.
From The Ground Up
It
was Pohl?s interest in flight simulation that got
him hooked on aviation as a business enterprise. It
started as a hobby in 1987 when he purchased the
original version of Falcon, a PC-based flight
simulation which he still enjoys today. Then in
1992 he met some like-minded folks who would meet
once a month in the basement of fellow aviation
enthusiast, Dave Brandt. (Brandt later helped Pohl
build the simulators in use today at ACES). A key
moment came in 1993 when Pohl took a flight in an
F-16 Flight Simulator at a nearby US Air Force
base. He was astounded to see that the radar in this
$3 million dollar simulator looked exactly
like the one he was using at home in Falcon 3.0.
?This
experience really fired me up, ?he said. ?I was
elated that I could land the jet. My instructor
seemed genuinely impressed that a guy off the street
could fly and understand the systems.?
Driving home that night Pohl realized that a
successful business venture could be realized if
this episode could be bottled up to allow other
people to experience these same feelings of fun and
exhilaration. Even though running his own business
was something that he always wanted to try, Pohl
knew doing so would require a large amount of work,
not to mention risk. Nevertheless, he went for it.
Pohl's business began with an
investment of $150,000 and some power tools. After
quitting his job in the insurance industry, he began
building the first simulated cockpits out of wood
and materials. The first simulator shell was
purchased from a defunct computer company, but now
Pohl buys them directly from a fabricator in the
area. Once complete, the first machine was
stationary and the software plucked right off the
shelf, which he claims resulted in a ?mediocre?
device. But Pohl guessed that the technology would
improve dramatically, and he was right. Adamant on
reaching his goal of engaging technology, Pohl opted
to do some extensive research on the construction of
these elaborate machines. By virtue of luck, he
managed to get a tour of
the Air Force Research Lab at Wright-Patterson AFB
in Dayton Ohio in 1994.There Pohl was able to look
at some of the most secretive flight training
devices at the time.
?I felt like I had entered
the Emerald City in the Wizard of Oz,? he said.
After much research and some
good old fashioned hard work, Pohl finally opened
A.C.E.S. in St. Louis Park in 1996 but emphasize
that he wouldn?t have been able to do so without the
help of a very good friend. Pohl explains his Dave Brandt, the man who
housed the flight simulation enthusiast meetings
years ago, is a talented Electrical Engineer and
more importantly, a self-proclaimed ?flight
simulation freak.? Since the very beginning, Dave
helped Pohl with all of the electrical issues that
simply ?flew? (pun intended) over his head. Brandt
also helped him build the simulators; wire the
motion bases, brainstorm design solutions and many
other intricate details.
?ACES
would not have gotten off the ground without Dave
Brandt,? Pohl emphasized.
As time went on and his comfort
level climbed, Pohl continually upgraded the
simulators and made them motion-based, tilting or
rising with the push of the stick. He developed the
AeroDome in 2001, an enclosed cockpit in which
terrain is projected onto a concave screen. He got
the idea from a North Carolina company that makes
virtual tours for architectural simulations. The
result: a pretty realistic sense of flying, complete
with sweaty palms and jittery stomach.
Since opening in 1996, over
50,000 people have flown at A.C.E.S. and during the
winter months, the facility is typically fully
booked 2-3 weeks in advance for the coveted weekend
slots. Customers wanting to experience what it's
like to fly an FA-18 Hornet and engage in dogfights
pay $40 for training and a one-hour ride. While you
would expect groups of men playing hooky from work
(or home) to be a main staple of revenue, Pohl said
that a growing slice of his business comes from
women buying gift certificates for their spouses.
Flying Creates Teambuilding
A.C.E.S. as associated itself
with former Blue Angels pilot
Rick
Adams for its Top Gun Team Building
program. Rick is a consultant to the center on
matters "fighter pilot" and is the host of the
corporate team-building program. Adams flew 125
combat missions over North Vietnam. In his new role
at A.C.E.S., Adam exposes
corporate personnel to a whole new virtual world,
where they re forced to work together at times, and
against each other on occasion.
It?s a great way for them to
release some stress,? Pohl said. Having the boss get
shot down by a sidewinder can do wonders for
morale,? he joked.
Selling to the Big Boys
You would think Pohl would be
happy to just remain content with his successful
A.C.E.S location, but this man is ambitious and
wanted to test the waters with the defense industry.
Aside for being a resource of design ideas, Pohl?s
1994 trip to
Wright-Patterson AFB gave him the motivation to
establish a working relationship with large defense
contractors.
High-tech flight simulators
used to train this country's military pilots
often-incorporate specialized components and
software costing millions of dollars. Pohl figured
the U.S. military would be interested in his
AeroDome, so he hit up the No. 1 defense contractor
? Lockheed Martin ? in early 2002. Pohl spent 82
days in his Highland Park garage assembling the
equivalent of F-16 and F-18 fighters using wooden
and fiberglass cockpits, computer-style projectors,
high-end sound systems and $300 all-metal gaming
joysticks essentially identical to those found in
real military jets. Pohl rented a truck and, with
help from neighbors, loaded up the simulators and
bolted them to the vehicle's wooden flooring. He and
wife, Kristi, then set off, with 5-year-old son
Charlie wedged between them, on the long drive to
Florida.
"I was intimidated when the top
engineer came in to look at it; I thought he'd rip
it apart," Pohl said. Instead, the engineer smiled.
"Sweet," he said. The firm showed immediate interest
but didn't place its order until early 2003.
Nevertheless, the wait was well worth it, as the
company seemed interested in buying additional
units.
Lockheed Martin has done some
of his AeroDome marketing for him, showing off the
simulators at the Interservice/Industry Training,
Simulation and Education Conference in Orlando in
late 2003. Pohl's simulator didn't necessarily look
its best at the top military trade show. After all,
competing simulators have up to eight projectors to
the AeroDome's one, along with better computer
graphics. However, the AeroDome's key selling point
? price ? is its strong suit. That combined with a
good foundation and realistic flight controls make
it competitive with the million dollar machines used
in the military today.
Planning for the Future
As
Pohl enjoys the fruits of his success, he still sets
his sights on larger defense contracts. Not
believing in the mantra of "expand or die", Pohl has
no plans for retail expansion. ?We want to
expand the wholesale side of ACES, which
means building flight simulators for the defense
industry, the military, schools and entertainment
businesses,? he said Pohl claims he has
received a lot of interest in franchising but he is
clear to potential investors that this is ?a huge
commitment?, both fiscally and emotionally. He
claims this frank attitude eventually scares off
most of the people who talk about opening a
franchise. Nevertheless, Pohl says will be happy to
work with someone who is very serious about
starting their own flight simulation business. In
the end, it is the nature of the work that keeps
Pohl so motivated to developing his business.
?The
whole subject just thrills me...it really is a
passion,? he explained. I check the various flight
simulation web sites every day and read the flight
simulation magazines. Combining his of my main
interests - business and flight simulation - makes
it nothing like a job. It's still work, and a lot
of it, but it?s different than a job.?
Pohl
said he marvels at how someone can sit in front of a
PC and type in what looks like gibberish (computer
code), which later comes out as the gorgeous
graphics and flight models we have all grown to
love. About once a year Pohl claims to have a
nightmare where he?s woken up and discovered his
flight simulation business never really happened and
was all just a dream. But after really waking up,
Pohl always sits up in bed, smiles and says to
himself, "No, wait, it really has happened
and it's not just a dream". And I am one lucky
fellow!?See
for yourself in this week?s video feature.
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