Junkyard warriors
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Mike Sciacca
Ron Milligan flies planes for a living, both commercial and military.
Now -- and this would be any young kid’s fantasy -- he’s got to
scrounge around in a makeshift junkyard, looking to create the biggest,
fastest or strongest contraption with any parts he can find.
You might say he’s the proverbial kid in a candy store -- at age 38.
“Yeah, it will be a lot of fun,” Milligan said of the scavenger hunt.
“It’s definitely a game for the grown up kid in all of us”
Last week Milligan filmed an episode of The Learning Channel’s
“Junkyard Wars,” which tentatively is scheduled to air in January. The
1981 Edison High graduate, a T-29 pilot in the Air Force Reserve at
Edwards Air Force Base, is part of the “Jet Jocks” team whose other two
members include fellow pilots Dave Fedors of Palmdale and Giff Stein of
Phoenix.
All three were roommates at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs
and also at the U.S. Air Force Pilot Training Center.
Commercially, Milligan is a pilot with Delta Air Lines and Fedors and
Stein fly with American Air Lines.
All three were beginning their first day of filming Junkyard Wars
locally when terrorist attacks hit the East Coast last Tuesday. Taping
continued throughout the week, and all three were safe on the ground.
Junkyard Wars gives two teams 10 hours to see which team can create
the biggest, baddest, most thorough “whatever,” Milligan said, with parts
they can find in a junkyard.
At dawn, contestants are informed of their mission and also are
assigned an expert in the field of that day’s challenge. The clock starts
ticking and the teams race to design and build a working machine with the
parts they find.
People from different walks of life -- engineers, machinists,
soldiers, appliance repairmen, psychologists and, now, pilots have
competed.
In its first season last year, the series received an Emmy nomination.
“I saw my first episode of the show last January,” Milligan said
before he took part in the filming. “I then fired off an e-mail to both
Dave and Giff asking if they’d be interested. Both said they were up for
it. The tough part was getting an application ready and coordinating our
schedules. Once we did, we were ready to go.”
Fedors, Milligan said, found an aviation junkyard in Rosamond and
filmed their application video, which featured a one-minute introduction
of each team member. They had five minutes or less to describe how
something might work, and Fedors came up with the idea of a rap song on
how an engine is built. Milligan and Stein refined the tune a bit, and
the rappers were a hit with the folks at TLC, who then asked the Jet
Jocks to be on the show.
Out of hundreds of applicants, The Learning Channel said, eight teams
of three people from the U.S. and Canada were selected for their
mechanical skill, creativity and “crazed lust for horsepower.” Teams will
be paired off against one another to compete in a single elimination
tournament. The winners of each competition advance to the next round.
While the contestants take this competition seriously, they have a
good time in creating their final design.
“Usually, the program entails a lot of problem solving and one skill
we do need to have is welding,” said Milligan, who, in his youth,
delivered the Independent as a paperboy. “All three of us have welded in
the past and we currently are brushing up on our skills. We’re going
there to have a good time but, we want to win.”
Milligan’s game plan for the competition was simple: “Don’t reinvent
the wheel,” he said. “But Dave’s theory is to build the biggest engine
and have an automatic transmission. We have a good team bond, so I know
we’ll come up with a game plan that we all can agree on.”
The resources they have to choose from are scrap parts, from corroded
steel to rusted aluminum.
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