Sudbury Airport satellite view
📍 Sudbury⬆ 1,141 ft2 runways
CYSB · YSB

Sudbury Airport

46.62500°N
-80.79890°W
ARR / DAY
23
14.1%
DEP / DAY
27
2.6%
ON-TIME
schedules pending
AVG DELAY
7d window

Sudbury Airport (CYSB/YSB) is a medium international airport located in Sudbury, Canada. It features 2 runways with the longest being 6,600 feet. SkyMeter has observed roughly 23 arrivals and 27 departures per day on average over the last 7 days, served by 13 carriers across 10 routes. The most active carrier is Perimeter Aviation (PAG). The busiest route is to Thunder Bay Airport (CYQT).

Current weather

Latest METAR observation

52m ago
Temp
79°F
Wind
11 kts
220°
Visib
10+ km
Ceil
METAR CYSB 072300Z 22011KT 20SM FEW160 BKN220 26/16 A3002 RMK AC2CI5 SLP166 DENSITY ALT 2600FT

Destination network

Great-circle routes from CYSB · last 7d

11 destinations
Live destinations · drag to pan · scroll to zoom

Hourly traffic

Avg movements per hour · local time · last 30 days

12a 1a 2a 3a 4a 5a 6a 7a 8a 9a 10a 11a 12p 1p 2p 3p 4p 5p 6p 7p 8p 9p 10p 11p

Top routes

Click any segment for full inspection

Route Operator Flights Avg enroute
YSBYYZ
Toronto, CA
Jazz Aviation 27 0h 48m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
Perimeter Aviation 22 2h 3m
YSBYHM
Hamilton, CA
Central Mountain AIR 6 2h 21m
YSBYYC
Calgary, CA
Westjet Airlines 6 3h 26m
YSBYOW
Ottawa, CA
PTR 6 0h 51m
YSBYTZ
Toronto, CA
JET Freighters 6 0h 59m
YSBYOW
Ottawa, CA
Propair 5 0h 58m
YSBYTZ
Toronto, CA
CFW 5 2h 1m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
CFW 3 2h 1m
YSBYOW
Ottawa, CA
CFW 3 1h 54m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
Ornge AIR 3 2h 0m
YSBCSL8
Bromma AIR Maintenance AB 2 0h 7m
YSBYXL
Sioux Lookout, CA
Ornge AIR 2 7h 47m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
Centrafric'Air S.A. 2 2h 59m
YSBYHM
Hamilton, CA
HTT 2 4h 4m
YSBCNC5
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (McClellan 2 0h 14m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
Flight Inspection Center of the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China 2 3h 22m
YSBYQT
Thunder Bay, CA
JET Freighters 2 3h 50m
YSBYGK
Kingston, CA
CFW 2 2h 28m
YSBYXL
Sioux Lookout, CA
JET Freighters 2 3h 18m

Pilot & community notes

8 comments from OurAirports — click to expand

8
Anonymous
11/11/2010
re: Whitewater Lake Sudbury Aviation
John and Pearl McMahon were my aunt and uncle. My name is Ronda Mackwood nee Makela. My mothers father was also part owner of Sudbury Aviation with his brother John. My father owns Lauzon Aviation on Lake Lauzon in Algoma Mills.
Anonymous
06/30/2009
Whitewater Lake Sudbury Aviation
I grew up maybe a mile from Sudbury Aviation. As a kid in the early sixties I hung around there a lot. My cousin Ray (Romain) Labine was an instructor at Sudbury Aviation. Unfortunately when Charlie went in he brought 3 other guys with him. He took off in snow showers lost VFR and flew into the ice at Scotia Lake. My first ride ever in a plane was with my uncle Ray Labine in one of those Fleet Canucks that was probably around 1960. I obtained my licence in 1974 at Muskoka airport, I went on to get my multi-IFR and commercial and flew for Shell as the aviation sales manager out of Montreal. When you were flying out of Whitewater the business was owned by John and Pearl McMahon. Both are now passed away. John of Alzheimer's and Pearl of a stroke. My parents new them well. I dropped by Sudbury Aviation last week to say hello. I now live in BC and fly a Cessna 182. Sudbury Aviation now uses two DHC-2's (Beaver) and one Cessna-185 for charters and a Cessna 172 for instruction. The business has been owned by Margaret Watson-Hyland for probably the last 25 years.
Anonymous
05/21/2009
Learning to fly at Sudbury Aviation - 1967.
I learned to fly at Sudbury Aviation during the summer of 1967. At the time I was sixteen years of age. The air service had five Fleet 80s (Fleet Canucks) Some of the registrations that I remember are CF-DYX, CF-HOU, & Cf-ENQ. My father, Doug Calver, was a forestry pilot at the time (MNR) based at Parry Sound. We had just moved from Chapleau that spring. My log book says that I soloed with five hours and 40 minutes. It says that it was the Chief Pilot, Charlie Armstrong who was my instructor on that flight. It was also he who took me on my final fight test for the flight part of the license requirements. We were taking off out of Whitewater Lake and there was a thud, and the engine started to run roughly. I just put it back on the water and we coasted to a stop with the engine running at about 1700 RPM. We shut the engine off and Charlie got out onto the float and opened the cowling. He looked the engine over and commented that the crankcase was cracked. He spun the prop and the engine restarted. We headed back to the dock. We completed the balance of the flight test later in the day in another airplane. He was killed a few years later in a crash in a Cessna 180 (CF-MEO) during the winter time. Since that time I have had the pleasure of flying with my father, and my brother who learned to fly in Parry Sound at Georgian Bay Airways in 1969. We have had the privilege of owning three different types of airplanes: 1961 Piper Comanche 180, 1975 Beech F33A (gorgeous!!!) and a 1976 Cessna Skyhawk 180. They are all gone now. Wasn't flying them enough because of secular commitments and now who can really afford it anyway! But I have many pleasant memories to recall. My father is now 84 years of age and still in good health. If I still had any one of these airplanes, I'd still give him the left seat. Thanks for listening, Dave Calver Now in North Carolina
Anonymous
04/28/2009
Sudbury Airport
Roland a joke seriously,Don't go see that guy
bcrosby
03/12/2009
Restaurant?
I'm planning a flight for this weekend to YSB. I will take the notes below in consideration when parking the aircraft. Just a quick question. Is there a restaurant in the terminal?
Tony
08/05/2007
Landing Fee
It is a small world - I stopped in Rockliffe today for a burger and started talking to someone. It turned out that Roland is the President & CFI of Eagle Flight Centre in Sudbury. He told me that what I was charged in Sudbury was the terminal parking fee, but there is no landing fee. He said that if we visit, we should park at his Flight Centre, he does not charge a parking fee. He welcomes visitors, his 100LL is cheaper than the main FBO and he will sell fuel to transients. Finally, if you know of any flight instructors looking for work, he needs instructors at his schools in Sudbury and Timmons for both wheels and floats.
david
07/27/2007
re: Landing Fee
I think Tony's right -- the landing fee is keeping away GA traffic. I've always chosen North Bay (YYB) instead of Sudbury (YSB) as a fuel stop, since it has no landing fee, and no ramp fee for a short stop. YYB is also a very short drive from downtown North Bay, while YSB is a long way out of town.
Tony
07/25/2007
Landing Fee
Was charged a landing fee for a short stop when flying a Hope Air mission. It was a very quiet airport, I wonder if the fees were a reason?
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