Airports Posts

AirVenture Begins with Proactive Effort to Stop Privatized ATC
July 24, 2017

AirVenture Begins with Proactive Effort to Stop Privatized ATC

Almost everywhere you turn among the hundreds of acres of airplanes and lovers of aviation are subtle (and no so subtle) signs that make it clear that the best way to improve the US Air Traffic Control (ATC) system is to “Modernize, Not Privat…
Quiet Skies: A General Aviation Transect of Canada
July 20, 2017

Quiet Skies: A General Aviation Transect of Canada

On the eve of the Congressional vote to privatize the US air traffic control system, I made an informal, unscientific general aviation study of a nation—Canada—that privatized its system in 1996, when Transport Canada sold its air traffic control an…
Artificial Intelligence: The Perfect Pilot?
June 19, 2017

Artificial Intelligence: The Perfect Pilot?

On the eve of the Paris Air Show, Boeing announced its next step in developing an autonomous airliner. With artificial intelligence (AI) making the decisions of a perfect pilot, said a number of different sources who covered the Boeing media session…
Why America Reallocates Public-Use Airports
May 23, 2017

Why America Reallocates Public-Use Airports

Public use airports are an essential (and underappreciated) component of America’s infrastructure. The current total, provided by the the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, counts 5,145 public use aerodromes. What’s really interesting …
Privatized ATC May Solve Pilot Shortage
May 8, 2017

Privatized ATC May Solve Pilot Shortage

This headline isn’t as strange as it sounds when you consider that the airlines are the leading promoters and supporters of privatizing air traffic control, and that the managers have often been at odds with the laborers (like pilots). Mix thi…
When Pilots Back Themselves Into a Corner
May 6, 2017

When Pilots Back Themselves Into a Corner

When Pilots Back Themselves into a CornerWhen I was still writing for AOPA Pilot, Turbine Edition Editor Tom Horne always surprised me with his relentless interest in some of the funny and strange things I’ve experienced in my career as a pr…
Quality or Quantity: How Do You Assess Your Flying Life?
April 24, 2017

Quality or Quantity: How Do You Assess Your Flying Life?

As a word merchant, I’ve learned a lot by reading obituaries because the good ones succinctly review a life by sharing its telling accomplishments, whether the subject’s notoriety is universal or unknown. The really good ones interview t…
The Reality of General Aviation Nostalgia
April 10, 2017

The Reality of General Aviation Nostalgia

Basking in the warm breezes of Wisconsin’s first coat-free day of spring, I suffered a pang of aviation desire. It would be a nice day for any general aviation pilot to go flying. But in the hemisphere that surrounds my deck the only sights an…
2020: General Aviation’s Coffin Corner?
March 13, 2017

2020: General Aviation’s Coffin Corner?

In aviation “coffin corner” is where bad things come together. I learned the term long ago, reading about the U-2, in Francis Gary Power’s book, if I remember correctly. When flying at the upper edge of its envelope, a single digit…
The Few. The Proud. The New Student Pilots
Feb. 27, 2017

The Few. The Proud. The New Student Pilots

On the road to our favorite brewpub for date night I noticed a new billboard for the U.S. Marine Corps: “We don’t accept applications. Only commitments.” The smallest member of America’s armed forces, it meets its recruitment…
Same Plane, New Name & Accomplishments
Feb. 13, 2017

Same Plane, New Name & Accomplishments

Exploring the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center, I saw this blood red P-51C hanging from the ceiling, and I immediately knew that this plane had to be Paul Mantz’s Bendix air racer that finished first in 1946, and ag…
The FAA Lost Me at “Innovative Solution”
Feb. 6, 2017

The FAA Lost Me at “Innovative Solution”

I was really starting to like the FAA the past few years, what with the Part 23 rewrite and passage if 3rd Class Medical reform. I saw them as more of a kinder, gentler agency … more let’s all work together for the greater good and that …
Airport Archeology & Airport Infrastructure
Dec. 18, 2016

Airport Archeology & Airport Infrastructure

On the cool, gray morning I parked before the terminal at the Alliance Municipal Airport (AIA) in northwestern Nebraska, I didn’t expect my airport archeology effort to be a lesson about the airport infrastructure that serves the nation today.…
Seeing the Future of Aviation in the Past
Nov. 20, 2016

Seeing the Future of Aviation in the Past

With its back to the coastal mountains of Oregon, the world’s largest free span wooden hangar sleeps like a giant on green grass under a rusty blanket of tin. Known as NAS Tillamook Hangar B, it is the sole survivor of the 17 wooden hangars t…
Casper: Airport Appreciation Past & Present
Nov. 6, 2016

Casper: Airport Appreciation Past & Present

Working my way home on US 20, about 10 miles outside of Casper, Wyoming, I approached the entrance to the Natrona County International Airport. For a moment I debated making the left turn because nearly all of the airports I’d visited in the p…
Curiosity Quest: The FAA Cargo Focus Team
Oct. 24, 2016

Curiosity Quest: The FAA Cargo Focus Team

To keep up with the FAA, I subscribe to the news feeds for most of its branches. The other day, the Flight Standards Service (AFS) sent me notice of a draft policy document, and its subject, updated air cargo definitions and abbreviations caught my…
Overwhelmed at Planes of Fame Air Museum
Oct. 9, 2016

Overwhelmed at Planes of Fame Air Museum

There is no other way to put it. The Planes of Fame Air Museum overwhelmed me. Drowning in the aviation history it showcases, and the aviation provenance of the airport in Chino, California, where it presents it, I don’t know where to start th…
EAA Chapter 1158 Goes Old School With Dead Reckoning Navigation Challenge
Sept. 25, 2016

EAA Chapter 1158 Goes Old School With Dead Reckoning Navigation Challenge

The meeting room at the EAA Chapter 1158 hangar on the West Bend (Wisconsin) Municipal Airport (ETB) bubbled with eager anticipation, and a little bit of anxiety, before the briefing for its rain-postponed Navigation Challenge (see Fly-In to Challen…
Aircraft Storage: Kingman Airport’s Legacy
Sept. 12, 2016

Aircraft Storage: Kingman Airport’s Legacy

Following the airport signs posted along the historic path of Route 66 added some welcome surprises on the journey from Chicago to Santa Monica, but several airports were predetermined destinations. One of them was Arizona’s Kingman Airport (I…
Fly-In to Challenge Flying Fundamentals
Sept. 6, 2016

Fly-In to Challenge Flying Fundamentals

If you are confident in your proficiency in flying fundamentals and are willing to put it to the test, consider a cross-country flight to the West Bend (WI) Municipal Airport (ETB) this coming Saturday, September 10, for Kettle Moraine EAA Chapter 1…
Oklahoma Small-town Promotes Aviation
Aug. 29, 2016

Oklahoma Small-town Promotes Aviation

The last thing I expected to find on the historic route of US 66 at the edge of the small town of Weatherford, population 10,833 (according to the 2010 census), in western Oklahoma was not only a first-rate air and space museum, but one affiliated w…
US 66 Surprises: Heritage In Flight Museum
Aug. 19, 2016

US 66 Surprises: Heritage In Flight Museum

On a journey from Chicago, Illinois, to Santa Monica, California, that followed the historic route of what was US Route 66, I kept my promise to heed the little green signs I passed that pointed toward small town airports. Riding down the curving dr…
Back Corners: EAA AirVenture Encore
July 30, 2016

Back Corners: EAA AirVenture Encore

The EAA AirVenture grounds on the Wittman Regional Airport cover a vast area. It is a hike and a half to reach its back corners, but it is worth it because it is where the interesting airplanes seems to be. Take this skeletal Cub-like airplane made …
Hump Day: EAA AirVenture Part 2
July 27, 2016

Hump Day: EAA AirVenture Part 2

When Mother Nature cooperates, Wednesday is traditionally the day that those who arrived at EAA AirVenture last weekend leave town, and those who will go home this coming weekend arrive. That sort of happened today, but Mom’s rainy tantrum dem…