Aviation History Posts

What’s a Hawker?
Jan. 19, 2026

What’s a Hawker?

http://www.airliners.net/photo/Raytheon-Hawker-850XPi/1976827/LIf you follow business aviation stories, you’ve probably read about the loss of two Hawker jets – an 800XP and a 900XP – in the past two years. Both accidents evolved …
A Forest Fire at Sea – the USS Forrestal
Nov. 25, 2025

A Forest Fire at Sea – the USS Forrestal

When we record episodes of the Airplane Geeks the format is usually the same. We introduce our guest, when we have one, and then run through the four or five major aviation stories of the past week. Max and Micah and David and I offer up our opinio…
Today is 9/11 … again
Sept. 10, 2025

Today is 9/11 … again

My memory of September 11, 2001, is, at best, a blur except for the images. The scenes, however, are indelibly etched in my mind.It was a sunny morning with temperatures in the low 70s and not a cloud in the sky. A perfect day, I thought. I’d…
When WASPS took over Avenger Field
April 7, 2025

When WASPS took over Avenger Field

I enjoyed Pam Leblanc’s story when I read it in another magazine. I asked, and she graciously allowed us to reprint it here. Enjoy – RM______________________________By Pam LeBlancThey had to cinch up the waistbands of their oversized,…
Does Airline Safety Correlate with a Diverse Pilot Population?
Feb. 25, 2025

Does Airline Safety Correlate with a Diverse Pilot Population?

Capt. BeattyA disinformation campaign falsely links “DEI” to airline accidents – let’s check the facts.By Capt. Jenny BeattyThere is no extant literature examining this question, so I accessed various sources to compile available data. I research…
An Upwind Battle for Women Pilots
Dec. 11, 2024

An Upwind Battle for Women Pilots

In the BeginningIt was the afternoon of November 2, 1929, when a group of women pilots first gathered at Curtiss Field in Valley Stream, Long Island, New York. That meeting became the impetus for what became known as the Ninety-Nines, Inc., the Int…
The Boeing Strike Is Just Another Symptom
Oct. 29, 2024

The Boeing Strike Is Just Another Symptom

The past decade has not been kind to Boeing.737 MAX 8Until 2018, America’s premier aircraft builder appeared extremely successful if money was the only assessment. Boeing also had a solid defense business with billions in military contracts in add…
Remembering My First Airplane Ride
Sept. 17, 2024

Remembering My First Airplane Ride

Bell 47Do you remember your first flight? I know I do. That image of a 12-year-old me climbing into the right seat of an old Bell 47 helicopter at Greater Rockford Airport in 1963 is indelibly etched into my brain. I even remember the pi…
Remembering Gordon Baxter: Bax Seat was a Flying Magazine Reader Favorite
Aug. 19, 2024

Remembering Gordon Baxter: Bax Seat was a Flying Magazine Reader Favorite

(Reposted by request)Each time I stand near my desk, my eyes naturally focus on the framed cover of the August 1983 Flying magazine. Below it is page 100, the “I Learned About Flying from That” (ILAFFT), where my first column appeared. On i…
AirVenture Preflight: Go/No-Go 2024
July 22, 2024

AirVenture Preflight: Go/No-Go 2024

Making a pragmatic go/no-go decision is the goal of preflight preparation. Regardless the destination or activity one must weigh all the participating variables. These can change because life is dynamic and our goals, priorities, and individual capa…
What Makes an Ace in the 21st Century?
Feb. 18, 2024

What Makes an Ace in the 21st Century?

When it was revealed in a BBC interview, The Fighter Pilots Hunting Houthi Drones Over the Red Sea, that Marine Captain Earl Ehrhart, an AV-8B Harrier pilot aboard the USS Bataan, had downed seven drones, subsequent stories on this action hailed him…
Mechanical Drawing: The Art of Aviation Engineering
Sept. 4, 2023

Mechanical Drawing: The Art of Aviation Engineering

Guided by triangles and French curves, pencil applied to paper is how ideas made the transition to all things aviation. Mechanical drawing was its moniker and the artists who precisely lined each part of some aeronautical creation so hands-on crafts…
Thunderbird, Final Piston Bendix Trophy Race Winner
Aug. 10, 2023

Thunderbird, Final Piston Bendix Trophy Race Winner

Wandering among the flying machines that carpet the Oshkosh acreage during EAA AirVenture 2023, nothing of interest caught my eye until it spied an immaculate blue P-51C Mustang. On its flawless flanks, in sunshine-yellow letters was its name, Thund…
EAA AirVenture 2023: Change is the Only Constant
July 30, 2023

EAA AirVenture 2023: Change is the Only Constant

In decades past, back when its moniker matched its location, one of Oshkosh’s primary draws was learning about new products and programs that their creators debuted on aviation’s primary stage, where an eager audience hungrily consumed e…
Airlines Make Price Pitch for More Legroom, but Will it Last?
May 29, 2023

Airlines Make Price Pitch for More Legroom, but Will it Last?

Is it coincidence that after decades of shrinking seat pitch (that ever-narrowing gap where your legs are supposed to go in coach), that the airlines have so thoroughly alienated people that they can now shrink coach to expand the space in the front…
Single-Pilot Point of Failure
May 1, 2023

Single-Pilot Point of Failure

Given the capable reliability of aviation technology today, in the realm of a perfect world, single-pilots flying people-carrying commercial and military aircraft seems a logical hypothetical possibility.To prove the reality of this possibility, th…
Airline Fees = Ticket Tax Avoidance
March 6, 2023

Airline Fees = Ticket Tax Avoidance

During the State of the Union Address, President Joe Biden said he wanted to crack down on airline “junk fees” that airlines added to their ticket prices. Given the motivation for the ever expanding menu of these fees, I’m not hold…
Aerostats: A Stratospheric Gulf of Tonkin?
Feb. 20, 2023

Aerostats: A Stratospheric Gulf of Tonkin?

The recent political and military focus on aerostats—balloons—and the resulting cyclone of incomplete communication of verifiable concrete details, the confusion resulting from people demonstrating that they possess no knowledge or understanding of …
Celebrating Ernie Gann’s Typewriter on His Birthday
Oct. 17, 2022

Celebrating Ernie Gann’s Typewriter on His Birthday

When I returned home from the EAA Aviation Museum to start writing this I discovered that today, October 13, 2022, is Ernest K. Gann’s 112th birthday. This is significant because he owned the subject of my photo session, an Olivetti Lettra 22 …
Recommended Reading: Rinker Buck’s Flight of Passage
Sept. 5, 2022

Recommended Reading: Rinker Buck’s Flight of Passage

Published in 1997, Rinker Buck let the memories of his cross-country flight from New Jersey to California in a 1946 Piper PA-11 age for 30 years before sharing them in Flight of Passage. Like a fine single-malt whisky, time has refined the raw spiri…
Words Versus Military Tuskegee Top Gun Actions
Aug. 22, 2022

Words Versus Military Tuskegee Top Gun Actions

President Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9981 on July 26, 1948. It mandated the desegregation of the US military. Truman stood firm in the face of pushback from politicians and military officers of all ranks from all branches who opposed an int…
Wings Set Aviation Movie Standard in 1927
Aug. 8, 2022

Wings Set Aviation Movie Standard in 1927

Much has been made of the actors portraying naval aviators in Top Gun: Maverick being filmed in the aft seat of an F-18 Super Hornet to capture the sagging distortion of real-life g-forces. Compare that to the challenges faced by Charles “Budd…
Egrett & Perlan 2, AirVenture’s High Flyers
July 27, 2022

Egrett & Perlan 2, AirVenture’s High Flyers

Attracted to unusual and unknown aircraft, I walked past the record-setting Airbus Perlan 2 stretching its 84-foot wingspan across AirVenture’s Boeing Plaza to find out what the large, white turboprop was and why its fuselage was a series of l…
Don’t Pass the Historic Wendover Airfield By
July 11, 2022

Don’t Pass the Historic Wendover Airfield By

During World War II the US military carved thousands of airfields into the American landscape. Of the hundreds that still serve our aerial infrastructure, few maintain a general connection to their original mission. An exception might be Utah’…