Aviation Marketing Posts

Cessna’s Skycatcher … Caught!
Sept. 13, 2010

Cessna’s Skycatcher … Caught!

Cessna’s new 162 Skycatcher has begun rolling out of the assembly hangar at Wichita’s Yingling Aviation across the ramp from Cessna’s mothership factory complex. Cessna expects to deliver about 50 of the Special Light Sport Aircraf…
Flight Training’s Future Needs Unified Plan
Sept. 6, 2010

Flight Training’s Future Needs Unified Plan

When it comes to the future of flight training in America, I have some good news, and some not so good news. The good news is that given the attendance at the panel discussion of this subject, held the Saturday of EAA AirVenture, flight instructors…
NextGen Success Hinges on Showing Big Picture Integration
Aug. 27, 2010

NextGen Success Hinges on Showing Big Picture Integration

Like many pilots, I still haven’t gotten my head around all the details related to the Next Generation National Airspace System. EAA AirVenture Oshkosh, I figured, would be the perfect place to learn more about its components, like ADS-B, the …
Does the Aviation Industry Really Care About Pilot Population Growth?
Aug. 6, 2010

Does the Aviation Industry Really Care About Pilot Population Growth?

Given the underwhelming participation at an 1130  panel discussion about the subject the Saturday of AirVenture Oshkosh, the general answer must be a big, boldfaced NO.For the discussion of  How to Grow the Pilot Population, just seven of the nearl…
Exhibiting Aviation’s State of the Industry
Aug. 3, 2010

Exhibiting Aviation’s State of the Industry

An EAA AirVenture Oshkosh participant every year since 1978, I started spending the week there in 1989, when I began a decade-long tenure as Flight Training magazine’s booth boy.  I spent roughly half that time in the old exhibit buildings, no…
Oshkosh, the Verb
July 30, 2010

Oshkosh, the Verb

Sometimes we bloggers simply talk too much trying to express how we feel about something like AirVenture when simply letting the story tell itself works much better. With that clever insight in mind, may I present for your review, a few photos that…
Checking Out EAA AirVenture—Day 0
July 28, 2010

Checking Out EAA AirVenture—Day 0

For the decade I’ve lived just outside of Oshkosh, my favorite excursion of EAA AirVenture Oshkosh always takes place on Day 0. Otherwise known as setup up day, this year was little different, all because of the weather.To say we’ve had…
Let’s Discuss the Future of Flight Training
July 22, 2010

Let’s Discuss the Future of Flight Training

As I write this, the start of EAA AirVenture Oshkosh is five days away. Between the daily rain showers and afternoon thunderstorms (yes, it’s pretty soggy here) the air is growing increasingly alive with the sound of engines I seldom hear duri…
UAV Next Step: Autonomous Aerial Refueling
July 15, 2010

UAV Next Step: Autonomous Aerial Refueling

It seems that the capabilities of unmanned aerial vehicles will soon be complete. On July 1, DARPA announced a $33 million dollar contract for Northrop Grumman to demonstrate autonomous aerial refueling using two NASA Global Hawks. The company wil…
Rote is the Route to Prosaic Mediocrity
June 28, 2010

Rote is the Route to Prosaic Mediocrity

Flight instructors who can remember the answers that returned a passing score on the Fundamentals of Instruction test they had to take should be able to tell you that Rote is the first of four levels of learning. If they possess a good memory (or th…
Does Parochialism Hinder Aviation’s Future
June 23, 2010

Does Parochialism Hinder Aviation’s Future

Last weekend I had the honor of being a guest on Airplane Geeks, thanks to my JetWhine.com co-conspirator Rob Mark, who is one of the quartet of regulars. It was my inaugural podcast (Episode 101), and I greatly enjoyed the wide ranging aviation con…
Becoming a Pilot: Is it a Relevant Choice?
June 13, 2010

Becoming a Pilot: Is it a Relevant Choice?

Is it karma that led NPR to broadcast a story on the dwindling number of student pilots in June? It reported an FAA estimate that this year’s number of student pilot certificates would total less than 60,000, a “10 year low.” If yo…
Pay Attention to California School Regs
June 7, 2010

Pay Attention to California School Regs

Flight schools and instructors nationwide should be paying close attention to California Assembly Bill 48 (AB-48), which imposes new requirements (and fees that pay for their administration by the Bureau of Private Post-secondary Education) on those…
Steve Wood: Flying for a Record Purpose
June 1, 2010

Steve Wood: Flying for a Record Purpose

Pilots earn their certificates for many reasons, but it’s been my experience that they only keep flying after the checkride if they have a goal, a purpose for being airborne more satisfying and fulfilling than the empty aeronautical nourishmen…
DC-3 Reunion Anchors Reflective Airline Arc
May 24, 2010

DC-3 Reunion Anchors Reflective Airline Arc

Reflection is an unintended consequence of a wide interest in aviation, and connecting past with present is the EAA AirVenture Oshkosh reunion of the iconic airplane that earns its keep still, even as it approaches its 75th birthday. Some call it t…
NIFA Challenges Pilots Past Bare Minimums
May 20, 2010

NIFA Challenges Pilots Past Bare Minimums

Discussion over the state of professional pilot training is continuing several weeks after we posted Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs.  Proficiency-based training has been a central theme, as has educating pilots past the bare mini…
The Future of Aviation, LaHood Style
May 17, 2010

The Future of Aviation, LaHood Style

OK, I might as well just come out and say it right from the start … I’m pretty miffed. But I’ve actually been angry since the NBAA convention in Florida last fall when I heard Tom Buffenbarger, president of the International Associ…
Modern Conflict & the Future of Fighters
May 12, 2010

Modern Conflict & the Future of Fighters

Several days ago I read a New York Times Op-Ed piece, Leading With Two Minds. In it, David Brooks described how the US Army, in five short years, had reshaped itself to fight insurgencies with something other than overwhelming force. Thirty-five y…
Learn-to-Fly Day Coming to an Airport near you … I Hope
May 9, 2010

Learn-to-Fly Day Coming to an Airport near you … I Hope

Despite my buddy Scott Spangler’s somewhat guarded endorsement of the international Learn-to-Fly Day scheduled for May 15th, I’m jumping on the bandwagon next Saturday at our local flying club in Chicago. Events are taking place in 147 c…
California Requires Pro Training Standards That Don’t Involve Stick & Rudder Education
May 5, 2010

California Requires Pro Training Standards That Don’t Involve Stick & Rudder Education

On October 11, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Assembly Bill 48, the California Private Postsecondary Education Act of 2009. To summarize the act’s 57 pages of tiny type, it gives students a financial parachute should the priv…
Adventure and the Future of Flying
April 28, 2010

Adventure and the Future of Flying

Celebrating her birthday at our favorite brewpub, my wife was spending part of the quarter-billion dollar Powerball lottery prize just before the drawing that gave it to a Missouri convenience store worker instead of her and a pool of coworkers. S…
Do Pilots Still Use the E-6B Whiz Wheel?
April 19, 2010

Do Pilots Still Use the E-6B Whiz Wheel?

Recently I received a release from Sporty’s Pilot Shop about its new CD or downloadable training course, Virtual Tips & Tricks for the Manual E6B. Not a week or so later I read that Sporty’s will soon have its iPhone E-6B app ready f…
Rightsizing Aviation: Doing Less With More
April 14, 2010

Rightsizing Aviation: Doing Less With More

For the past week or so a number of us have been engaged in an ongoing discussion on flight training, inspired by Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs, about the forthcoming end Danny Webster’s program.This discussion has focused on…
Hope & Cynicism for EAA’s Learn-to-Fly Day
April 11, 2010

Hope & Cynicism for EAA’s Learn-to-Fly Day

For more than two decades the GA industry and the companies that make a living from it have launched a handful of programs designed to get people who look up to act on their aviation interests. When Flight Training magazine was launched in 1989, it …