Blogging Posts

Airmanship and the Fundamentals of Flight
Dec. 28, 2014

Airmanship and the Fundamentals of Flight

Sporty’s debut of its Cessna 172LITE Project has rightfully attracted the attention of a cannonball launched from the high dive at the deep end of the aviation pool. While most are paying attention to the splash made by the airplane’s re…
An Airline Career Query & No Good Answer
Dec. 7, 2014

An Airline Career Query & No Good Answer

Directed my way by a leader familiar with my connection to aviation, an Eagle Scout e-mailed me this question: “I want to become an airline pilot when I get older and I’d like to know where to start? What things can I do as a high schoo…
Caught In the (P-61) Black Widow’s Web
Oct. 26, 2014

Caught In the (P-61) Black Widow’s Web

A side benefit of visiting Reading, Pennsylvania, where two of my wife’s three sons (and 6.5 of her 11.5 grandchildren) reside is catching up on the Mid Atlantic Air Museum’s restoration of its P-61 Black Widow. When I first saw the airp…
Have You Seen a Baumann Brigadier?
Oct. 12, 2014

Have You Seen a Baumann Brigadier?

As the photo here shows, it looks like an old Aero Commander, and when I first saw this photo that was my initial identification. And then I noticed that the tail feathers were lower, and that the horizontal stab didn’t have the CommanderR…
Flying a Seaplane
Sept. 29, 2014

Flying a Seaplane

The classroom was a 150 hp PA-12 Super Cruiser on floatsHow many times during an airline pre-takeoff briefing have you heard the flight attendant say, “In the event of a water landing …”Trust me, there ain’t no such thing a…
Aviation Writers I Read
Sept. 22, 2014

Aviation Writers I Read

Note to the World’s Best Readers / Listeners – You now have the option to listen to the Aviation Minute podcast or read the text below. If you receive Jetwhine via e-mail, you can click here to listen as well.I wouldn’t be much of…
AOPA’s 152 Reimagined
Aug. 7, 2014

AOPA’s 152 Reimagined

Note to the World’s Best Readers / Listeners – You now have the option to listen to the Aviation Minute podcast or read the text below. If you receive Jetwhine via e-mail, you can click here to listen as well. One obstacle to learning t…
AirVenture Reflections: Contraction, Consolidation, and Concentration
Aug. 3, 2014

AirVenture Reflections: Contraction, Consolidation, and Concentration

“What’s the coolest thing you’ve seen at AirVenture this year?” For the past 15 or 20 years, this is the question I dread because I never have an answer for my interlocutors. Don’t get me wrong, I find many things inter…
Aviation Fences Past, Present, and Future
July 13, 2014

Aviation Fences Past, Present, and Future

On a two-wheeled vagabondage adventure, I reunited with my riding buddy in Seattle, and he’s leading us east toward Oshkosh. For those unfamiliar, vagabondage has a direction of travel, like east, but no route or itinerary. Except for one must…
Rethinking Aircraft Accident Stories
July 8, 2014

Rethinking Aircraft Accident Stories

I had an opportunity to visit the normally closed-to-the-public NTSB Training Center near Leesburg Virginia a few weeks ago as a guest of director Paul Schuda assisted by Senior Air Safety Investigator Bill English.To say my visit was eye opening w…
Looking Bach at Aviation Eras
June 1, 2014

Looking Bach at Aviation Eras

Recovered from his landing mishap in the Pacific Northwest, Richard Bach has resumed his online conversation, and he is as thought provoking as ever. In “Change of an Era” he reflects on the change progress has always brought to aviatio…
Is Airline Withdrawal a GA Opportunity?
May 18, 2014

Is Airline Withdrawal a GA Opportunity?

A recent New York Times story, “Air Travel Economics Make Midsize Hubs Unprofitable“, explained why airline travel today often demands long drives to the nearest major airline hub. This withdrawal of service from outlying communities and…
Culture of Fear Suppresses Joy of Flight
May 4, 2014

Culture of Fear Suppresses Joy of Flight

More than it has in the previous two years I’ve judged an airport writing contest, fear was a central theme in the nearly three dozen essays submitted by students in elementary, middle, and high school. Most of them addressed airline flights …
The Aviation Minute: Episode 9 – The FAA Shoots Itself in the Foot
May 1, 2014

The Aviation Minute: Episode 9 – The FAA Shoots Itself in the Foot

When the FAA tells you they’re changing the way they conduct business because they want to be more fair to someone, or that they want to save money, it’s probably time to duck. You can pretty much be sure that whatever they have in mind …
For Boomers, Rusty Pilot is Difficult Decision
April 20, 2014

For Boomers, Rusty Pilot is Difficult Decision

Since I learned to fly in 1976, the vicissitudes of life have removed me from the cockpit and later returned me to the left seat. As a rusty pilot, I am again at a point where my return to the sky is possible, but deciding whether to take advantage …
Lessons We’ve Already Learned from MH370
April 14, 2014

Lessons We’ve Already Learned from MH370

While it may seem to many of you as if the Malaysian Airlines 370 story has been going on forever, we’re really only into the opening scenes of this investigation. Remember it took two years to recover the data recorders from Air France 447.L…
First-Person View and Recreational Flight
April 6, 2014

First-Person View and Recreational Flight

From the first time we looked up, what has attracted humans to flight is seeing the world from the perspective of a bird. That attraction still drives many of us, but how we achieve this first-person view (FPV) has changed with technology. If you do…
The Aviation Minute Continues: Episodes Four & Five
March 31, 2014

The Aviation Minute Continues: Episodes Four & Five

 It’s time to get our listeners caught up on The Aviation Minute.Seems that working the kinks out of our new podcast turned out to be a bit more time consuming than I’d at first thought. Now that the iTunes folks tell us The Avi…
Aviation Safety & Unrealistic Expectations
March 23, 2014

Aviation Safety & Unrealistic Expectations

Has the exemplary aviation safety record become its own worst enemy because it instills unrealistic expectations of risk in the minds of those fly? As a consequence, reactions to these infrequent but unpreventable circumstances instantly climbs to a…
Malaysian Flight 370: A Great Show of Smoke And Mirrors
March 16, 2014

Malaysian Flight 370: A Great Show of Smoke And Mirrors

James Bond creator Ian FlemingIan Flemming and Tom Clancy, both master writers of suspense and political intrigue — and their alter egos James Bond and Jack Ryan respectively — are probably looking down from heaven in awe at the story c…
LeTourneau Aviators Promote Female Flyers
March 11, 2014

LeTourneau Aviators Promote Female Flyers

Le Tourneau University introduces 6th grade girls to aviation opportunities.In case you missed it, last week was Women in Aviation Worldwide Week, and this past weekend Women in Aviation International held its 25th annual International Women in …
Can Collective Effervescence Save Aviation?
Feb. 23, 2014

Can Collective Effervescence Save Aviation?

If curiosity got you past the headline, stick with me for a few more words for an idea that might help save general aviation. If you’ve attended EAA AirVenture Oshkosh, even for a day, most likely its passionate enthusiasm dispersed a yearR…
Last Words: Charlie Victor Romeo
Feb. 9, 2014

Last Words: Charlie Victor Romeo

Like moths seeking illuminated warmth, pilots are genetically drawn to aviation accident reports. Most say they pore over them to perhaps discern details that might keep them from ending up as the subject of their own accident report. As they read, …
Math Transports Jellyfish From Sea to Sky
Jan. 26, 2014

Math Transports Jellyfish From Sea to Sky

Technology rules the present and future of every aspect of aviation. It seems clear that pilots can’t fly today without it, or very well with it. If there’s handwriting on the hangar walls that pilots should be paying attention to it wou…