Business Aviation Posts

GA’s Future Depends on Recalibrated Desires
Feb. 24, 2013

GA’s Future Depends on Recalibrated Desires

As Baby Boomers march into retirement in increasing numbers, there’s an opportunity for general aviation and its surviving participants to recalibrate their desires and define the future of personal flight. It all hinges on flying clubs, which…
Move Past LaHood … and the Sooner the Better
Feb. 4, 2013

Move Past LaHood … and the Sooner the Better

Sometimes the best action is to take none, which is precisely the route I chose last week when many people were falling over themselves to tell outgoing Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood how much they appreciated his past four years on the job.…
Chicago Meigs Field (CGX) is Dead … Really
Jan. 22, 2013

Chicago Meigs Field (CGX) is Dead … Really

Not long ago, I had a chance to visit some old friends here in Chicago when I took the family down to a few of the Chicago museums on the east edge of downtown. Having survived 12 years of the Chicago Public School system, I know the former field-tr…
Aviation Safety: What Has Become of Us?
Jan. 13, 2013

Aviation Safety: What Has Become of Us?

Oh, the irony of progress.In 2005, the FAA issued its first Safety Alert for Operators, “an information tool that alerts, educates, and makes recommendations to the aviation community [that] includes air carrier certificate holders, fractiona…
The Slow Death of a Great Brand
Nov. 7, 2012

The Slow Death of a Great Brand

One of the first things I learned as a graduate student at Northwestern’s Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) program 20 years ago and years later as a teacher in that same program was the value of a brand. Managing a brand is so import…
The FAA and its Centers of Excellence
Oct. 15, 2012

The FAA and its Centers of Excellence

Those with a proclivity for cynicism might judge this headline an oxymoron equal to military intelligence. But before you snigger and stop reading, consider this:  under its Center of Excellence banner, the FAA has selected a team of universities wi…
If I Were an American Airlines Pilot
Oct. 8, 2012

If I Were an American Airlines Pilot

There’s no small amount of irony in the fact that American Airlines axed the contracts of their pilots just a few hours past Labor Day last month. Kind of adds insult to injury. I feel for the pilots having been around to watch the ugliness of…
A Little Labor Day Message
Sept. 3, 2012

A Little Labor Day Message

Thanks to my comrades at The Airplane Geeks Show for staying way ahead of me and posting my annual Labor Day message. In case you don’t listen to our show — impossible as that might be — do give this link a quick click. Promise I d…
Sequestration: Don’t Let the Trolls Win
Aug. 20, 2012

Sequestration: Don’t Let the Trolls Win

Until the other day, I thought a troll was one of those horrid little creatures living under bridges just waiting for the chance to reach up and scare the dickens out of some little kid. But lo and behold, as a reader told me, a troll in the Interne…
Bird Strike Investigators Want Your Snarge
July 10, 2012

Bird Strike Investigators Want Your Snarge

Bird strikes have been one of my passing interests ever since I watched the head-on confrontation between a seagull and A landing A-6 during a wheels’ watch at NAS Alameda in the early 1970s. (The seagull lost, by the way.) Somewhere over the …
Safety May be the Death of General Aviation
June 25, 2012

Safety May be the Death of General Aviation

In her opening statement at the June 19 convocation addressing General Aviation Safety—Climbing to the Next Level, NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman said “in spite of improvements to the commercial and corporate aviation safety records, the GA acc…
Is Silence a Symptom of Aviation Atrophy?
June 18, 2012

Is Silence a Symptom of Aviation Atrophy?

With  no demands or duties, I retired to the deck on Father’s Day to reflect on my life’s journey, to appreciate the good times and bad that are its waypoints. A caressing breeze ebbed and flowed from the west like wind waves on the sky&…
FAA Takes a Fresh Look at GA Airports
May 28, 2012

FAA Takes a Fresh Look at GA Airports

Taking “A fresh look at the many roles General Aviation Airport play in the National Air Transportation System,” the FAA recently released the 34-page report of its in-depth, 18-month study of roughly 3,000 airports, General Aviation Air…
CFIs Need Career Situational Awareness
May 9, 2012

CFIs Need Career Situational Awareness

Last week, the middle school where I am a substitute teacher held its annual career and hobby day, where students sign up for presentations  that interest them. I was on duty as a student wrangler, not a speaker, and it was happenstance that I ended…
No User Fees for GA … Yet
May 6, 2012

No User Fees for GA … Yet

I was trying to explain some of the subtleties behind the word altruism to my daughter this morning at breakfast, and it made me think about the fight against aviation user fees.And yes, we have a few truly interesting family meals around our house…
What’s Aviation’s Future in a Polarized World?
April 20, 2012

What’s Aviation’s Future in a Polarized World?

At the World Aviation Training Symposium, held last week in Orlando, Boeing’s chief test & evaluation pilot for new airplane development, Mike Carriker, said the industry must modernize its educational methods and technology if it hopes to…
FAA InFO Translates Canadian ATC Lingo
Feb. 29, 2012

FAA InFO Translates Canadian ATC Lingo

In an attempt to keep current with all aspects of aviation, I subscribe to all manner of e-mail updates. In this arena, the FAA is prolifically focused. My latest discovery is the InFO, short for Information For Operators.Produced by the FAA’…
Will Aviation Biofuel be New Farm Subsidy?
Jan. 22, 2012

Will Aviation Biofuel be New Farm Subsidy?

First thing last Monday morning I read that US Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack was scheduled to hold an hour-long meeting with aviation officials from Boeing, Honeywell, and United Airlines later that day at Boeing HQ. The announced …
Aviation: It’s ALWAYS About The Passengers
Jan. 19, 2012

Aviation: It’s ALWAYS About The Passengers

Last Saturday was not a good day for transportation, but for once the bad news was not about aviation. An immense cruise ship — the Costa Concordia — capsized in the Mediterranean Sea off the west coast of Italy where rocks near the sho…
Fear of Flying: How GA Pilots can Lessen the Impact
Nov. 13, 2011

Fear of Flying: How GA Pilots can Lessen the Impact

By Douglas Boyd Ph.DOne of every six adult Americans is afraid to fly according to the Journal of Travel Research. Frightened folks — who BTW cross all socio-economic lines — take 66% fewer commercial airline trips than those who enjoy time alof…
Biz Jets Merely a Pawn in Wealth Wars
Nov. 6, 2011

Biz Jets Merely a Pawn in Wealth Wars

With her saucy style, Gail Collins is one of my favorite New York Times Op-Ed authors. This week she wrote about “The Best Perk in Politics.” Naturally, she’s talking about business jets and all the free rides Rick Perry took on th…
A Budding CFI, a New Writer
Nov. 2, 2011

A Budding CFI, a New Writer

Editor Note: At least a couple of times each week, someone sends an unsolicited story trying to convince us to publish it. More often than not, the material simply doesn’t fit. It’s either too long, too sales focused or – as happen…
Aero 2075: An Engineer’s Crystal Ball
Oct. 30, 2011

Aero 2075: An Engineer’s Crystal Ball

A fuel-efficient idea by the Institution of Mechanical EngineersNow that I have your attention, the concept of fuel efficient formation flight for airliners is one of four areas covered in the United Kingdom’s Institution of Mechanical Eng…
Mr. Babbitt Needs to Get in Shape
Oct. 26, 2011

Mr. Babbitt Needs to Get in Shape

Some functions come naturally to most humans, eating, sleeping, even defending ourselves … at least most of the time. But the message the House of Representatives just sent FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt with passage of the European Emissions…