Business Aviation Posts

The Atlantic Takes GA View of Coal
Dec. 22, 2010

The Atlantic Takes GA View of Coal

General aviation is so rarely a supporting player in larger stories that this occurrence quickly captures your attention. Reading Dirty Coal, Clean Future in the December 2010 issue of The Atlantic, James Fallows wrote: “When I have traveled …
Air Traffic Control: Over-Controlling
Dec. 20, 2010

Air Traffic Control: Over-Controlling

The service delivered by some ATC facilities today is just not what it used to be in the old days before the PATCO strike. There, I said it.Having been around in the old days — like the 70s – when traffic at most towers was insane by today&…
Fixing Flight Training: the FT-IEP
Dec. 6, 2010

Fixing Flight Training: the FT-IEP

Introduced in Fixing Flight Training: What You Can Do Now!, the flight training individual education plan, or FT-IEP, can be initiated by students, instructors, or flight schools. It has the potential to alleviate three of the four dropout motivator…
Fixing Flight Training: What You Can Do Now!
Dec. 1, 2010

Fixing Flight Training: What You Can Do Now!

In the overwhelming number of comments to last week’s Aviation Has the CFIs it Deserves, pilots, instructors, and flight school owners clearly confirmed the veracity of AOPA’s survey that identified the leading causes of aviation’s…
The FAACs, or the Truth about Aviation’s Future?
Nov. 28, 2010

The FAACs, or the Truth about Aviation’s Future?

Don’t feel bad if you don’t find the acronym FAAC jumping right to the head of your aviation conversations these days. It’s not exactly front page news to anyone in the aviation industry, except perhaps the few dozen hand-picked p…
Finding an EFB Primer in Callback Reports
Oct. 27, 2010

Finding an EFB Primer in Callback Reports

Like any pilot who’s lugged a bag heavy with thousands of pages of instrument approach procedures, SIDs, STARs, airport diagrams, and ancillary information, my aching back really likes the idea of the paperless cockpit served by an electronic …
Scary? Only for REAL Pilots
Oct. 24, 2010

Scary? Only for REAL Pilots

That title is what we call a grabber, intended only to make you read the rest of this short post. Without this disclaimer, some might believe that I think landing at any of these airports is a piece of cake … and I surely do not.My thanks to…
Aviation Leadership: Change the World
Oct. 18, 2010

Aviation Leadership: Change the World

by Rob Mark — The fact that I grew up during the radical insanity of the 60’s is not going to come as any great surprise to some readers. It might actually explain quite a bit about my personality to a few in fact.But before any snap d…
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 …
Electric Aircraft & Air Show Possibilities
Aug. 19, 2010

Electric Aircraft & Air Show Possibilities

On many levels the 2010 Electric Aircraft World Symposium was a surprise. Sponsored by GE Aviation and held at the EAA museum on AirVenture Friday, I expected a geek fest with a small audience of a hundred or less, because that’s the space av…
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…
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…
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…
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…
Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs
March 29, 2010

Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs

Last week a number of sources, including the Nashua Telegraph, reported that Daniel Webster College was phasing out its professional pilot training program. It’s not the first flight training program to close, nor will it be the last, but tha…
Pilots Aren’t Perfect & Flying is Not Risk Free
March 17, 2010

Pilots Aren’t Perfect & Flying is Not Risk Free

Reaction to the AOPA Air Safety Foundation’s Nall Report on the safety record of amateur-built experimental aircraft, and comments about my recent post on this subject (The Internet & Homebuilt Aircraft Accidents), led to the somber reflec…
No-Pilot Aircraft Go Vertical & Hover
Feb. 14, 2010

No-Pilot Aircraft Go Vertical & Hover

At a fundamental level I understand the technology that makes no-pilot, remotely controlled aircraft work. And it seems to work well in fixed-wing aircraft that fly high in the controlled airspace (see UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence&…
Finding a Job is not for the Lazy: The Primary Intangible
Jan. 24, 2010

Finding a Job is not for the Lazy: The Primary Intangible

When I give talks around the country about social media, I always try to mention what I call the primary intangible about these new tools … the opportunity to connect with new people, folks who are often in a position to help a younger person …
UND Plants Seed of No-Pilot Airliners
Jan. 11, 2010

UND Plants Seed of No-Pilot Airliners

Much has been made lately of the University of North Dakota’s new bachelor’s of science degree in aeronautics with a major in Unmanned Aircraft Systems Operations, taught at the Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences in Grand Forks.UND i…