Business Aviation Posts

Should Business Aviation Just Say No?
Nov. 29, 2009

Should Business Aviation Just Say No?

After reading “Fly the Sleazy Skies,” an editorial in the November 26 New York Times, my first reaction was to say unkind things about politicians. In public they say bad things about business aviation, and then they get to eat their ca…
DOT Aviation Advisors Missing the Point
Nov. 22, 2009

DOT Aviation Advisors Missing the Point

In a recent Fast Lane post, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood wrote about the first meeting of the new aviation advisory committee that reports directly to him. Its members hail from airports, air carriers, management, labor, manufacturers, ge…
PBI ATC: One Bad Apple Won’t Spoil the Bunch
Nov. 19, 2009

PBI ATC: One Bad Apple Won’t Spoil the Bunch

One of the truly enjoyable parts of life — for me at least — is the chance to travel often aboard a business airplane. If I’m not in the left seat, I’m usually pretty close as I was last week on board an Embraer Lineage enroute from We…
Ag Interest Reveals Risk Management Handbook
Oct. 28, 2009

Ag Interest Reveals Risk Management Handbook

Ag flying has always interested me because it is one of the last bastions of professional stick and rudder flying. Sure, technology has infiltrated the cockpit, but here it replaces the flagman (human or otherwise) who helps the pilot apply even cov…
Visual Distractions Still Affect Flight Safety
Oct. 5, 2009

Visual Distractions Still Affect Flight Safety

When I learned to fly back in the mid 1970s, the airspace over the LA Basin was pretty crowded. Because of the smog that then reduced the visibility to some degree every day, most aviators were usually quite serious about seeing and avoiding each o…
NPRM Points to Flight Training’s Future
Sept. 15, 2009

NPRM Points to Flight Training’s Future

In the August 31, 2009 Federal Register, the FAA published Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 09-08, Pilot in Command Proficiency Check and Other Changes to the Pilot and Pilot School Certification Rules. Its seemingly disparate proposals regarding fli…
Pilots: Who Needs Them?
Aug. 3, 2009

Pilots: Who Needs Them?

Qualified professionals to operate the world’s fleet of new, high-technology aircraft are more necessary than ever before, despite a growing proliferation of UAVs. Unfortunately, airline management and their pilots are not always on the same …
July 20, 1969: Where Were you?
July 20, 2009

July 20, 1969: Where Were you?

I was a teenager in the 60’s which for me translates into a few key trigger points etched in my mind. The day President Kennedy was shot I was in shop class. When Martin Luther King was assassinated, I was off on active duty with the U.S. Air …
AvWeek’s Biz Av Lady on Vacation
July 17, 2009

AvWeek’s Biz Av Lady on Vacation

My thanks to AvWeek’s Benet Wilson for allowing me a little space on her blog while she was out on vacation. I’ll try and coax her to write something for Jetwhine. Rob GUEST POST: Business Aviation Is Still a Secret Posted by Bene…
Cute as a Button for AirVenture 2009
July 12, 2009

Cute as a Button for AirVenture 2009

Some folks really believe that the hit of this month’s AirVenture is going to be the arrival of the Airbus A380 at AeroShell Square. And no, the big deal this year is not going to be EAA’s director of public relations Dick Knapinski danc…
A380: Quite a Ride
June 1, 2009

A380: Quite a Ride

I was privileged to have been invited to fly the Airbus A380 in Toulouse last week. I think it took about 4 seconds for me to decide when I was asked if I wanted the job of flying, evaluating and then writing up my findings on a few new pieces of on…
Corporate Flying is New Pilots’ Career Goals
May 24, 2009

Corporate Flying is New Pilots’ Career Goals

After reading reports of faltering flight schools, I wandered over to the Fox Valley Technical College’s aviation campus on the Wittman Regional Airport in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, to see how things were going in flyover country. Not so bad, it see…
Business & ATPs Becoming GA’s Leaders
May 5, 2009

Business & ATPs Becoming GA’s Leaders

Ever since I can remember personal flying has always represented the lion’s share of the general aviation fleet and hours flown, measured by the FAA’s annual GA and Part 135 survey. The most current data is for 2007, well before the econ…
Knives on the Plane
April 29, 2009

Knives on the Plane

New Yorkers often stand as a national litmus test of just how tough Americans can be in a crisis. The weeks and months after 9/11 showed us that even they have their limits although most found a place somewhere to bury those ugly days.In just a few…
OSH Tower Falls With Aviation’s Change
April 21, 2009

OSH Tower Falls With Aviation’s Change

Across the aviation arc on the Internet many have bemoaned the April 9 passing of the old control tower at the Wittman Regional Airport, better known to the world by its location–Oshkosh. Photographers from the organization that  calls OSH ho…
Max Says "Learn to Fly" … Pass it on
March 28, 2009

Max Says "Learn to Fly" … Pass it on

For writers, any kind of writers, the big league means writing books. My first foray came 20 years ago when Tab Books – eventually absorbed into the McGraw Hill network – gave me a chance to write about something I held near and dear to…
UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence
March 24, 2009

UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence

A recent New York Times’s article, “Drones Are Weapons of Choice in Fighting Qaeda, ” added to the mounting evidence that Unmanned Aerial Vehicles are changing the face of military aviation. This is especially true in the U.S. Air …
EASA Taking Aim on U.S. Flight Schools
March 19, 2009

EASA Taking Aim on U.S. Flight Schools

Measuring the health of U.S. flight schools is easy. Grab the latest General Aviation Manufacturers Association Statistical Databook and see how many student pilot certificates the FAA issued last year. The most recent number is for for 2007: 66,79…
ImagineAir Brings SATS to Life in Southeast
March 16, 2009

ImagineAir Brings SATS to Life in Southeast

In the spirit of my last post, Share Thumbs-Up Moments With Everyone, I just discovered a new air taxi company, ImagineAir, founded by two flight instructors who met at Georgia Tech. Based in Lawrenceville, just outside of Atlanta, ImagineAir made i…
Share Thumbs-Up Moments With Everyone
March 10, 2009

Share Thumbs-Up Moments With Everyone

If you haven’t heard, the Internet and blogs like JetWhine are killing print journalism. Slowly, community journalists, everyday people with an interest in their community, are becoming our primary source of news. If you doubt this, watch TV …
Wired Airspace: It’s all About NYC & Airlines
March 5, 2009

Wired Airspace: It’s all About NYC & Airlines

Maybe I haven’t had enough coffee this morning, but I’m not sure how to take an article in the current issue of Wired, “Air Repair: Key to Eliminating U.S. Flight Delays? Redesign the Sky Over New York City.” It reminds me o…
Seething About the Buffalo Crash
March 1, 2009

Seething About the Buffalo Crash

I don’t know what makes me more angry, the story in the Wall Street Journal that claims investigators are pointing the finger of blame at the pilots of the Dash 8 Q400 in the Buffalo crash a few weeks ago, or that from a pilot-training perspec…
EMS Helicopter Safety: First, Do No Harm
Feb. 25, 2009

EMS Helicopter Safety: First, Do No Harm

A confirmed rotorhead, I recently invested some unexpected free time looking into the NTSB’s public hearing on Safety of Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) Operations. I didn’t have the time to watch four days of video availabl…
Homebuilding: Complexity is the Price of Progress
Feb. 15, 2009

Homebuilding: Complexity is the Price of Progress

After reviewing thousands of comments about the fed’s proposed policy and procedural changes affecting the 51-percent rule, the Amateur-Built Aviation Rulemaking Committee completed its mission, submitted its final recommendations to the FAA,…