Education Posts

Pilots, OTC Drugs Can Be Interactively Bad
Jan. 13, 2020

Pilots, OTC Drugs Can Be Interactively Bad

A recent New York Times story about the hidden drug epidemic rooted in the conflict between prescribed medications and over-the-counter (OTC) drugs and supplements focused on people in their 60s, but as I read, I could easily see that pilots taking …
Giving Thanks: Bach in Nothing By Chance
Dec. 2, 2019

Giving Thanks: Bach in Nothing By Chance

Seeking refuge from the gloomy, overcast skies that are growing darker as a winter storm crawls across Wisconsin, I turned to my bookshelves in the hope that the title of a tome once read would catch my eye and lift my spirits. As my eyes slid acros…
Veterans Day as a Time to Reflect
Nov. 10, 2019

Veterans Day as a Time to Reflect

Funny how another person can make you think differently about something you thought you already understood. For me it’s my time in the military, the U.S. Air Force in the 1960s to be precise.When Jetwhine contributor Micah Engber mentioned a …
Automation and the Atrophy of Airmanship
Sept. 23, 2019

Automation and the Atrophy of Airmanship

In the cover feature of the September 18, 2019 New York Times Magazine, William Langeweishe presents a cogent, comprehensive, and nuanced answer to its interrogative headline, “What Really Brought Down the Boeing 737 Max?” The subhead su…
AirVenture Surprises & Snowbird Respect
Aug. 12, 2019

AirVenture Surprises & Snowbird Respect

As it seemed last year, the U.S. Navy’s Blue Angels low-level fly-by at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh this year seemed to catch many people by surprise. I don’t mean to shatter your illusions, but nothing at AirVenture happens as a surprise, es…
Gliders Launch with 454 Cubic Inches of Pull
June 17, 2019

Gliders Launch with 454 Cubic Inches of Pull

Gliders—sailplanes—are engineless flying machines powered by gravity’s conversion of altitude into airspeed. Without a doubt, they are aviation’s purest expression of flying for fun. It is also the most social aeronautical neighborhood, …
Aviation Anniversaries and Complacency
May 20, 2019

Aviation Anniversaries and Complacency

Trying to be a good father, I spent a rainy weekend making a recycling run though boxes that have lived unopened for more than a decade in the closet of the spare bedroom. Accepting that my expiration date, while unknown, is growing ever closer, I d…
Aviation Records Note Seasonal Transitions
April 8, 2019

Aviation Records Note Seasonal Transitions

For many, Florida’s Sun & Fun fly-in announces the commencement of flying season in every new year. A better transition from one flying year to the next is the National Aeronautic Association’s springtime announcement of the previous…
Total Coverage: The FAA Oxygen Mask Study
Jan. 14, 2019

Total Coverage: The FAA Oxygen Mask Study

Total Coverage: The FAA Oxygen Mask StudyThe FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 sometimes asks more questions than it answers. For example, what was behind Section 536. Oxygen Mask Design Study?It requires the FAA to review and evaluate the design an…
A Logophile’s Look at Aviation
Dec. 31, 2018

A Logophile’s Look at Aviation

Like many word merchants, I’m a logophile, a lover of words. When a new one catches my attention, meaning I can foresee some sentence in which it might be of use, I record it. For the past 15 years or so, my logo reliquary (“a container …
The Last Photo Banshee Represents a First
Nov. 19, 2018

The Last Photo Banshee Represents a First

As a former Navy photographer’s mate, the big aerial cameras under the long, windowed nose of the dark blue straight-wing jet drew me to the McDonnell F2H-2P photo Banshee. It was the Navy’s first photoreconnaissance jet. And the airplan…
Could Knowledge of Undisclosed MCAS Have Saved Lion Air 610?
Nov. 17, 2018

Could Knowledge of Undisclosed MCAS Have Saved Lion Air 610?

Could Knowledge of Undisclosed MCAS Have Saved Lion Air 610?By Rob MarkHaving spent more than a few decades in the cockpit, I thought even I’d reached that plateau where I could claim I’d just about seen it all … until this week&…
New Non-Tower AC: Perfect Spring Tune-up
April 9, 2018

New Non-Tower AC: Perfect Spring Tune-up

Ah, springtime. Any day now it should finally stop snowing. As the snow melts, puddles, and sublimates from airport operation areas, airplanes will emerge from their T-hangar hibernations and start sniffing the sky on sunny weekends. In preparation …
Pilot Past Tense
March 12, 2018

Pilot Past Tense

Asking newly met people their occupations is a phatic conversation starter that leads me down the semantic rabbit hole. Upon learning that I’m a word merchant, they ask what I write about. After hearing “aviation,” they ask if I…
Learning to Fly and the Convenience Culture
Feb. 26, 2018

Learning to Fly and the Convenience Culture

“Convenience,” wrote Tim Wu in The Tyranny of Convenience, “more efficient and easier ways of doing personal tasks—has emerged as perhaps the most powerful force shaping our individual lives and our economies.” From a passeng…
The Aesthetics of Collision Avoidance
Jan. 29, 2018

The Aesthetics of Collision Avoidance

When it came time for Dennis Hutchinson to paint the Davis DA-2 he’d restored, he picked red and white with gold and blue accents, “because I like them and think they go well together.”Aesthetics had little do with how he arranged…
Bruce McCandless, the Astronaut in the Iconic Photo
Jan. 18, 2018

Bruce McCandless, the Astronaut in the Iconic Photo

Bruce McCandless, the Astronaut In the Iconic Photo, by Micah EngberListen to the episode or read it belowWhen you think about the first space walk maybe you think about Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov who in March 1965 was the first man to ever leave th…
Science Fiction and Our Believable World
Jan. 15, 2018

Science Fiction and Our Believable World

It has been decades since I’ve read any science fiction. Roaming the dusty shelves of my memory’s recall, the last such cover I cracked was called, I think, The Way Station. Like the other tomes I’d read in the genre, it described …
Insanity and the DOT Pilot Shortage Solution
Dec. 4, 2017

Insanity and the DOT Pilot Shortage Solution

As most sentient people know, insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Or maybe it is just laziness because developing a new, more efficient way of educating pilots is too much time, effort, and money. Wh…
Redbird Migration: Technology as Teacher
Nov. 6, 2017

Redbird Migration: Technology as Teacher

Deciding which breakout sessions was a vexing challenge at the Redbird Migration Flight Training Symposium held at the EAA Aviation Center in Oshkosh between October 10 and 18. Participants could pick six of 17 breakout sessions, with only four repe…
Redbird Migration Looks Back at the Future of Flight Training
Oct. 23, 2017

Redbird Migration Looks Back at the Future of Flight Training

For the past six years, Redbird, which has developed a family of aviation training devices, has sponsored a flight-training symposium attended by a hundred or more of the land’s leading aviation educators. Known as the Redbird Migration, in th…
Flight Instructors to Remember and Forget
Oct. 2, 2017

Flight Instructors to Remember and Forget

After 40 years of flying, flight instructing and communicating throughout the aviation business, it’s almost impossible for me to remember that of all my flight instructors, I almost allowed my first ago to drive me completely away from the bu…
Essential Feedback: How Are We Doing?
Aug. 14, 2017

Essential Feedback: How Are We Doing?

Feedback is an essential nutrient to our emotional well-being because humans, as a group, all embody some degree of insecurity. This is especially true in activities where inconsistent variables provide challenges unique to every attempt of an activ…
Logging Virtual Flight Time at AirVenture
July 29, 2017

Logging Virtual Flight Time at AirVenture

One of the most frustrating aspects of getting excited while watching others fly, like the U.S. Navy Blue Angels, is not being able to immediately feed that emotional and physical craving. It figures that technology provided some relief with some v…