Flight Training Posts

More Flap About NWA 188
Dec. 10, 2009

More Flap About NWA 188

My story a few weeks ago about the two guys flying past MSP and the penalty they incurred for abandoning their post for over an hour seemed like a no-brainer to me. The two pilots were distracted for some reason we were unaware of at (Photo: Fokke…
A Rare Breed: Students Who Finish Training
Dec. 4, 2009

A Rare Breed: Students Who Finish Training

To maintain my face-to-face social skills and keep my mind nimble I am a substitute teacher for the local school district. Getting an early morning call from the high school offers the added treat of hearing how its principal is progressing toward h…
FAA & Test Takers a Step Closer to Learning
Nov. 16, 2009

FAA & Test Takers a Step Closer to Learning

Tests are an important part of the learning process because they assess the knowledge students have acquired—and retained. This measurement is as important for students as it is for teacher. As anyone who’s taught any subject for the past cent…
Proverbs for Powered Flight’s Second Century
Nov. 10, 2009

Proverbs for Powered Flight’s Second Century

Aviation is all about change, and it makes rapid advances in short spurts of time. World War I was once such spurt, and World War II was another. Capabilities soared and crew size shrank as progress took the place of navigators and radio operators.…
Warning! Read Technology’s Fine Print
Nov. 2, 2009

Warning! Read Technology’s Fine Print

Preparing for my first encounter with a new (to me) integrated avionics system, I dove into the system’s reference guide with eager anticipation. With a PFD, MFD, and FMS keypad this baby had all the bells, whistles, and databases that qualify…
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…
Who Will Fly for America Tomorrow?
Oct. 20, 2009

Who Will Fly for America Tomorrow?

So, you wanna be a professional pilot, huh? Despite the economy, there will be a good number of vacant cockpit seats in the next decade or so as the last of the baby boomer bulge reaches 65, the airline pilot retirement age. If you are a Wall Stree…
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…
Brennand Airport: A Work in Perpetuity
Sept. 29, 2009

Brennand Airport: A Work in Perpetuity

Owning and operating an airport was never one of Ted Vander Wielen’s life goals. But in 1995, Ted says, he learned that Bill Brennand was retiring and selling the airport he built 10 miles north of Oshkosh in 1968. The only party interested in…
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…
Sonex Onex Overshadowed by R&D Stars
Sept. 9, 2009

Sonex Onex Overshadowed by R&D Stars

Unveiling the projects gestating in the Sonex R&D department, the Hornet’s Nest, during EAA AirVenture Oshkosh, the SubSonex jet and E-Flight Power System (covered last week in Jet & ESA Fly From Sonex Hornet’s Nest) got all the …
Jet & ESA Fly From Sonex Hornet’s Nest
Aug. 31, 2009

Jet & ESA Fly From Sonex Hornet’s Nest

At EAA AirVenture Oshkosh, Sonex Aircraft pulled back the curtain on its research and development department, called the Hornet’s Nest, and unveiled three projects it’s been working on for the past handful of years. One of them the E-Fl…
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 …
Social Media Gets Serious at AirVenture
July 29, 2009

Social Media Gets Serious at AirVenture

Broadcasting from high atop the massive MyTransponder mobile HQ the other night on the grounds at AirVenture 2009, I managed to add my two cents to a pretty nice Episode 58 of the Airplane Geeks podcast that I now co-host with Max Flight and Dan We…
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…
Artful Flying
June 28, 2009

Artful Flying

One thing you never want to do is give me a book to review. I read them quickly, but often take forever to getting around to telling people what I thought of the experience, which pretty much defeats the purpose of the review … at least from t…
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…
Fox Valley Tech Pairs Pancakes & Future
April 26, 2009

Fox Valley Tech Pairs Pancakes & Future

Fly-in pancake breakfasts have been a grassroots aviation staple for nigh on a half century or more. Most of them are hosted by EAA chapters or local flying clubs, which is why the feast hosted by the Fox Valley Technical College at its aviation cam…
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…
Shades of Captain Sulley
April 19, 2009

Shades of Captain Sulley

The world watched in awe a few months back as Capt. Sullenberger put a US Airways A320 just where he wanted it – well so to speak – on the Hudson River, close by to a half dozen small boats that allowed for the quick rescue of all aboard…
Certified Flight Attendants
April 9, 2009

Certified Flight Attendants

Most airline passengers understand that pilots are required to qualify initially through FAA guidelines, are also required to regularly undergo a physical exam just to make sure some small problem doesn’t lead to incapacitation aboard a flight…
Sporty’s Downloads Affordable Videos
April 6, 2009

Sporty’s Downloads Affordable Videos

Roaming around the online aisles of Sporty’s Pilot Shop looking for something to keep my head in the sky while the economy has me tied to the ground, I ran across the “Download Center.” Curious, I gave it a click, expecting I’…
It’s a Buyer’s Market for Recreational Flyers
April 1, 2009

It’s a Buyer’s Market for Recreational Flyers

Until the 1980s, most pilot saw homebuilding as a lunatic fringe. Its stereotypical practitioners were older guys with rough hands and patched jeans rooting around in airport boneyards, looking for a deal. And then a funny thing happened: the produ…