General Posts

June 1, 2011

Air France 447 Pilot Error? Probably, but …

It’s been an exciting few weeks in the search for Air France 447. In just 20 days or so, searchers located the fuselage and both the cockpit and flight data recorders in 13,000 ft. of water on the floor of the South Atlantic. More victims are …
May 7, 2011

Comment Now to Save Backcountry Flying!

Going on a backcountry safari to explore the airstrips long ago hacked out of what became the the Selway-Bitterroot and Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness Areas ranks second on my all-time list of best aviation experiences. (First was flying…
May 4, 2011

Cessna Finds a New Way to Skin an Airplane

First there was fabric over wood and/or metal frameworks. Then were was metal over metal, which led to monocoque construction. Eventually,  composite materials followed suit, complete with a subcutaneous layer of acoustic foam to keep things quiet. …
April 7, 2011

NextGen & Congestion-Closed Runways

Mention the Next Generational Air Transportation System to pilots and the first thing that comes to mind is money and the pain resulting from complex changes. If you’re a GA flyer, add unkind words for the airlines, the primary beneficiary of …
March 30, 2011

Working With Nature Returns Many Rewards

At every level and every altitude, the world today is an unhappy place growing ever more turgid and lethal. Keeping current with local, state, national, and world events can inspire hope’s suicide. If there is a hotline holding promise of some…
March 23, 2011

There’s Nothing New in GA Safety Because We’re Still Making the Same Stupid Mistakes

The notices arrived in my in-box almost hand in hand.  Analyzing the previous year’s data, the AOPA Air Safety Institute’s Joseph T. Nall Report for 2010 gives the good and bad news about general aviation accidents. And the  2011 Safety…
March 9, 2011

2010 Updates Pilot Population Highs & Lows

Using FAA data provided by the General Aviation Manufacturers Association’s annual Statistical Databook, I’ve built a spreadsheet of pilot population data back to 1964. Updating it for 2010 revealed a new highpoint in pilot certification…
Feb. 27, 2011

GAMA Statistics & The Perspective of Time

The General Aviation Manufacturers Association annual Statistical Databook & Industry Outlook is like a late Christmas present that puts all other gifts or lumps of coal into a broader context.  The first edition, published in 1973, ran just 22 …
Feb. 23, 2011

Friday Night Flights to Wild Alaska

At every level, and in every corner, it seems that the world is a universally unhappy place, and has been for awhile. Citing political mandates, and mindless of immediate or future consequences, oligarchs are strenuously exercising their financial h…
Feb. 2, 2011

Onex Makes 1st Flight; Fits 99% Size Pilots

Stopping by Sonex Aircraft the morning of  January 28, Mark Schaible greeted me with the news that its single-seater, the Onex, had made its first flight the day before. It passed its FAA inspection just after noon, added Sonex Founder John Monnett,…
Jan. 20, 2011

Savvy Flight Instructor Now Flies a Kindle

Not long ago I received an e-mail from Greg Brown, one of the many friends made during my time at Flight Training magazine (and Greg, the 2000 CFI of the Year, still writes his popular “Flying Carpet” column for it.) It was a short note …
Jan. 12, 2011

Winter Callback: What Would You Do?

Immediate gratification is one of my guilty pleasures, especially when it comes to the interactive editions of Callback, the online publication of NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System. And there is some pilot ego involved as well, a chance …
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 …
Dec. 14, 2010

CPC Training Sets Customer Service Baseline

Customer service, as the AOPA student retention survey recently reaffirmed, plays an important role in the student pilot dropout rate. As anyone who has called or visited more than one flight school can attest, the quality of customer service—good, …
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…
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…
Nov. 10, 2010

FAA Cuts Flying Costs With Free Charts

Now that I have your attention, temper your excitement with the understanding that this cost-saving opportunity may only benefit infrequent fliers, those who feel lucky to afford 30 or 40 hours a year. As a lifetime member of this fraternity, every …
Oct. 21, 2010

AOPA Diagnoses Aviation Ills with Research

Reading that AOPA has commissioned an ambitious research project to diagnose the ills that have been decimating the American pilot population for decades, a visceral first reaction was “finally!” The project’s announcement rightly…
Oct. 6, 2010

FAA Should Serve Training Safety & Reality

Not long ago the FAA brought the number of fatal accidents in amateur-built experimental aircraft to the attention of the aviation community. It got more specific about the problem—and its solutions—in its Aviation Safety business plan for fiscal ye…
Sept. 26, 2010

Individual Effort: Principal Key to New Pilots

Subbing for the middle school gym teacher the other day, I reported for lunch duty at the conjoined cafeteria it shares with Omro High School. There I saw OHS Principal Brett Steffen, who acted on his aviation interest and earned his private pilot c…
Sept. 15, 2010

LEAP Could Inspire Pilot Population Growth

Many, including yours truly, have been talking about the challenges facing aviation and the declining pilot population in the 21st century. Among them is the public perception that flying is mundane, as exciting as taking the bus or driving a car. …
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…
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…
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…