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Flying Staff

Cirrus Training Device Takes on a Fresh ‘Perspective’

Cirrus Design Corp. and Frasca International have teamed to update one of Cirrus’ two Frasca flight training devices (FTDs) to incorporate the new Perspective avionics from Garmin. Training is now available at Cirrus’s Duluth, Minnesota, factory. Announced at the EBACE show in Switzerland, the new avionics suite includes Garmin’s synthetic vision technology and a center […]

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Landing Incident Prompts AD on Eclipse 500; None Grounded

When an Eclipse pilot at Chicago Midway Airport firewalled the throttles for a go-around caused by wind shear, the engine controls stuck in the maximum-thrust position. The very light jet landed safely with two pilots and two passengers on board, but the incident led to an emergency airworthiness directive from the FAA. According to Eclipse, […]

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Aviation Legend John Miller Dead at 102

Captain Johnny Miller, a self-taught pilot whose flying career began with barnstorming during aviation’s golden age, has died at 102. Miller flew his own Beech Bonanza throughout the country up until a few years ago. Over his career, he flew the airmail, set a transcontinental record in a Pitcairn autogiro, competed in air races, served […]

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$139K Light Sport Amphib Makes a Splash

Can a light sport amphibian gain a beachhead in the new-airplane market? With Vern Raburn on its board of advisors and a veteran team of engineers from Burt Rutan’s Scaled Composites, California-based Icon Aircraft is approaching the market with gusto. Founded in 2005 by former F-16 pilot Kirk Hawkins, Icon’s inaugural product is a slick, […]

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The Bernoulli Brigade

It must be a perennial embarrassment to high school physics teachers that cheap balsa gliders — to say nothing of folded-up pieces of paper, or butterflies — can fly. After all, it says right here in the official textbook that airplanes fly because air has to go a longer distance over the top of the […]

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Oldest Boeing Flying Again

Addision Pemberton made the first flight in a Boeing 40 biplane in February after an eight-year restoration of the oldest flying Boeing in existence. Boeing designed the airplane in 1925 to serve early mail routes, and the fuselage was later stretched to add two and then four passenger seats in the cabin. Pemberton’s Boeing 40 […]

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Avemco to Offer Insurance for Part-Time CFIs

As an effort to increase the number of active flight instructors, Avemco will be offering insurance coverage for CFIs not affiliated with flight school or FBO training programs who wish to conduct flight training in their own aircraft. According to Jim Lauerman, Avemco president, the additional endorsement will allow aircraft owners who are also CFIs […]

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Cessna to Build Columbus in Kansas

Cessna’s recently announced, large-cabin Columbus bizjet will be built in Kansas. The company made the announcement shortly after state legislators approved a bill pledging $33 million of funding for the new factory. Cessna says that the Columbus project will provide more than 1,000 direct jobs as part of its $780 million investment, the biggest project […]

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A Faster King Air

When Beech developed its big T-tailed King Air 200 in 1973 it named it the Super King Air, and using the word super has proved to be right on target 35 years later. More than 2,000 King Air 200s have been delivered, making it the most popular turbine-powered business airplane of all time. And over […]

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