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Pilot Proficiency

Safety Against the Odds

The e-mail we received here at Flying from Col. Sid “Scroll” Mayeux, chief of aviation safety at the United States Air Force Safety Center, was a little hard to believe. “Last year (Fiscal Year 2009),” Mayeux’s e-mail read, “was the USAF’s safest year in aviation safety, with 17 Class A Aviation Flight Mishaps for a […]

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Understanding Electrical Systems

I sometimes chuckle when I think about the complexity of the electrical systems in new airplanes, particularly single-engine airplanes. Most current production singles have multiple electrical buses, more than one electrical power source and, often, emergency backup batteries. And that’s great. But there is still only one engine, and if it quits, the airplane is […]

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Airwork: Assessing the Risk of Ascending

The idea was to get away. We’d just learned that the life of the engine in our Cardinal ¡ha terminado! And, even after we decided what to do about replacing the engine, it would be some time before we’d be able to fly the airplane again. In the meantime, the IFR certification (transponder and pitot-static […]

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Make Someone’s First Flight a Happy Memory

With National Learn to Fly Day approaching (May 15), I’m reminded of some of my own “first flights. “A couple months ago, I got a Facebook message from a high school friend whose father had some medical problems. He’s now on the mend, but one of the things my friend told me was that her […]

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VFR Flight Planning

April 2010 Flying cross-country by visual flight rules is a far less precise endeavor than flying IFR (see Robert Goyer’s IFR Flight Prep: A Whole New Game April 2010 article for more info). As a former Navy fighter pilot turned GA pilot once put it, VFR flight consists of “sniff-checking your way through weather” –– […]

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IFR Flight Prep: A Whole New Game

April 2010 LIKE A LOT OF PILOTS who learned instrument flying in the mid ’90s, I got my ticket as new technology was just beginning to show up in the cockpits of small airplanes. Not that it did me much good at the time. My instrument training at FlightSafety Academy, then in Lakeland, Florida, was […]

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Sport Pilot: A&P Signoff, Student Pilot,Certificate Extension, Dual Instruction

Each month, Flying answers questions about the Sport Pilot/Light Sport Aircraft rule with assistance from the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), the authority on the opportunities available within the category commonly known as “Sport Pilot”: Q:Can an A&P (Airframe and Powerplant) mechanic sign off an annual condition inspection for an experimental light-sport aircraft or must it […]

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Training: Flight School Safety

When we talk about flight training safety, we usually refer to the steps an instructor can take to ensure a lesson is not marred by an incident or accident. However, there are also operational considerations that can contribute to flight training safety. I recently had a chance to talk with Dana Siewert, the director of […]

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Bring Along a Buddy

I’m a lucky guy. When I ask someone to fly along with me to hone my procedures, I can turn to Flying contributing editor Tom Benenson. Tom is one of the most experienced pilots you’ll find, and has made a career seeking out detailed strategies for flying in the IFR system, so his input is […]

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May 15 Is International Learn to Fly Day

One of my personal goals this year is to follow one of the directives issued at the recent Women in Aviation International Conference and promote general aviation in my local community. Lo and behold, as often happens when you put goals out into the universe, opportunities seem to appear. Last night I attended my first […]

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Pilot in aircraft
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