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Pilot Proficiency

An Added Lesson

This was a day of contrasts. It started with my lesson in the P28. Weather looked ok at the time of briefing but had changed somewhat after we got through the preflight. A wind change meant a different runway and the direction we planned to depart toward had become “dark”. A new plan. So instead […]

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“Dive Away From Wind?”

I would hope that every one of us learned early on in our training the proper control positions when taxiing whenever there was some wind present. I’m sure we all remember the diagram showing in which quadrant the wind was and how the controls should be positioned to ensure that the wind didn’t get the […]

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Airwork: Where Are You Headin’?

I thought of it as a “fam” flight — a flight to familiarize someone with why general aviation engenders such passion. A week or so earlier, during a physical, my doctor expressed an interest in going for an airplane ride. Since I try to never postpone joy, I invited her. Lauren was hesitant to take […]

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An International Affair

Today I had the chance to sneak out of the office (we’re shipping the April issue and there’s not a lot of leeway for me to be out if we’re going to be on time) to attend the Women in Aviation International Conference at Disney’s Coronado Springs Resort and Convention Center through Saturday, Feb. 27. […]

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Lesson 5: A Typical Sunday?

It’s starting to come together for me. At least for slow flight and power on and off stalls. With Lesson 5, I accomplished these under my “own power.” I even successfully radioed in each of the maneuvers so others in Charlie South practice area, located to the west of KRVB, would know where we were […]

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Smooth Flying in Rough Air

Bumpy air isn’t pleasant. For passengers, it can feel even worse, sometimes to the point where it becomes necessary to offload lunch. Airmanship guru Wolfgang Langewiesche addressed the problem in his 1944 classic, Stick and Rudder: “It is in rough air that straight flight becomes an art — and the interesting thing about it is […]

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Plan the Flight; Fly the Plan

We always hear, “Plan the flight — Fly the Plan.” And this is great advice — until the plan no longer makes sense. Unfortunately, too many pilots plan the flight and then hang on to that plan when it no longer makes sense because they really don’t have a backup plan. Quite often, we spend […]

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Gear Up: The Remarkable Benefit of a Slightly Different Course

It is unlikely that inhabitants of any part of the country other than the Northeast really identify with the term “nor’easter.” For those familiar, the word sends shivers. The wind whips out of the northeast in New England when a low parks itself off the coast and blows back cold, wet weather from over the […]

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Winter Weather’s Dirty Half-Dozen

When any pilot considers cold-weather flying, in-flight airframe icing is first and foremost on the list of worries. Icing is an important safety risk to all types of airplanes, and a great deal of cost and effort is spent to avoid icing or to safely remove it or prevent it from accumulating. But the cold […]

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Pilot in aircraft
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