Pilot Proficiency

Responding to Reality

The importance of careful flight planning is drummed into our heads from our first flight. The very first regulation in FAR 91, Subpart B, on Flight Rules (91.103) states that “each pilot in command shall, before beginning a flight, become familiar with all available information concerning that flight.” It then continues with a list of […]

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Sage Advice From Mac?’Don’t Forget the Wheels’

When we decided to include a weekly Flying Tip in every Flying eNewsletter, Editor-in-Chief Mac McClellan pointed out that FAA accident/incident reports almost always include one or more gear-up landings every week. His advice to me was, “Every week, tell ’em to remember to put the gear down.” Well, here we are with Flying Tip […]

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Aerobatics for the Rest of Us

Samuel Hynes flew Grumman TBM ‘Avenger’ torpedo bombers with the Marines in the Pacific during World War II. After the war, he became a literature professor, ultimately teaching at Princeton. At one point in the early 1950s, he lived upstairs from my parents in a small apartment in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. [My mother said he sort […]

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Prop ‘er Procedures

Every spring the FAA accident records are littered with a few reports of runaway aircraft — the result of hand propping gone awry. Usually, no one is injured. But innocent aircraft parked nearby are often victimized. In some cases, the errant aircraft will actually take off and fly around until it runs out of fuel […]

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Talk to Yourself

The safety level for professional flight operations goes up several notches with a two-pilot crew. I don’t think that’s just because the workload is so great that two are needed. But rather, I believe the second person in the pointy end serves as a second pair of eyes — not just to watch for traffic, […]

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Some Wisdom From Bax

Gordon Baxter — ‘Bax’ to just about everyone — remains one of Flying‘s most loved and revered columnists. His Bax Seat essays graced the last page of the magazine for decades, with tales of monster-size 450 hp Stearman cropdusters, open-door Piper J-3 Cubs and everything in between. Bax, a Texan who made his ‘final flight’ […]

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Wide-Eyed Admiration Might Lead to Undue Pressure

If the most dangerous words in aviation are “Watch this,” then the second most dangerous could be, “Show us how it’s done.” I heard those exact words on the frequency last week. The wind was the worst I had ever seen it in these parts, blowing 90 degrees directly across the only runway in operation […]

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When Feathered Friends Become Foes

My personal experience with bird strikes came during a night instrument training flight in a Mooney. I caught a glimpse of a feathered wing in the landing light beam, felt a slight bump, and that was it. When we landed, there were a few splotches of blood and feathers on the tail. Sorry. Not nearly […]

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Saving Private Flyin’

With lots of negative press in hard economic times, anyone who uses a “private” airplane (I guess we view the airlines as public transportation) is in the crosshairs. Now is the time for all segments of general aviation to support each other and find the common ground, rather than seek out differences. It’s true, most […]

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Shaking Off the Rusty Spots

It’s been a cold winter for much of the United States, and it stands to reason that many pilots don’t get out flying as much. When the days are short and the underwear is long, motivation for those regular “tune-up” flights sometimes falls victim to inertia. When you do get back in the saddle, there […]

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Pilot in aircraft
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