Aviation News

Flying Managing Editor Is Sporting a New Certificate

Connie Sue White, Flying Magazine managing editor, has passed her check ride and now holds an FAA Sport Pilot certificate. According to Editor-in-Chief Robert Goyer, her examiner said their soft-field landing was the best she had ever seen in a Remos light sport aircraft, and said she “couldn’t even tell they had landed.” Congratulations, Connie […]

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FAA Revisits Cessna Seat Track Hazard

A rash of seat track failures in the mid 1980s led to an FAA airworthiness directive (AD) on several Cessna models. Faulty latch mechanisms led to several accidents in which the seat slid back and the pilot lost control of the airplane. Now, the FAA has published a notice of proposed rulemaking that adds new […]

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NetJets Numbers Edge Into the Black

Fractional aircraft specialist NetJets announced pretax earnings of $158 million for the first nine months of this year, contrasting with losses of $531 million for the same time frame last year. The increased earnings are attributed to increases in flight hours and lower fuel costs, though income from monthly management fees is down due to […]

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General Aviation Caucus to Have New Leadership

When Congressman Vern Ehlers (R-Mich.) retires at the end of this term, he will be replaced as chairman of the House of Representatives’ GA caucus by fellow Republican Sam Graves (R-Mo.). A longtime pilot, Graves is lauded by GA advocacy groups as a good choice to the lead the caucus, which Ehler helped to establish […]

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Two-Place Electric Cessna 172 Skyhawk

You could say the bad news is that Bye Energy’s plan for an electric Cessna 172 will have only two seats and an endurance of two hours. But the good news for flight schools might far outweigh those drawbacks. For one, the energy costs to fly the airplane are expected to be less than $10 […]

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GA Deliveries Still Down; but ‘Glass is Half Full’

General aviation is still in the doldrums, reflected by low third quarter numbers from the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA). Deliveries dipped to 420 aircraft, that’s 23.4 percent lower than Q3 2009. Stacked up against the same time period in 2008, it’s even more depressing — down by almost 60 percent. But that was the […]

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Some GA Stalwarts Swept Away in Election 2010

Conservatives had plenty to cheer about at the close of Election Day 2010, as incumbents were swept away in a wave of dissatisfaction with the status quo in Washington. But for general aviation interest groups, the new class of congressmen represents a new class to be educated about our industry. And in the case of […]

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Another of GA’s Favorite Sons Is Under Fire

Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.) appears largely unrepentant about his failure to access notams about a closed runway. The senator, a 10,000-hour pilot who has been flying for 50 years, landed a Cessna 340 on a closed runway at Port Isabel-Cameron County Airport in Texas on Oct. 21. The runway was marked with oversize Xs and […]

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Corporate Angel Network Sets a Stunning Mark

Most are familiar with the Corporate Angel Network’s mission — arranging rides to and from treatment for cancer patients in empty seats on corporate aircraft. But the breadth of the White Plains, New York-based charity was underscored when it arranged transportation for 317 patients in October this year — the most impressive monthly total in […]

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Flying South? Remember, You’re Not Alone

It’s almost two years since US Airways Flight 1549 achieved its ‘miracle’ water landing in the Hudson River. In the time since, pilots Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger and Jeff Skiles have spoken before innumerable people to recount their experience. But last June, Skiles addressed a group that not only knows a lot about the bird strike […]

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Pilot in aircraft
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