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Pilot Proficiency

University Study Needs Your Input

Three aviation-oriented colleges — the University of North Dakota (UND), the University of Alaska and Embry Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU) — are co-opting on a research project aimed at clarifying pilots’ needs for in-cockpit weather. The study also hopes to gain insight into how best to educate pilots in using the available weather data. Dubbed […]

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Redbird Flight Simulations

June 2010 I HAD HEARD THE NAME REDBIRD Flight Simulations before, but it wasn’t until I got a call from my former Meridian instructor, Bill Inglis, who told me that he was buying a pair of Redbird full-motion simulators for his flight-training company, that I took the opportunity to learn more about the sim maker. […]

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Sport Pilot: Required Instruments & Paperwork

May 2010 Each month, Flying answers questions about the new 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: What are the instruments that the FAA requires for VFR day flight in a two-seat (pilot, passenger) homebuilt […]

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Warmer Temps = Higher Density Altitude

As I write this, the mercury here in New Jersey is inching into the 90s. It seems like just a few weeks ago the trees were still budding. But summer has arrived, and with it, all the new flight planning considerations of the season. Most often, we think of summer as the time for thunderstorms […]

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Upset Training Comes to My Home Airport

The debate over whether or not to reintroduce spins to primary flight training has proponents on both sides, but most pilots agree that strapping on a parachute (required by FARs) and experiencing flight around all axes is a worthwhile exercise, if you can find the time and place. A cottage industry has built up around […]

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I Learned About Flying From That: Lucky Drop

During the most intense of the Vietnam War years, I had a strong sense that I was the luckiest young sailor in the Navy, as I luxuriated in a serendipitous assignment as an air rescue swimmer and H-34 crew chief stationed in Hawaii. Operating workhorse Sikorsky S-58 helicopters out of Pearl Harbor and Barbers Point […]

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eNotams Launched by FAA

As of April 20, a computer has been generating digital notices to airmen (NOTAMs) for Atlantic City (NJ) International Airport (KACY). The technical innovation, set to expand to several other airports soon, is said to offer numerous advantages over human-generated notams, according to FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt. For example, notams may now be transmitted to […]

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Gear Up: One Big Airplane

Though I thoroughly enjoyed being the guest of US Airways, after two tiring sessions in its simulators, I was ready for a break. The Boeing 757 and 737 had been fun and, for the most part, understandable to me. I had survived assorted V1 cuts and wind shear in both airplanes and was pretty well […]

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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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Wire Strike Hazards Aren’t Just for Helicopters

A pleasant spring jaunt on a sunny day often leads to meandering down a winding river. It’s one of the most scenic trips you can make, and a light airplane makes it so much more thrilling than floating downstream in an inner tube. But before you succumb to the temptation to skim too close to […]

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Pilot in aircraft
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