i try to click on latest questions on light sport powered parachute and nothing comes up. why? i really need them and can’t find any on faa site. thank you for any help you can give me. brett
Position: Taxiway Hotel... KSLCGroundspeed: 30 knotsEquipment: 319Pax-on-board: 123Max forward taxi speed limitation on the 319 is 30 knots. I taxi at 30 knots when I can do so safely. Dry surfaces, light winds with smooth concrete joints are required, and of course, no one ahead blocking the way. The heavy loads of Christmas and New Years are behind us, as […]
Position: 100 miles south of KMSPAltitude: 37,000 feetGroundspeed: 515 knots (592 mph)Equipment: A320 V2500-A5 enginesPax-on-Board: 150 + 2 jumpersLocal Time: 0220 hrsAirborne... Compass heading 091 degreesIt's the beach thing again... Think I am looking west (for as the Led Zeppelin song goes: there's a feeling I get when I look to the west...) Th […]
Position: Fifty miles southeast of KOAK (Oakland)Altitude: 18,000 feet and climbingGroundspeed: 370 knotsRate-of-climb: 2,800 fpmEquipment: A319Pax-on-Board: 123Airborne...It has been one of those weeks... Juggling a heavy flight schedule with family matters taking place away from the domicile. I am glad to be back in the cockpit where I am in control, more […]
Position: Over KCMH (Columbus)Altitude: 34,000 feetGroundspeed: 414 knots (475 mph)Equipment: A319 Pax-on-Board: 123 + 3 jumpers Airborne... Fi-Fi's nose is fifteen degrees into the quartering headwind of 120 knots to maintain the course line. In our six, the sun is barely above the horizon. Our cockpit is filling with early morning light... The kind of […]
Emergency brainwash post...Crippen and Young... Two of the hottest fighter pilots ever. The kind of pilots who flew F-4 Phantoms into Vulcan gun range and traded heavy metal with comrades in Migs, then flipped them off, canopy to canopy, as they thundered past in afterburner.Thirty years ago, these two Gods of Thunder did something so audacious it is hard to […]
Well, I've been procrastinating writing this post for a while since we returned from South America, because I knew it was going to be huge. We took some 1200 photos over the two weeks we were in Chile and Argentina, and there were actually quite a few things I never bothered to get the camera out for. Just selecting the photos I wanted to use in this po […]
I spend a lot of time at FL350. A lot of time. NewCo's average stage length is longer than most regional airlines', particularly those that fly turboprops and 35-50 seat jets. For the most part that's a good thing. It means less work, less stress, less unpaid time on the ground. It results in more efficient trips and more days off work. That s […]
Merry Christmas to all! Today Dawn and I are flying to Atlanta and then onwards to Santiago, Chile, for the start of a two-week vacation in South America. We'll be stopping in Santiago, Púcon, and Puerto Varas before boarding the Navimag ferry for a four-day journey through the Patagonian fjords to Puerto Natales. From there we will spend a few days tre […]
Today is December 22, the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year. Here in Minneapolis it is short indeed, at 8 hours and 46 minutes. The sun rises at nearly 8AM, sets at 4:30PM, and never reaches higher than 21.6º above the horizon. This is the price we pay for gloriously long summer days with lingering sunsets and dusky twilights that cling to the we […]
If you've been in aviation very long, you've likely heard some variation of the following story:A student pilot was practicing touch and goes in a Piper Cub at the local grass strip when he saw a Bonanza zoom overhead. "Wow," he thought, "I wish I could fly a fast, sexy airplane like that!"The Bonanza pilot was plodding along at […]
I'll tell you about the circular yurt construction shortly, but today I couldn't pass up this story about a cat that escaped from its carrier before take-off on an Air Canada flight. Air Canada allows small pets to be carried in the passenger cabin, provided that they remain in approved pet carriers that fit on the floor under a seat. The door to t […]
Today someone in an aviation workplace was either amused or insulted, I'm not sure which, by my excitement that he was genuinely using trigonometry for real things. I'm afraid that he may have thought that my excitement and admiration was over the fact that he knew how use trigonometry at all, but really this is just one cool part of a very cool pr […]
I'm not currently working with helicopters, either as a charter customer or with a company that operates rotary ring aircraft, but I had to love this trojan horse spam. Your order for our air commuter services has been received and processed. The chopper will be at your disposal from 3.30 p.m. wednesday to 5.45 tuesday. Once again, the rates are as foll […]
The post from a few days ago didn't actually herald my being back. It was actually an indication that I'd neglected the blog for so long that a post I had written long ago and postdated to the far future came due and published itself. I didn't have a good plan for when to schedule it at the time and had been punting it forward through time for […]
I have a few requests to blog about the weather more, and I mean to, but somehow haven't for a while. I was going to today, with a report on the Weather Channel as a jumping-off point, but then I realized something that sidetracked me on that entry. There's two sorts of being identified as the blogger. One is when someone who reads the blog meets m […]
i try to click on latest questions on light sport powered parachute and nothing comes up. why? i really need them and can’t find any on faa site. thank you for any help you can give me. brett
The FAA changed the link… I’ll go back and update it. Thanks for letting me know.