photo Archives - FLYING Magazine https://cms.flyingmag.com/tag/photo/ The world's most widely read aviation magazine Mon, 11 Dec 2023 16:17:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 A Fond Memory: Sun ‘n Fun Aerospace Expo 2023 https://www.flyingmag.com/a-fond-memory-sun-n-fun-aerospace-expo-2023/ Sun, 10 Dec 2023 16:49:20 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=190128 There's something special about about flying your airplane into an airshow or aviation festival. You truly feel accomplished when you fly the published approach, rock your wings on command, stick the landing on the dot specified, and then are greeted by the people on scooters who direct you where to park at the Sun 'n Fun Aerospace Expo.

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There is something extra special about flying your airplane into an airshow or aviation festival. You truly feel accomplished when you fly the published approach, rock your wings on command, stick the landing on the dot specified, and then are greeted by the people on scooters who direct you where to park.

That’s how it is supposed to go—and often it does go that well, provided you do your homework before you launch for the big event.

Aspiring to own a backcountry king? The Aviat Husky A-1C was just one option to choose from at Sun ‘n Fun. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]

If this is your first flight to a given airshow or fly-in, look for a pilot who has made the trip before and is willing to share information. You might even find someone who will make the flight with you.

Pick the route that works best for your aircraft, keeping in mind performance, especially when it comes to climbing over any high terrain on the way. A turbocharged Cessna T182 might not have any trouble, but the pilot of the vintage Taylorcraft might take a longer route that keeps the airplane over lower terrain.

Consider using supplemental oxygen. Though the regs say that the minimum flight crew needs to be on supplemental oxygen at 12,500 feet after 30 minutes, most pilots begin to experience hypoxia at much lower altitudes—sometimes as low as 6,000 feet—so be prepared.

Know how to calculate performance and use the avionics you’re flying with. You don’t want to be the pilot randomly pushing buttons to update a flight plan while hurtling through the air.

Be conservative about weight and balance as well as performance. While it is tempting to overload your aircraft by ‘just a little’ with all the gear you want for camping, it can come back to bite you. Remember, the OEM determined the calculations in the POH using a new airplane and a test pilot at the controls.

Have at least two methods for updating your preflight briefing in the air—a tablet and com radio, for example—and always carry a backup handheld radio. If you’ve never used a payphone (these people walk among us—payphone operation is now part of my curriculum), learn how to use it. There are places that lack cell service but still have a payphone on location, believe it or not.

Pack water and snacks for the trip, and be wary of dehydration and hunger as they make you sleepy. Drink some water before the approach to landing, as water wakes you up—and an alert pilot is a better pilot.

Plan each leg of the flight meticulously. Be careful that get-there-itis does not cloud your judgment. Build in extra days, and ID places to divert to on each leg.

Make sure you are night current and proficient before you begin the journey. There are times when a pilot finds themselves playing “beat the clock” in an aircraft not certified for night flight because the last flight segment went longer than they anticipated.

For navigation, use a combination of digital and analog methods—if the digital goes tango uniform, the paper could save your trip. Make sure both paper and digital materials are current. You do not want to fly with a sectional years out of date and enter Class D airspace thinking it’s a Class E airport—only to learn the airport now has a tower.

Be conservative about fuel burn. Make a list of all the airports that have fuel, located along your route and within 20 miles off to each side, just in case.

If you are flying with a copilot or a companion, have a discussion about cockpit duties before you leave the ground. With a copilot, make sure to designate who is the ‘pilot flying’ and who is the pilot monitoring and fielding radio calls and programming avionics.

If they are not a pilot, you can still assign them the task of watching for traffic and dialing in frequencies on the com side.

Mods and more mods go on display, such as this Blackhawk Aerospace King Air conversion. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]

Airshow NOTAMs

By regulation, specifically FAR 91.103: “Each pilot in command shall, before beginning a flight, become familiar with all available information concerning that flight.” This means the pilot needs to know what weather to expect, be familiar with the forecasts, fuel requirements, aircraft takeoff and landing data, weight and balance, alternatives available if the planned flight cannot be completed, and any known traffic delays of which the pilot in command has been advised by ATC. If your intended destination is an airshow or fly-in, this regulation is now on steroids—expect to find a multi- page notice to air missions (NOTAM) released several days before the event.

The larger the fly-in, the larger the NOTAM. Pay special attention to the communication procedures. If the airport is non-towered, it is likely that a temporary control tower will be brought in for the event. The procedures are created to lessen frequency congestion.

Instead of having hundreds of pilots all talking at once, it’s often one radio call made over a specific landmark to establish contact. Rock your wings when recognized, then follow instructions for landing.

Most NOTAMs have traffic pattern diagrams imposed on Google Earth images for illustration—it’s easy to see where you should be and where you need to avoid when you have an image to refer to.

Pilots who have flown into airshows before—like Sun ’n Fun Aerospace Expo and EAA AirVenture—recommend having a hard copy of the NOTAM with you in the cockpit along with any digital presentation. Paper doesn’t run out of batteries.

Even if you have flown into this particular event before, still study the NOTAM, as they are often adjusted year to year—for example, traffic patterns may be altered to move aircraft away from heavily populated parking areas.

New tech on display: The show saw the announcement of the CubCrafters Carbon Cub UL with a Rotax 916iS powerplant. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
The night show on Wednesday and Saturday draws a crowd to see performances by the likes of the Aeroshell demonstration team light up the sky. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
The WACO on floats highlighted a press conference outside of the WACO Kitchen at KLAL before the show. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
The classic lines of the Lockheed Electra always draw an airshow crowd. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
“Panchito” soars through the moody central Florida skies during the Sun ‘n Fun Aerospace Expo’s daily airshow. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
The Junkers A50 light sport version made its grand U.S. debut at the Sun ‘n Fun Aerospace Expo. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]

Skills for the Airshow Arrival

Brush up on specialty takeoffs and landings, crosswind approaches, and go-arounds before you head out on the great adventure. You do not want to be rusty flying into an airshow.

There is a maneuver you were probably not taught as a student pilot but you need it to establish communication and many of these events—that is rocking the wings of the aircraft.

It sounds simple enough, but the controllers who ask the airplanes to identify themselves by rocking their wings really want to see you rock those wings. Make that airplane thrash around like a 10-year-old who has had a frog put down their shirt—but don’t stall or roll inverted.

Practice approaches, especially short approaches and precision landing technique, because “land on the green dot” means land on the green dot.

Study the airport diagram for the facility and know where you will be expected to park. Usually, airshows have ground marshalers, often people on scooters wearing safety vests with FOLLOW ME on the back.

Remember to watch your wingtips as you taxi, especially when there are lots of people around. Though there may be designated pathways for pe- destrians, some people drift outside of their lanes. You don’t want to be the pilot of the Cessna 172 who hits someone in the back of the head with your wing while you taxi, or the guy in the Beechcraft Baron who decides to ignore the ground handlers and taxi into the grass—putting the nosewheel into a gopher hole, resulting in two propeller strikes.

And, in the end, if you are delayed getting to the event, learn from the experience—and realize that it will make a better story to be told around the campfire.

In Paradise City, new models abound in the ultralight and light sport world, including this Aeroprakt-32, made to be an aerial photo platform. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
A perennial favorite among the favored P-51s, the Mustang “Crazy Horse” silhouettes against the sunset. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]

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Gallery: Wednesday at Oshkosh https://www.flyingmag.com/gallery-wednesday-at-oshkosh/ https://www.flyingmag.com/gallery-wednesday-at-oshkosh/#comments Wed, 27 Jul 2022 14:14:05 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=149437 Our reporters are on the ground, taking you along with them.

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EAA AirVenture continued Wednesday, once again under picture-perfect conditions at Wittman Regional Airport (KOSH). Our reporters are on the ground, taking you along with them.

A Lockheed Martin U-2 Dragon Lady reconnaissance jet wows the crowd on Wednesday at Oshkosh. [Photo: Thom Patterson]
Patty Wagstaff provided aerobatic thrills Wednesday in an Extra 300LX. [Photo: Thom Patterson]
Gregory Reister, who traveled to Oshkosh from Alberta, Canada, shows off his AirVenture windsock headgear. [Photo: Thom Patterson]
A flight crew member aboard the Perlan 2 high-altitude glider watches a flight demonstration of a Delta Air Lines Airbus A330-900neo. [Photo: Thom Patterson]
A Game Composites GB1 GameBird aerobatic airplane taxis on Runway 27 at Wittman Regional Airport during AirVenture’s daily airshow. [Photo: Thom Patterson]
Van’s new RV-15 drew quite a crowd all day. [Photo: Meg Godlewski]
Show attendees have an opportunity to write their anniversary messages to Van’s to mark 50 years since the company’s creation. [Photo: Meg Godlewski]
Faux machine guns sit on a replica of the World War I biplane the Fokker D.VII. [Photo: Meg Godlewski]

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Gallery: Brigadier General Charles McGee https://www.flyingmag.com/gallery-general-charles-mcgee/ Mon, 17 Jan 2022 17:34:27 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=112648 The post Gallery: Brigadier General Charles McGee appeared first on FLYING Magazine.

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Tuskegee Airman General Charles McGee, a decorated Army pilot who flew over 400 fighter combat missions between World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War, died Sunday at the age of 102.

Take a look back at some moments from McGee’s historic life.

At Ramitelli airfield in Italy, Col. McGee stands in front of the P-51C he named “Kitten” for his wife. At his side is Nathaniel Wilson the Mustang’s crew chief. [U.S. Department of Defense]
General Charles McGee spends some time with FLYING editor-in-chief Julie Boatman during his 100th birthday celebration. [Photo: Stephen Yeates]
McGee high-fives Airmen during his visit to Dover Air Force Base on December 6, 2019 [U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Christopher Quail]
President Donald J. Trump participates in the promotion pinning ceremony for State of the Union Gallery guest and Tuskegee Airman, retired Brig. Gen. Charles McGee, February. 4, 2020, in the Oval Office of the White House. [Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead]
This document officially named McGee as a rated pilot. [Courtesy: US Government Archives]
McGee receives the Distinguished Flying Cross in Korea in 1951. [Courtesy: U.S. Department of Defense]
Col. McGee gives a thumbs up after piloting a Cirrus Vision Jet with demo pilot Boni Caldeira, of Cirrus Aircraft to celebrate his 100th birthday. [Photo: Stephen Yeates]
Retired U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Charles McGee, documented Tuskegee Airman, holds up a bottle of cola to honor the tradition of shooting down an enemy aircraft during his tour of the 99th Flying Training Squadron Dec. 6, 2021, at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas. In celebration of the U.S. Air Force’s 75th anniversary, McGee was treated to a heritage tour of the 99th FTS and participated in a training mission in a T-1A aircraft simulator. [U.S. Air Force photo by Sean M. Worrell]

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Gallery: Roc Takes Third Test Flight https://www.flyingmag.com/gallery-roc-takes-third-test-flight/ Sun, 16 Jan 2022 18:42:21 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=112490 Stratolaunch’s Roc—the biggest airplane in the world—returned to the sky Sunday, making its first test flight in more than eight months.

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Stratolaunch’s Rocthe biggest airplane in the world—returned to the sky Sunday, making its first test flight in more than eight months. Check out some photos from this historic event.

Stratolaunch director of flight operations Evan “Ivan” Thomas approaches Roc before Sunday’s test flight. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Pre-flight preparations on Sunday at California’s Mojave Air & Space Port (KMHV) began before daybreak. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc was wheels up at 8:48 a.m. PT Sunday from Runway 30 at California’s Mojave Air & Space Port. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Eventually, Roc’s massive wings will carry and launch reusable hypersonic test aircraft. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
The one-of-a-kind airplane is powered by six Pratt & Whitney PW4056 turbofans obtained from retired Boeing 747-400s. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc’s length measures 238 feet. Surprisingly, the Boeing 747-8i’s 250-foot length is 12 feet longer. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc’s flight crew cycled through retraction and deployment of the middle main landing gear on the left fuselage. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc pilot Mark “Gidro” Giddings made two low approaches above the runway Sunday before landing the gigantic airplane. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc landed Sunday at California’s Mojave Air & Space Port after a test flight that lasted nearly four and a half hours. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
Roc’s flight crew executed two low approaches over Runway 30 before landing. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]
The world’s largest airplane by wingspan boasts a total of 28 wheels. [Courtesy: Stratolaunch]

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Gallery: Cirrus G6 SR Series https://www.flyingmag.com/gallery-cirrus-g6-sr-series/ Tue, 11 Jan 2022 21:12:03 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=111460 The post Gallery: Cirrus G6 SR Series appeared first on FLYING Magazine.

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On Tuesday, Cirrus Aircraft introduced the latest evolution of its single-engine piston product line, the 2022 G6 SR Series. Take a look around this updated aircraft.

Editor’s Note: All photos courtesy of Cirrus Aircraft.

The new SR Series introduces a stunning new colorway: Himalayan Salt.
The wing has been made “sleeker” along with smoother transitions surrounding the ice panels.
Redesigned step lighting makes for easier entry at night.
A new baggage door allows for remote keyless entry, and swings open past 90 degrees.
New fast-charging USB ports enhance the passenger experience—and keep pilots powered up.
The new G6 SR Series is available starting this week.

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Our Favorite Photos of 2021 https://www.flyingmag.com/our-favorite-photos-of-2021/ Wed, 29 Dec 2021 14:26:55 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=109016 A collection of the images we like best from FLYING's news and features of the past year.

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When a pilot hears an airplane overhead, they look up—and compelling photos of aircraft draw our attention, too.

We have pulled our favorite images from 2021’s news and features online into a collection for you to enjoy. Let us know your favorites, too, at editorial@flying.media.

Here’s to capturing more aviation memories in 2022!

[Courtesy: Blue Origin]

Funk’s historic moment: Wally Funk steps out of Blue Origin’s New Shepard capsule after fulfilling a lifelong dream of reaching space. Funk, a trailblazer for female aviators, finally was able to achieve her lifelong goal of flying into space for the first time at the age of 82.

[Credit: Stephen Yeates]

The joy of airshows returns: Air shows were on again in 2021, with EAA AirVenture at Oshkosh, Wisconsin, hosting a record crowd. The Phillips 66 Aerostars took scholarship winners from I Hart Flying up for a demo flight.

[Courtesy: Joby Aviation]

Joby takes flight: Joby Aviation, one of the many companies vying for market share in the busy eVTOL space, makes a 150-nm milestone flight in July.

[Credit: Jim Allen]

Houston coolness: The B-17 Texas Raiders from the Commemorative Air Force Gulf Coast Wing give the crowd a glimpse of the past at Wings Over Houston.

[Credit: Mark Loper]

Winner, winner: Vicky Benzing taxis in after securing her win in the Silver Sport Class at the National Championship Reno Air Races in September. Benzing blazed around the course at 305 mph in Lucky Girl, her Lancair Legacy. 

[Credit: Mark Loper]

Storming in: The first STOL Drag races take place at Reno in September, with single-engine airplanes of all stripes duking it out in front of the crowds.

[Courtesy: Gulfstream]

The big reveal: Gulfstream unveils its G400 (pictured) and G800 to fill out its lineup of midsize to ultralong-haul jets at an unveiling in Savannah in October.

[Courtesy: Jeremy Kariuki]

Quite a view: FLYING staff reporter Jeremy Kariuki shares the aircraft he’s most thankful for: the Lockheed C-130 he served on as crew chief in Wichita Falls, Texas.

[Courtesy: Kim Magee]

A special ride: Balloonist Kim Magee secured the Montgolfier Diploma from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) for her flight in an AX-05 balloon.

[Courtesy: Rolls-Royce]

Fastest in the world: Rolls-Royce proves it’s serious about electric aircraft with its record-setting flight in the Spirit of Innovation in November.

[Courtesy: Stratolaunch]

We like big airplanes: Want to know what it’s like to fly the world’s largest airplane? Stratolaunch Director of Flight Operations Evan Thomas, left, and co-pilot Mark “Gidro” Giddings bank right during Roc’s second flight. 

[Credit: Stephen Yeates]

A new era begins: FLYING Senior Vice President of Global Sales & Partnerships Lisa deFrees and Editor-in Chief Julie Boatman celebrate with FLYING owner Craig Fuller at EAA AirVenture after bestowing the 2021 Innovation Award upon Garmin, Piper, Daher, and Cirrus for Autoland. Fuller had just closed the deal to purchase the legendary title—and launch the new FLYING.

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