• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
General Aviation News

General Aviation News

Because flying is cool

  • Pictures of the Day
    • Submit Picture of the Day
  • Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Products
    • NTSB Accidents
    • ASRS Reports
  • Comments
  • Classifieds
    • Place Classified Ad
  • Events
  • Digital Archives
  • Subscribe
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Diamond Aircraft arrive at Doss Aviation for Air Force Initial Flight Screening Program

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

The first 11 of 44 Diamond DA20-C1 and one DA40 aircraft have arrived at Doss Aviation at Pueblo Memorial Airport in Colorado for the Air Force’s Initial Flight Screening Program. The program is a 40-day, 25-hour flight screening course for up to 1,700 United States Air Force officers annually.

Procedures established for reimbursing five Washington D.C. general aviation operators for Sept 11 losses

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

The Department of Transportation (DOT) has issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that establishes procedures for reimbursing general aviation operators at five Washington, D.C., area airports for the “direct and incremental financial losses they incurred while the airports were closed due to federal government actions taken after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001,” […]

Cirrus has landed a milestone

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

Cirrus Design Corp. has landed a milestone, receiving an Organization Designated Airworthiness Representative (ODAR) designation from the FAA. This authority allows Cirrus to train, evaluate and manage its own team of airworthiness designees. The designation is a “testament to the FAA’s confidence in our quality systems and personnel,” says David Coleal, president and COO. The […]

Jabirum’s smallest LSA receives certification

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

Jabiru USA’s smallest Light Sport Aircraft, the Calypso, has earned LSA certification. The Calypso-SP (Sport Pilot) can cruise at 100 knots on 85 hp, provided by a four-cylinder, aircooled, direct-drive Jabiru 2200 engine, which runs on either 100LL or 91-octane auto gas, Jabiru officials said. With full fuel, the LSA accommodates a 400-pound additional payload. […]

Of Meigs and mayors

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

Pilots are not the only people still talking about the closure of Meigs Field in Chicago. According to the group Friends of Meigs Field, the issue is a hot topic in this year’s Chicago mayoral race. Candidates Bill Walls and Dorothy Brown have both made the midnight illegal destruction of the airport an issue in […]

When cargo goes astray…

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

How did alligators get into the sewers of New York? Maybe they took an airplane. When West Palm Beach Airport was officially dedicated in 1936, the first flight out was an Eastern Airlines DC-2 bound for New York City. To celebrate the event West Palm Beach Mayor Ted Brown and Florida Postmaster O.B. Carr decided […]

Former President Bush’s wings bring luck to new aircraft carrier

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

When its 700-ton island was lifted onto the flight deck of the nation’s newest and most advanced nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, George H. W. Bush (CVN 77), the ship’s namesake placed his World War II Naval Aviator’s wings under the structure. Tradition holds that placing such tokens aboard new vessels brings good fortune. Vessels from ancient […]

the Buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

By General Aviation News Staff · October 20, 2006 ·

“You guys are so lucky, you get to fly EVERY DAY!” — Part of a good-bye speech made to instructors at a Seattle flight school by a pilot about to leave for a desk job with the FAA. “It is in Florida where we believe the microjet-based air taxi concept will live or die.” — […]

On the mend: Changes in medicals a step in the right direction

By Dave Sclair · October 20, 2006 ·

Do you believe me when I write that among the top publications I receive, the Federal Air Surgeon’s Medical Bulletin is not one of those that regularly receive high priority? Believe me, I don’t read this 12-page quarterly bulletin on an even irregular basis. However, the other day I saw a copy at the office […]

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 4042
  • Page 4043
  • Page 4044
  • Page 4045
  • Page 4046
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 4300
  • Go to Next Page »

© 2025 Flyer Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Comment Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Photographer’s Guidelines