frustratedpilot: (Default)
2006-04-29 03:58 pm
Entry tags:

The Buzz of a Hornet

An F-18 has been cutting circles over our neighborhood this afternoon. Naval Reserve on maneuvers?

I remember, some months after I moved here, I saw a pair of F-16s making simulated strike approaches at Morristown, which was perhaps chosen for its likely resemblance to Sarajevo or Belgrade. (Andrei Codrescu voiced a similar complaint that New Orleanians had for when Army helicopters maneuvered around there, using the Easy as a stand-in for Bagdad.)

The only thing I could see being quasi-bombed around here would be the mine at New Market.

If there are any Iranians reading this--stay out of the hills.

FP
frustratedpilot: (Default)
2006-04-15 12:02 am

Transportation Safety, Misadministered!

The TSA blunders again!

Upshot: A Marine Corps Sergeant, returning home from combat duty in Iraq, is arrested by the TSA screeners for having GUNPOWDER RESIDUE ON HIS BOOTS!

The TSA is a joke. 'Nuff said.

FP
frustratedpilot: (Default)
2006-03-11 12:01 am

New Oxymoron: National Air Defense Command

I never thought anybody named BUSH would ever be my hero...but too many Bushes are still my villains.

Upshot: the Transportation Security Administration made the mistake of hosting a public hearing on the issue of airspace restrictions set up after 9/11/01. A fighter pilot who also flies small planes as a private citizen pointed out a "loophole" in the system--and NORAD is trying to hush up the matter.

FP
frustratedpilot: (Default)
2005-07-25 02:05 pm

Tilting Windmills

Hey.

I learned from www.aero-news.net yesterday that the first civil tilt-rotor aircraft, the Bell-Agusta BA609, is in flight testing and it looks successful so far. Bell Aircraft had been working on tilt-rotor technology since Ike was President, so it's about time this came along. This machine is the "Peace Dividend" of the Osprey that Bell (along with Boeing and other companies) developed for our armed forces. It'll probably be at least a year away from the FAA issuing it a certificate for carrying passengers, but it's still real progress.

So where are we going to see this machine fit in? Well, it takes off vertically, like a helicopter (which it is), but flies faster than any helicopter ever built, as it converts to a turboprop airplane in flight. So ambulance use is a given...especially for conveying trauma cases where speed is critical. Police departments would want them for rapid-response missions--at least at the State level. State governments would want them for VIP vehicles, as they'd be have more operational flexibility than conventional airplanes or helicopters. But the "killer ap" will be for those corporate CEOs who do a lot of regional travel. Imagine if you have a home office atop a Chicago skyscraper. With one of these as your limo, you could have satellite offices in Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Green Bay, Detroit, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Louisville, Columbus and Cleveland, travel to all of them on a very regular basis--and never see an airport concourse if all of the other office locations have heliports.

The only problem is the post-WTC attitude that the public now has to aircraft in urban airspace. General Aviation is still suffering the fallout from 9/11, and desire for "better security" might make it tougher for law-abiding air travelers no matter what way they want to go.

FP