AVweb Insider

AVweb Insider offers a curated collection of opinion pieces, personal narratives, and expert analyses that delve into the nuances of aviation. From firsthand pilot experiences to in-depth discussions on industry trends and safety considerations, this section provides readers with thoughtful perspectives that go beyond standard news reporting. Ideal for aviation professionals and enthusiasts seeking deeper insights into the flying world.

I Stalled The Damn Thing

I stalled the Cub on a base-to-final turn the other day and it wasn’t intentional. This may be hard to fathom, but I got punked by a bird and it happens all the time. I won’t be surprised if other pilots who fly slow taildraggers have had these bird encounters, which are quite obviously intentional […]

Read More »

Steal A Beaver? It Ain’t That Easy

When some guy went on a demolition derby with a 70-year-old Beaver floatplane in Vancouver Harbor last week, it raised inevitable questions about the security of the seaplane terminal and the security of aircraft in general. News anchors were in full furrow about the fact that someone could just waltz into the terminal and take […]

Read More »

Dubai Jetman: History On The Fly

If YouTube and Instagram had existed when Wilbur and Orville slipped the surly bonds in Kitty Hawk, the whole thing would have pixeled by as just a brightly colored Koi in the overwhelming river of digital content that numbs the senses. You’d have been wondering … this isn’t new, right? I’m just seeing it now, […]

Read More »

The Rime of the Ancient Aviator

For as long as I’ve been flying instruments, my idea of a perfect day is about 200 and a mile. A little rain, maybe blowing up to 20 knots and with a hint a rime? Sure, fine. Why not? So that aspect of living in Florida is disagreeable to me because Florida is where instrument […]

Read More »

Of Mice And Men Who Hate Them

Growing up watching cartoons taught me the value of applying extreme measures to simple problems, such as dropping anvils on adversaries or, for delayed impact, introducing round bombs with hissing fuses. But aviation issues require mature reflection, so I consult the 1950s cartoon cat vs. mouse wars, including Tom & Jerry or the copycat duo […]

Read More »

Taxiway Of Tears

Diamond Aircraft’s factory—a place with a storied history—is located quite some distance from the London, Ontario, airport where it’s sited. Access to the runways is via a long, tree-lined taxiway that would be a pleasant trip if I hadn’t been nearly killed on it at least three times. For editorial titillation, I’m exaggerating, but not […]

Read More »

Common Sense vs. E- Everything

When then 15-year-old Greta Thunberg gave a face and a voice to the Fridays For Future movement in August of 2018, climate change was already a passionately discussed topic around the globe. What followed as the global movement gained momentum can be described as a historical miracle of modern times. Rarely in history have so […]

Read More »

Except for Helicopters. With Reward, Comes Risk

Crashes are crashes, but when one involves a major celebrity, as the Kobe Bryant accident did on Sunday, the daily press launches into frenzy mode. Audiences do their part by clicking on everything published and the resultant feedback loop can yield some pretty dodgy reporting. The need-to-know-right-now impetus sometimes puts reporters—even those with aviation expertise—in […]

Read More »

Face Winter And Spit In Its Eye

In Peter Mayle’s 1989 memoir, A Year In Provence, a naïve British couple purchased a bargain home in France, unaware that it was cheap, because it faced north, away from the sun. That winter they learned how unwise their relationship with the Earth’s furnace 93 million miles away was. I have a similar history with […]

Read More »
Sign-up for newsletters & special offers!

Get the latest stories & special offers delivered directly to your inbox

SUBSCRIBE