News Archives - FLYING Magazine https://cms.flyingmag.com/news/ The world's most widely read aviation magazine Tue, 22 Oct 2024 21:30:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 CAE Develops AR For Flight Training https://www.flyingmag.com/training/cae-develops-ar-for-flight-training/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 21:29:57 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219905&preview=1 Company has developed a system that is based on the Apple Vision Pro AR system

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Pilot training company CAE is developing an augmented reality system to supplement simulator training for pilots.

The company has developed a system that is based on the Apple Vision Pro AR system. The high-fidelity imagery of aircraft flight decks allows trainees to manipulate all the controls and view the instruments and status indicators in real time as they do so.

The system won’t replace full-on flight training device hours, but it will allow trainees to master homework tasks.

“The Apple Vision Pro App developed by CAE will allow pilots to familiarize themselves with the flight deck, practice critical procedures and develop muscle memory for key functions from anywhere,” Emmanuel Levitte, CAE’s chief technology and product officer, said in a statement. 

The company has fully developed the app for the Bombardier Global 7500 but says it can be adapted to any aircraft.

AVweb’s Russ Niles took the goggles for a spin and said the system is startlingly realistic.

“The fidelity and the virtual manipulation of the controls is hard to describe until you’ve done it,” Niles said. “With some practice, a trainee could be confidently running procedures and dealing with emergencies in a realistic way without leaving the couch. The prospects for this kind of training device are significant.”

Niles spoke with CAE’s Director of Incubation Eric Fortin, who developed the system, about its possibilities.


Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on AVweb.

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Pilot Chuck Coleman Killed in Airshow Crash https://www.flyingmag.com/airshows/pilot-chuck-coleman-killed-in-airshow-crash/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 21:05:43 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219900&preview=1 Experienced aviator had logged time in more than 100 types of aircraft and was a flight instructor for actors in 'Top Gun: Maverick.'

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Charles Thomas “Chuck” Coleman, an experienced airshow pilot who flight trained Top Gun: Maverick actors, was killed Sunday when his Extra Flugzeugbau EA300 crashed during an event in Las Cruces, New Mexico. 

According to city officials, the accident happened during the Las Cruces Air & Space Expo at Las Cruces International Airport (KLRU). Coleman, 61, was the only person on board the aircraft. 

The accident occurred at 2:30 p.m. MDT, the Las Cruces Sun-News reported. Many spectators caught the accident on cell phone video. Witnesses told authorities that the aircraft dove toward the ground then disappeared in a cloud of dirt behind scrub brush. 

Terre Blevins was one of the spectators who caught Coleman’s performance on her mobile phone. On the video, which was obtained by the Las Cruces Bulletin, Blevins can be heard asking, “Did he crash?” followed by exclamations and cries of dismay from other audience members.

That is immediately followed by the airshow announcer asking that people refrain from posting about the event on social media citing a lack of information and the desire to be respectful of Coleman’s family. The remainder of the airshow was canceled.

The accident is being investigated by the New Mexico State Police, FAA, and National Transportation Safety Board. The NTSB is requesting those who may have captured the event in video or in photographs to share their images by posting on the agency website here.

Career Legacy

Coleman was a member of the Mojave Space Port Governing Board, serving as its treasurer.

According to the organization, he had more than 35 years of experience in the aerospace industry as an engineer, ATP-rated pilot, A&P/IA mechanic, test pilot, and airshow performer.

He had logged time in more than 100 types of aircraft. He also served as a senior designer at McDonnell Douglas, lending his talents to the development of many aircraft, including the F-18. Coleman was also a test pilot for the ICON A5.

An experienced flight instructor, Coleman provided flight training to the pilots of SpaceShipOne in preparation for their suborbital flights, which resulted in winning the $10 million Ansari X Prize in 2004. He also flew the chase aircraft for the mission.

According to his website, he had 4,300 hours flying in the accident aircraft.

In addition to being a test pilot and flying in airshows, Coleman offered aerobatic flight training.

Coleman had some high-profile clients, among them the pilots for Virgin Galactic.

In 2018 he was called upon to provide flight training for the actors portraying Naval aviators in Top Gun: Maverick. He provided over 140 hours of flight instruction for the actors to prepare them for g-forces they would feel when filming the flying scenes.

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GA Pilot Group Delivers More Than 100K Pounds of Supplies to Storm-Ravaged North Carolina https://www.flyingmag.com/news/ga-pilot-group-delivers-more-than-100k-pounds-of-supplies-to-storm-ravaged-north-carolina/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 17:33:25 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219892&preview=1 After Hurricane Helene struck the state, members of the Carolina Aviators Network turned its platform into a volunteer clearinghouse.

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“How can we help?”

This phrase is common in the pilot community when someone needs help, especially when aircraft can be part of the solution. After Hurricane Helene made landfall September 26, members of the Carolina Aviators Network (CAN) turned its social media platform into a volunteer clearinghouse.

In the days immediately following the storm, nearly 6,000 national guardsmen from 11 states deployed as part of relief efforts, with the North Carolina National Guard hauling in more than 100,000 pounds of supplies from the Federal Emergency Management Agency by C-17.

The morning after the storm, the CAN Facebook group also exploded with an overwhelming response from its members, eager to volunteer their time and aircraft to help, according to Joel Amick, an organization director at the time. 

With people so willing to volunteer their time and airplanes, they agreed that they needed to do something, and quickly, Amick said. The organization began as a Facebook group in 2021, advertising fly-ins and fly-outs. Today it has more than 7,200 members and is a state-recognized 501(c)(3) corporation in North Carolina and South Carolina.

That “something” turned out to be 1,000 volunteers, including over 300 GA pilots who mobilized and showed up at Statesville Regional Airport (KSVH), which became a major distribution point for supplies to be delivered to the storm-ravaged areas.

[Courtesy: Carolina Aviators Network]

According to Erica Zangwill, a 400-hour pilot and CAN president, the organization along with the Hurricane Helene Airlift Relief Facebook group were simultaneously among the first on the scene. 

Airports across North Carolina and South Carolina became collection points.

Supplies were collected at Raleigh Executive Jetport (KTTA), according to Leeanna Tolles, vice president of the organization. Tolles is also vice president of technical operations for an aircraft solutions company and director of maintenance for a Cirrus Service Center—both jobs that require attention to detail. She said she used those skills to help facilitate the relief efforts by air and ground, although the latter was hampered by the lack of roads due to storm damage.

“We had a meeting on [September 30] with several other companies at KTTA, and by [the next day] we were collecting donations from as far away as New Jersey and loading airplanes headed for the mountains, as well as to the larger distribution sites like Statesville,” Tolles said. “Between airplanes and trucks/trailers, we have moved over 100,000 pounds of aid into the mountains. Our collection and dissemination of aid is still continuing as of October 20.”

Vacant hangar space was used for sorting and weighing donations. A wide variety of aircraft were used, including Robinson R44, Eurocopter EC-135, and Bell 47 helicopters. Fixed wing aircraft included a Daher Kodiak, Beechcraft King Air, and Pilatus PC-12, as well as Citation and Vision jets. A Douglas DC-3 and the military variant a Douglas C-47 were used as well as Piper and Cessna trainers, Kitfox and Super Cubs.

The organization worked with airport managers to arrange for hangar space and, in some cases, fuel discounts.

People pitched in wherever they were needed, said Mike Davis, a 4,500-hour pilot with multiple

certificates. Davis said he was surprised by the generosity and compassion of people in general.

“On [October 1] I worked controlling ground traffic through the gate at Statesville,” Davis said. “I took note that we had a car, truck, or SUV passing by me every 10 seconds. I recognized one woman

as she came in. She admitted that it was her third trip. Her car was packed to the roof.

Many people parked their cars by the road after dropping off their donations and went back

inside the hangar to help with the weighing and loading operations.”

Staying ahead of the needs was critical, said Stephen Linson, director of communications for 

CAN and a 430-hour commercially rated pilot. 

“The first 48 hours it was critical to get life-sustainable supplies up to the mountains,” Linson said. “After more information came into play, we found out that medication and life-saving supplies were most important.” 

First Flight

Zangwill said CAN’s  first flight was in the Piper Comanche, carrying 400 pounds of donated supplies to Rutherford County Airport (KFQD) in  North Carolina which was only five minutes away by car from some of the most devastated areas.

“We carried everything from water, baby formula and bottles, to toiletries, first-aid items, dog food, and cleaning products,” she said. 

At the time, powdered baby formula and clean water for mixing it were essential, she said, “along with EpiPens and Benadryl for first responders who were getting stung. The flooding had destroyed yellow jacket in-ground nests, leaving them aggressive.”

In a two-week period, CAN pilots flew 680 flights out of Statesville alone, carrying 34,224 pounds of relief supplies, she said.

The relief flights headed into the mountains of North Carolina required special skills. Low-time pilots or those who didn’t have much experience in the mountains were discouraged from making the flights, or were paired with more experienced pilots. Personal weather minimums were respected. As airlift operations increased, CAN requested that relief pilots have at least 300 flight hours and experience flying in mountainous terrain with a preference for two pilots on board.

The airspace and radios were busy. “Air traffic could be chaotic at times, but the air traffic controllers did an excellent job ensuring everyone’s safety,” Zangwill said.

When the aircraft landed, the ground operations team unloaded them quickly, with a goal of getting back into the sky within 15 minutes.

One of the most difficult things for pilots, however, was overflying the hurricane-damaged communities, littered with wrecked homes, roads, and bridges, Zangwill said.

“Flying the airplane took precedence over everything else,” she said. “So even while looking down on the devastation, my thoughts were focused on piloting the aircraft and staying ahead of it, maintaining spatial awareness of terrain and other aircraft. This is also where having two pilots aboard was very helpful.”

While TFRs were put in place in North Carolina for emergency response activities, as well as a survey by President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris of the affected areas in Raleigh and Asheville, the impact on relief operations was brief and did not cause any major disruptions as supply drops continued near the edges of the TFR, Zangwill said.

[Courtesy: Carolina Aviators Network]

The most challenging aspect of the operation was communication. Cell phone service was nonexistent or hit-and-miss as towers became jammed, which became overwhelming as information changed on an hourly basis, she said.

“[However, by day five,] we had transformed into a well-oiled machine,” Zangwill said. “We worked in conjunction with Hurricane Helene Airlift Relief, a Facebook group formed at the onset of the hurricane, to establish an intelligence center of sorts. Volunteers utilized an old-fashioned whiteboard to keep track of supply needs at each airport we were delivering to, along with various other pieces of information they were monitoring and updating.”

Lessons Learned

Pilots who participated in the relief effort say they now have a playbook for future disasters that will help the GA community and ground-based volunteers act quickly to save lives before government agencies and larger organizations have the ability to step in.

“Will disaster relief become part of our focus at CAN? No,” said Zangwill. “But if we can leverage our pilot license and aircraft to assist our neighbors in the event of another disaster, we certainly will.”

Zangwill has advice for other pilots who might want to help after a natural disaster.

“Refrain from photo flights—they only congest the airspace and compromise safety,” she said. “Check NOTAMs and adhere to PPRs, monitor fuel at landing airports (some had fuel shortages), and coordinate with ground contacts to confirm the ongoing need for airlift support. It’s a good problem to have, but we nearly had too much assistance.”

Fundraisers will continue, she said, with efforts now directed toward recovery and rebuilding in those affected regions.

“Additionally, we are hosting a large fly-in toy drive at Woodward Field Airport (KCDN) in  Camden, South Carolina, in a couple weeks to gather toys for families in western North Carolina whose Christmas will be quite different this year,” she said. “We plan to continue our efforts until support is no longer essential.”

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FAA Finalizes Rules for Powered-Lift Aircraft https://www.flyingmag.com/modern/faa-finalizes-rules-for-powered-lift-aircraft/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 16:59:02 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219886&preview=1 Rule covers pilot training and operations of powered-lift aircraft, such as electric air taxis.

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The FAA on Tuesday published a highly anticipated special federal aviation regulation (SFAR) that charts the flight plan for a new generation of aircraft.

At the National Business Aviation Administration-Business Aviation Convention and Exhibition (NBAA-BACE) in Las Vegas, FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker signed the SFAR, which contains initial operational rules and pilot training requirements for powered-lift aircraft and will remain in effect for 10 years.

“It’s here today,” Whitaker told NBAA-BACE attendees Tuesday morning. “It is now a final rule.”

The FAA called the SFAR the “final piece in the puzzle” for introducing powered-lift aircraft, which could begin flying passengers, cargo, and even ambulance services in rural and urban areas as soon as next year.

The category is a relatively new, special class of aircraft covering designs that take off vertically like a helicopter but cruise on fixed wings like an airplane. To be considered powered-lift, the aircraft must generate lift primarily from its engines—which can be electric, hydrogen, or hybrid-powered—while relying on rigid components, usually wings, for horizontal flight. They will become the first new category of civil aircraft since helicopters were introduced in the 1940s.

The FAA sometimes refers to these as vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) or advanced air mobility (AAM) aircraft, the latter term covering new aircraft technology more broadly.

FAA test pilots take Beta Technologies’ Alia electric VTOL aircraft on an evaluation flight. [Courtesy: Beta Technologies]

For years, the agency communicated to the aviation industry that there would be a pathway for powered-lift designs—such as electric air taxis being developed by Joby Aviation, Archer Aviation, and others—to be certified as Part 23 normal category aircraft.

But the regulator unexpectedly reversed course in 2022, determining instead that they would be certified as Part 21 special class aircraft. That kicked off a yearslong effort to develop an entirely new set of rules for powered-lift pilot training, operations, maintenance, and more.

The FAA last year released a proposal addressing several of those areas. It was panned by a collective of industry groups, however, who argued that the proposed pilot training requirements were too strict. They also clamored for performance-based operational rules—drawing from aircraft and rotorcraft guidelines as appropriate—rather than the creation of a new powered-lift operational category, as the FAA proposed.

FAA and Department of Transportation officials have promised to address the industry’s concerns. According to Whitaker, the SFAR does exactly that.

“For the last 80 years, we’ve had two types [of aircraft], rotor and fixed wing,” he said. “We now have a third type…and this rule will create an operating environment so these companies can figure out how to train pilots. They can figure out how to operate.”

The SFAR applies helicopter rules to certain phases of powered-lift flight, regardless of whether the aircraft is operating like a helicopter or an airplane. But in response to the industry’s feedback, it uses performance-based rules for certain operations, applying airplane, rotorcraft, or helicopter rules as appropriate.

For example, powered-lift aircraft can use helicopter minimums for VFR and IFR fuel requirements and minimum safe altitudes when they are capable of performing a vertical landing at any point along the route, as a helicopter is. This will allow manufacturers to get around the issue of low battery energy density, for example, by lowering the fuel reserve requirement.

“The rulemaking approach now is to really focus on performance and making sure you can prove that you can operate safely, or you can meet certain performance metrics, rather than being prescriptive and telling you exactly how to do it,” Whitaker said. “So we’re trying to create a larger envelope to have different means of compliance for some of the requirements and the rules.”

The approach mirrors the European Union Aviation Safety Agency’s (EASA) special class for VTOL (SC-VTOL) rules, which base operational guidelines on situational factors—like reserve fuel levels—instead of aircraft design. It’s a change that will be welcomed by manufacturers, who can now design aircraft for a wide range of operations rather than those defined by a narrow powered-lift category.

“We need to have the flexibility to allow these businesses to succeed, do so safely, and adjust our approach as we go along,” Whitaker said.

The other major difference between the SFAR and the FAA’s initial proposal is the creation of a pathway to train powered-lift pilots with a single set of flight controls. Some programs will still require dual controls. But throwover controls and simulator training will be acceptable substitutes. The change is a big one, as many powered-lift manufacturers designed their aircraft—including trainers—with single controls.

“Some pilot training can happen in the normal way that it’s always happened, with an instructor that has a set of controls and a student that has a set of controls,” Whitaker said. “But sometimes it’s a single set of controls that are accessible to an instructor, so we have rules that allow for that type of operation. And sometimes they have other configurations. So there again, we put in performance metrics to make sure that the companies can train instructors, and the instructors can train pilots.”

Last year, the FAA released a blueprint intended to serve as a framework for policymakers, describing a “crawl-walk-fly” approach to integrate powered-lift designs alongside conventional aircraft. The agency predicts they will initially use existing helicopter routes and infrastructure, and pilots will communicate with air traffic control as needed.

But Whitaker on Tuesday said the FAA will continue developing a new ecosystem for powered-lift aircraft. Critical to its blueprint is the construction of vertiports: vertical takeoff and landing sites equipped with electric chargers and other powered-lift infrastructure.

“The blueprint that we put in place 16 months ago for introducing this technology includes vertiports, and we’ll continue to work on that issue,” Whitaker said.

Plenty more work must be done in order for powered-lift designs to take to the skies at scale. But the SFAR gives the industry a practical pathway to begin flying.

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How to Ensure Stable Approaches https://www.flyingmag.com/what-a-cfi-wants-you-to-know/how-to-ensure-stable-approaches/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 14:50:30 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219872&preview=1 Rushing a landing checklist can lead to a late configured airplane and an unstabilized approach.

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When a pilot gets behind the airplane in the pattern, it is never a good thing. 

Rushing the checklist—or worse, forgetting the checklist items—leads to a late configured or nonconfigured airplane or being too fast or too high on final. All these things result in an unstabilized approach.

Unless there is an emergency on board, the best course of action is usually going around, flying the pattern again, and focusing on staying ahead of the aircraft.

Teaching the Stable Approach

There’s a lot that goes into a stable approach to landing.

The aircraft has to be at the correct speed and correctly configured for landing, such as landing gear down (that’s the big one), flaps at the proper setting, proper speed, etc. This includes trimming the aircraft so that it stays on speed and can land on the first third of the runway, preferably on the numbers, and stops within 100 feet of that mark with minimal braking.

Configuration of the aircraft should not be done aggressively. Slamming down the landing gear and dumping in the flaps all the way in at the same time results in unstable pitch moments. This can be demonstrated at a safe altitude in the practice area. The addition of flaps on one fell swoop followed by their rapid retraction is definitely a teachable moment, as the pitch change is often surprising, dramatic and swift, and not something you’d want to experience a few hundred feet over the ground.

Learn the Landing on the Ground

Learning to land and the stabilized approach should begin with a ground session.

I have found the use of a whiteboard with a drawing of the runway, anointed with the aircraft configuration, checklist use, appropriate airspeeds, and altitudes for each leg and distance from the runway to be an excellent tool. I ask my flight students to copy the drawing with their own drawing (and not take a photo), and in future lessons are asked to re-create it from scratch to show learning has taken place.

This diagram should also include notations of when the checklist is used.

Faux Pattern

One of the best techniques to teach pattern procedures is something I call “faux pattern,” which is done in the practice area several thousand feet in the air to facilitate recovery at 1,500 feet agl.

The cardinal compass points are the “legs” of the pattern. After clearing turns, the learner configures the airplane to enter a 45-degree angle to downwind and performs as if they are in the pattern. This includes managing airspeed and aircraft configuration.

When the aircraft is on “final,” the CFI calls for a go-around, or gives the learner a scenario like “Uh-oh! There’s a disabled aircraft on the runway! What do you do?”

After a couple of run-throughs, a learner’s pattern work usually improves substantially.

Mistakes Happen

Instructors need to be very careful about what they allow the learner to do, as in mistakes they are allowed to make, because the pattern can be very unforgiving. I have seen a few techniques that gave me pause.

I was doing a stage check for a learner who kept revving the engine on downwind. When I asked why he did that, he said, “because it’s fun!” Another pulled the mixture to idle on downwind to “check it,” claiming that is what the previous CFI taught him to do. This was incorrect information. The previous CFI informed me that he couldn’t break the learner of the habit, so he fired him.

It is not just primary learners who develop strange habits in the pattern.

A “return to flying” commercial pilot and a former CFI announced his technique for landing a Cessna 172 in gusty winds was to come in with no flaps then dump all the flaps in on short final and put the aircraft into an aggressive slip to landing. He revealed this during the preflight briefing as we discussed aircraft performance. I was staring at him, waiting for the punch line—hoping there was one—but before I could reply, the owner of the flight school, who was sitting a few feet away in the lobby, loudly announced, “Not in one of my airplanes, you don’t!”

For the unfamiliar: there is a placard in the C-172 that reads “Avoid slips with flaps extended.” 

Be Ready for the Go-Around

Does your pre-landing checklist include verbalization of the phrase “go around is always an option”?

A senior instructor I flew with told me he added it because he was trying to reduce the startle factor when he told his learners to go around. He also made it a rule that if the aircraft wasn’t perfectly on speed, configured, and on glide path to touch down by the second center stripe on the 3,400-foot runway, the learner would go around.

Occasionally, some students pushed back when it appeared they would land long, as the Cessna and Pipers they flew didn’t need the entire 3,400 feet to come to a full stop. The instructor replied, “Someday you won’t have that much runway.” He was right, of course.

If you are flying at a towered airport and the controller tells you to go-around, it’s not up for debate—go around. It is possible that you don’t have the bigger picture. There could be something larger, faster, and turbine coming up behind you. Know what to do, and the order in which to do it.

If You Go Around

When the go-around goes bad, it is often because the pilot does not use enough right rudder and the aircraft has too much nose-up trim resulting in a stall. Anticipate the need for right rudder and be ready to push the nose down to counteract the left turning tendency and pitch up with the adding of full power.

Another bad habit particular to aircraft with retractable gear is taking the flaps out abruptly while simultaneously bringing the gear up. This creates a lot of drag, and it is not uncommon that the aircraft will settle back on to the runway with the landing gear—or part of it—retracted. This is expensive and embarrassing.

Make the practice of go-arounds something you do on a regular basis as part of your personal proficiency and currency program. You never know when you will need those skills.

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IADA: Encouraging Q3, Possible Surge in Aircraft Sales by Year’s End https://www.flyingmag.com/aircraft/iada-encouraging-q3-possible-surge-in-aircraft-sales-by-years-end/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 13:36:53 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219868&preview=1 Aircraft purchases expected to take off as election season nears a close.

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The International Aircraft Dealers Association (IADA) released its third-quarter market report for 2024 on Monday analyzing the current aviation marketplace.

The full report, available here, stated that IADA dealers and brokers collectively account for over half of all transactions worldwide. 

How’s the Market Looking?

IADA’s Perspective Survey of over 1,000 members included dealers and brokers for both new and pre-owned aircraft. 

It showed that, with 58 percent of dealers sharing their results from the July-August-September time frame, IADA dealers reported 144 new acquisition agreements in the third quarter of 2024. This is up 4 percent from the second quarter of the year, but up 22 percent year over year compared with the third quarter in 2023.

While the number of exclusive retainer agreements stayed relatively steady in Q3 2024 from the prior quarter, reduced-price listings were up 49 aircraft year over year.

“While seemingly significant, the 67 percent increase in reduced-price listings, reported Q3 [year over year], is measured from a relatively small base,” the IADA report said. “As expected, price adjustments are a feature of today’s market as the resetting of value expectations continues after post-pandemic highs experienced in 2021 and 2022.”

Reported activity in Q3 2024 included 373 closed deals and was the highest yet recorded for the third quarter since IADA’s Perspective Survey began in 2020.

“Year to date in 2024, the 993 closed deals reported were up 14 percent in volume compared with year-to-date 2023, an indicator of a healthy level of exchange activity in a counterbalancing marketplace—one in which IADA dealers are the preeminent players,” the report said.

The report stated Q3 2024 ended with 874 year-to-date (YTD) business aircraft transactions under contract, up 24 percent from 704 YTD at the end of the Q3 2023.

David Monacell, IADA accredited dealer at CFS Jets, said in the report that he expects a significant surge in Q4 and intensification after the election.

“Those that wait for ballots to be counted will likely deal with limited inspection locations, watered down pre-buys, and/or post closing conditions in order to transact in 2024,” Monacell said in the IADA report.

Scott Oshman, IADA accredited dealer at Oshman Aviation, said in the report that Q2 and Q3 market conditions and transaction volume have exceeded expectations within the midsize jets, light jets, and turboprop segments.

“Specific to midsize business jets, light business jets, and turboprops, inventory is steadily increasing, but demand and absorption are equalizing the increase in inventory,” Oshman said.

IADA chair Phil Winters said in a news release that while summer months may have been light on sentiment toward business aircraft transactions, most of the dealers and brokers are reporting heightened activity over the past month.

“Although there are more sellers coming to market at a greater rate than buyers, the buyers are absorbing that inventory increase with slightly lower pricing than two years ago,” Winters said. “At the end of the third quarter, we seem to be setting up for an active and healthy fourth quarter of this year.”

Additionally, IADA executive director Wayne Starling said in the release that the insurance marketplace is shifting toward a buyer-driven market, contrasting to earlier trends in 2024.

Days on Market

According to data compiled by AMSTAT, a business aviation market research company, cited in the report, the days on market (DOM) rate for aircraft increased by 55 percent over the past 18 months. This trend has stabilized, however, with the DOM rate undergoing a slight 8 percent increase and staying below the 10-year average.

“IADA members also noted that the anticipated slowdown due to geopolitical tensions and the ongoing election cycle had less impact than expected,” IADA said. “Combined with a recent drop in interest rates, the market is now showing promising signs of renewed activity. Hesitation among buyers due to market uncertainty appears to be diminishing, with IADA members encouraging clients to act swiftly as the fourth-quarter market is expected to accelerate.”

Looking Ahead

The report stated that IADA’s member surveys provide six-month projections for supply, demand, pricing, and dealer willingness to inventory.

Most respondents expect the next six months to show a stable demand and willingness to inventory, except in the large and ultra-long-range jets categories, where projections see both a slight decrease in demand and willingness to inventory.

“A healthy mix of IADA members spanning aircraft financing/leasing, insurance, and sales have reported an increase in business activity in Q3 leading to a more optimistic outlook across the board for the next six months,” the report said. “These experts also believe that buyers have a slightly higher influence on who is driving today’s market while acknowledging that these subtleties can shift based on age, pedigree, and make/model of specific aircraft.”

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Hyundai Air Taxi Arm Announces FBO, Operator Partnerships https://www.flyingmag.com/hyundai-air-taxi-arm-announces-fbo-operator-partnerships/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219864&preview=1 Supernal will work with Clay Lacy Aviation and Blade Air Mobility to prepare a network for its air taxi, which it plans to launch near the end of the decade.

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Supernal, the electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) air taxi arm of automaker Hyundai, on Tuesday announced a pair of partnerships intended to prepare the ecosystem around its flagship SA-2, which it hopes to begin delivering to operators in 2028.

At the National Business Aviation Association-Business Aviation Convention & Exhibition (NBAA-BACE) in Las Vegas, Supernal said it will work with FBO network Clay Lacy Aviation to prepare the latter’s sites for eVTOL air taxis. Separately, the manufacturer signed a deal with Blade Urban Air Mobility with an eye toward refining and creating hypothetical routes for its flagship design.

Supernal’s SA-2, unveiled in January, is designed for a pilot to fly as many as four passengers in urban areas such as Miami or Los Angeles, the firm’s planned launch markets. Taking off vertically like a helicopter but cruising on fixed wings, it will have an initial range of about 60 sm (52 nm) and cruise at 120 mph (104 knots) at around 1,500 feet agl. The aircraft’s zero-emission and low-noise operation is another key selling point.

At NBAA-BACE from Tuesday to Thursday, Supernal will take attendees into a virtual reality space at Henderson Executive Airport (KHND) to give them an idea of the flying experience both for pilots and passengers.

The manufacturer at the event also announced a collaboration with Clay Lacy Aviation, its first official FBO partner, that will prepare the firm’s locations for eVTOL aircraft.

The strategy of working with FBOs to electrify their terminals is not uncommon in the nascent eVTOL space. Clay Lacy—the lone FBO accredited by the NBAA as a Sustainable Flight Department for its use of environmentally friendly infrastructure—is also installing infrastructure for eVTOL manufacturers Joby Aviation and Overair, for example.

Joby, Archer Aviation, Beta Technologies, and Lilium have similar arrangements with Atlantic Aviation. Archer and Beta are further working with another FBO network, Signature Aviation.

“Availability of infrastructure will be critical to scaling the AAM industry, and this partnership is the latest step in ensuring the ecosystem is thoughtfully designed for future commercial eVTOL operators,” said Diana Cooper, chief partnerships and policy officer for Supernal.

The manufacturer’s five-year agreement with Clay Lacy Aviation will focus on how to integrate eVTOL into existing airport operations, namely by devising standards and procedures for ground handling, battery management, and maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO). Supernal will further assist Clay Lacy Aviation with the installation of power and charging systems.

The partners will initially focus on the FBO network’s sites at Orange County Airport (KSNA) and Van Nuys Airport (KVNY) in Southern California, where Supernal plans to launch near the end of the decade. Later on, they will take what they have learned from those locations to prepare Clay Lacy Aviation’s broader network.

“Supernal and Clay Lacy share strong commitments to sustainable aviation, safe and efficient operations and a superior passenger experience that benefits the communities we serve,” said Scott Cutshall, president of real estate and sustainability for Clay Lacy Aviation.

Cutshall and Cooper on Wednesday will discuss how FBOs more broadly can prepare for electric air taxis on a NBAA-BACE panel that also includes representatives from Joby, Beta, and the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

Separately, Supernal announced a three-year partnership with Blade, an operator of primarily helicopters that offers private, on-demand flights in New York City and a few other markets.

The partners will create hypothetical New York City routes to plan for air taxi, organ transplant transport, and other future eVTOL services. They will also look for “advantageous commercial arrangements in geographies of mutual interest”—such as a network in Southern California that combines Supernal’s eVTOL and Blade’s air charter broker platform.

“Our goal is to make aviation more accessible by preparing to adopt eVTOL aircraft,” said Melissa Tomkiel, president and general counsel of Blade. “In combining Blade’s expertise with Supernal’s forward-thinking innovations, this partnership is poised to accelerate AAM development and enable quiet, safe, and emission-free transportation.”

Supernal will help guide Blade’s plans to launch an AAM offering with technical and operational support. Blade in return will provide feedback on Supernal’s aircraft design, safety, passenger comfort, and potential to operate across multiple markets.

“It is critical we collaborate with experienced commercial partners like Blade to ensure our eVTOL’s cabin features align with passenger expectations for comfort, safety and efficiency in the next generation of inter-city mobility,” said David Rottblatt, senior director of strategy and commercialization at Supernal.

A Supernal-Blade network could fly passengers and cargo between Blade terminals at heliports and airports. At NBAA-BACE, for example, Blade is offering private helicopter flights between Henderson Executive Airport and the Las Vegas Convention Center, providing a glimpse of what a Supernal eVTOL route may look like.

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NTSB Blames Boeing 747 Engine Fire on Shoddy Maintenance Work https://www.flyingmag.com/aircraft/ntsb-blames-boeing-747-engine-fire-on-shoddy-maintenance-work/ Mon, 21 Oct 2024 18:07:19 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219857&preview=1 Agency has published its final report on a January engine fire incident.

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The National Transportation Safety Board said an improperly installed borescope plug led to a January engine fire on an Atlas Air Boeing 747. Maintenance on the aircraft had been performed just four days before the incident.

On January 18, Atlas Air Flight 3885 was between Miami and San Juan, Puerto Rico, when the crew received a fire indication in the Boeing 747-8F’s No. 2 engine at approximately 3,000 feet. An emergency was declared and the aircraft returned to Miami with no injuries reported.

No signs of an uncontained engine failure were found, the NTSB’s final report noted, though minor burn damage was reported on the GEnx engine’s thrust reverser fan duct. The aircraft returned to service nine days later on January 27.

According to the agency’s report, a third-party maintenance contractor was tasked with performing a borescope inspection on the No. 2 engine, requiring the removal of a plug. Both the mechanic and inspector certified that the inspection had been completed in line with maintenance manual standards.

The removed plug was found loose in the engine cowling, which resulted in the fire.


Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on AirlineGeeks.com.

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Navy Confirms Crew Killed in EA-18G Crash https://www.flyingmag.com/military/navy-conforms-crew-killed-in-ea-18g-crash/ Mon, 21 Oct 2024 16:02:44 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219830&preview=1 Fighter jet crashed east of Mount Rainier on October 15 during a routine training mission.

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Two Navy crewmen aboard an EA-18G Growler that crashed in Washington state last week have been confirmed dead, according to military officials.

The jet crashed east of Mount Rainier on October 15 during a routine training mission. The wreckage was found the next day on a steep mountainside.

The fighter jet was assigned to Electronic Attack Squadron 130 (VAQ-130), known as the “Zappers,” based out of Naval Air Station (NAS) Whidbey Island north of Seattle.

The Navy identified the aviators as Lieutenant Commander Lyndsay P. Evans, 31, a Naval Flight Officer from California, and Lieutenant Serena N. Wileman, 31, a Naval aviator from California.

“It is with a heavy heart that we share the loss of two beloved Zappers,” said Timothy Warburton, commanding officer of VAQ-130. “Our priority right now is taking care of the families of our fallen aviators and ensuring the well-being of our sailors and the Growler community. We are grateful for the ongoing teamwork to safely recover the deceased.”

There was no information as to whether their remains have been recovered.

The crash site is located in steep terrain inaccessible by ground vehicles. The recovery efforts are battling low visibility to recover the wreckage.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

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Honeywell Forecasts Strong Growth Ahead for Business Aviation https://www.flyingmag.com/business/honeywell-forecasts-strong-growth-ahead-for-business-aviation/ Mon, 21 Oct 2024 15:11:02 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=219824&preview=1 Around 8,500 aircraft worth $280 billion will be delivered in the next five years, according to the company's outlook.

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National Business Aviation Association-Business Aviation Convention & Exhibition (NBAA-BACE) in Las Vegas this week is launching on a hopeful note with the annual Honeywell Global Business Aviation Outlook predicting strong and stable growth in the industry for the next five years.

The forecast also predicts demand for 8,500 new business aircraft worth $280 billion during that period, up a little from earlier forecasts and prompting some manufacturers to ramp up production. At the same time, customer demand has leveled off, suggesting a more balanced market is taking hold, according to the survey, which was released Sunday in Las Vegas on the eve of the big show.

“The business aviation industry is in a prolonged period of healthy growth, and we don’t see that positive trend changing any time soon,” said Heath Patrick, president, Americas Aftermarket, Honeywell Aerospace Technologies. “Business aviation continues to see more users and, as a result, manufacturers are ramping up production to keep pace with growing demand, a trend we expect to continue for the foreseeable future.”

Demand for large business jets continues to dominate the market. More than two-thirds of that $280 billion will be spent on the latest long-range wonders. But those of more modest means remain bullish on their smaller aircraft as important business tools.

“More than 90 percent of those surveyed expect to fly more or about the same in 2025 than in 2024,” Honeywell said.

NBAA-BACE formally kicks off on Tuesday at the Las Vegas Convention Center.


Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on AVweb.

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