

Aviation News Talk – Pilot Stories, Safety Tips & General Aviation News
Max Trescott | Aviation News Talk Network
General Aviation news, pilot tips for beginners & experts, interviews, listener questions answered, technical details on G1000 & Perspective glass cockpits & flying GPS approaches. 40 yrs experience flying general aviation aircraft. As an active flight instructor, I bring my daily experiences in the air to this show to help teach pilots and future pilots to fly safely. I'm a Platinum Cirrus CSIP instructor and work with people who are thinking about buying a new or used SR20 or SR22. Go to AviationNewsTalk.com for my contact information, or to click on Listener Questions, which lets you speak into your phone to leave a question you'd like answered on the show.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 26, 2017 • 51min
Unstable Approach Definition and Private Pilot Tips for How to Fly a Stable Approach + GA News
You've undoubtedly heard of a stabilized approach and know it's helpful to have one prior to landing. But many pilots don't know all of the elements of a stabilized approach, or the potential expense of an unstable approach. Last year, two pilots I know dug deep into their wallets to pay for damage resulting from landings that followed unstable approaches. Both considered going around, but didn't. The pilots of an IFR charter fight into Akron, Ohio in November 2015 weren't so lucky; everyone died after their unstable approach. So what is a stabilized approach, and why does it matter? Cirrus Aircraft's Flight Operations Manual gives a good description. It says: "A stabilized approach is characterized by a constant angle and constant rate of descent approach profile ending near the touch-down point. Stabilized approach criteria apply to all approaches including practice power-off approaches." It goes on to say that for VFR landings, an "approach is considered stabilized when all of the following criteria are achieved by 500' AGL: Proper airspeed, Correct flight path, Correct aircraft configuration for phase of flight, Appropriate power setting for aircraft configuration, Normal angle and rate of descent, Only minor corrections are required to correct deviations. A go-around must be executed if the above conditions are not met, and the aircraft is not stabilized by 500' AGL." This episode contains lots of tips to help you consistently fly stable approaches every time you fly the traffic pattern, including tips for long, straight-in approaches, which often lead to unstable approaches. Click here for the listener survey. Tell us what flight planning tools you use when planning a longer flight. Please visit my new Patreon page and make a contribution to help me with my goal of improving the AviationNewsTalk.com website. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories Student Pilot Pleads Guilty to Lying to Accident Investigators Low Accident Rate Maintained as GA Activity Grows NTSB launches blog about GA accident investigations FAA Changes Night Landing Rules At KSFO FAA Reorganization Delta Reverses Position on ATC Privatization Time running out for FAA reauthorization House Working on FAA Extension Bill Australian Airservices promises 10 percent cost reduction Garmin Receives EASA Approval For New GTN 650/750 Features Technology gives legally blind Peoria boy a chance to fly

Aug 17, 2017 • 46min
13 Fun Ideas for National Aviation Day + GA News
National Aviation Day has been around for more than 75 years, But it probably doesn't get as much attention as it deserves. Here are 13 fun ideas for celebrating on national aviation Day, which is August 19. Franklin D. Roosevelt created National Aviation Day in 1939 by presidential proclamation. Originally it was to celebrate the growth and advancements made in aviation. But one can't help wonder whether it was also a way to start getting more people interested in aviation got a time when Europe was just beginning to enter World War II. Today we face a different challenge, which is how to attract more people to aviation at a time when pilots are in high demand, but new student pilot starts are declining. Here are 13 ways that you can celebrate today, or help get other people more connected to aviation. 1. Get someone else involved in aviation. 2. If you are a rusty pilot, get back into flying! 3. Fly in a new airplane type. 4. Watch an aviation themed movie. 5. Fly a flight simulator! 6. If you are a licensed pilot, fly somewhere new! 7. Visit an Aviation Museum 8. Fly a radio controlled airplane 9. Volunteer to help an aviation-related organization 10. Download and read an aviation book from your local library or from NASA 11. Go Plane Spotting 12. Thank someone who works in the aviation industry 13. Take an aviation course Click here for the listener survey. Tell us what flight planning tools you use when planning a longer flight. Please visit my new Patreon page and make a contribution to help me with my goal of improving the AviationNewsTalk.com website. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories NTSB Completes Icon Investigation Flaps Up In Fatal Rough Water Takeoff Santa Monica Rushes to Shorten SMO Runway Privatization would increase the deficit by almost $100 billion House Dems ask Inspector General to Investigate DOT's lobbying Every Saudi airport will be privatized this year First UK 8.33kHz radio grant claims paid by CAA Herne Bay air show crash pilot 'trapped by wrong lifejacket AOPA quietly introduces flagship content delivery app

Aug 9, 2017 • 44min
Turbocharger emergencies, TAWS Terrain Awareness Systems, Activating a Leg of an Instrument Approach + GA News
Many pilots think that if a turbocharger fails, it's no big deal and just represents a slight loss of power, which may be inconvenient, but is in no way an emergency. They are dead wrong! All turbocharger failures must be treated as an emergency requiring an immediate landing. We'll talk about a pilot who didn't know this and as a result destroyed an airplane. And we had more feedback on entering the traffic at non-Towered Airports. Not everyone likes the FAA preferred entry for crossing over the field at 500 feet above pattern altitude and then turning to enter on the 45. As one listener writes, "just because 'it takes longer' is not an emergency. Short of a true emergency there really is no good reason to deviate from the standard procedure in my book." Plus listener questions. A listener asks about TAWS, the Terrain Awareness Warning System and how it works. We explain the different TAWS functions, and how they help keep you safe. And an instrument pilots asks about how to activate an instrument approach on his Garmin GPS. Click here for the survey. Tell us what flight planning tools you use when planning a longer flight. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories Presidential TFR TFR Cost to Local Airports Solar Eclipse Affects General Aviation Vulcanair Single Expected to Battle Cessna 172 ADS-B deadline won't change, FAA administrator tells Oshkosh crowds Chinese company Building Airplane Factory in Washington State ADS-B Out to Ease RVSM Compliance Flying Magazine is 90 Years Old!

Aug 3, 2017 • 41min
FAA WINGS program, Marvel Comics, Non-towered airport pattern entry, More ADS-B products, Flight Design Sold + GA News
We talk about the benefits of participating in the FAA WINGS program in lieu of doing a Flight Review (formerly called a BFR), which pilots in the U.S. must do every two years. Instead of spending an hour on the ground reviewing Part 91 rules and regulations, the FAA WINGS program lets you can take free online courses instead, which may be a better use of your time, if you choose courses that help keep you safer when you fly. We had lots of feedback on entering the traffic at non-Towered Airports. Not everyone likes the FAA preferred entry for crossing over the field at 500 feet above pattern altitude and then turning to enter on the 45. But we don't get to pick which rules to follow and not follow, just because we don't like them! Plus an Air Canada flight 759 near miss update. Oddly, that aircraft was not visible on SFO's surface radar for 12 seconds, and we explain why. Plus listener questions. An instrument pilots asks about how to activate an instrument approach on his Garmin GPS. Click here for the survey. Tell us what flight planning tools you use when planning a longer flight. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories New comic book Super hero to promote aviation: Aviore Airline Crew Forgets To Raise Gear AVIATIONWORKS4U PROVIDES ROAD MAP TO AVIATION CAREER German investment group buys Flight Design LIGHT SPORT EAGLE VIPER SD4 COSTS LESS THAN $90,000 uAvionix Rolls Out Low-Cost ADS-B Out

Jul 31, 2017 • 20min
Cirrus Embark – Free Training for Buyers of Used Cirrus Aircraft – Ivy McIver Interview
Cirrus Aircraft announced a ground breaking new program called Cirrus Embark that provides free, yes absolutely free flight training to buyers of pre-owned Cirrus Aircraft. So if you were to buy a ten-year old Cirrus from someone, you can get up to 3 days of free flight training, paid for by Cirrus! It's called the Cirrus Embark program, and we interview Ivy McIver, SR Product Line Manager at Cirrus Aircraft to talk about the Embark program. If you are thinking about buying a new, or late model Cirrus, please contact me now, so that I can give you some tips to help you with your decision process. You can contact me here. Click here for the survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email.

Jul 28, 2017 • 40min
Private Pilot Tips for Non-Towered Airports, Free Cirrus Training, ATC Privatization, and Air Canada Near Miss Update + GA News
We talk about flying at non-Towered Airports, including how to enter on the 45, when on the opposite side of the airport. The preferred method of entry from the opposite side of the pattern is to announce your intentions and cross over midfield at least 500 feet above pattern altitude; here in Northern California, pilot examiners look for pilots on checkrides to cross at 1,000 feet above the traffic pattern altitude. When well clear of the pattern—approximately 2 miles—scan carefully for traffic, descend to pattern altitude, then turn right to enter at 45° to the downwind leg at midfield. Air Canada flight 759 had a near miss last week, and a retired Air Canada captain told me that their procedures require pilots to back up visual approaches with electronic navigation. But apparently this pilot didn't follow that procedure, and he nearly landed on top of several airliners on a taxiway. Plus listener questions how to legally exit an airport under a TFR, and an instrument pilots asks about whether to load an instrument approach with vectors or an IAF. Click here for the survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories AirVenture Begins with Proactive Effort to Stop Privatized ATC https://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/general-aviation/2017-07-24/pelton-blasts-atc-privatization Cirrus Embark - Free Flight Training Air Canada pilot was not using guidance system Sun Flyer 4 Electric Airplane FreeFlight Systems Offers RANGR ADS-B Lease Program TruTrak/EAA Earn STC For Vizion Autopilot GDL 82 ADS-B datalink introduced Aviation accelerator in Shannon Emergency landing video

Jul 20, 2017 • 1h 1min
Private Pilot Tips for Traffic Patterns, Cirrus Crash, ATC Privatization, and Air Canada Near Miss Update + GA News
We talk about flying the traffic pattern, and talk in detail about flying a Cessna 172 in the traffic pattern. For example, many people don't know the exact meaning of "Make Right Traffic." It means, fly to a position where you can enter the traffic pattern on the 45, then turn to downwind and fly the traffic pattern. It doesn't mean to enter on the downwind. And of course you should be at pattern altitude when you're on the 45. We also talk about doing a forward slip in a Cessna 172 and use of flaps during crosswind landings. Air Canada flight 759 had a near miss last week, when it inadvertently lined up to land on a taxiway instead of on the runway. We talk about how confirmation bias may have contributed to the lack of awareness that the Air Canada pilots had about their situation. We also talk about a recent fatal Cirrus SR22 crash in Sonoma, California, and the importance of never pulling the parachute below 400 feet, as it will most likely make things worse! I give details about a recent flight I took from El Paso, Texas to Concord, CA with the new owner of a Cessna 206. We postponed the trip because of a heat wave 3 weeks ago. Plus listener questions about using flaps during crosswind landings and whether you can fly if you're legally using medical marijuana. Click here for the survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories CBO: ATC Privatization would add $20.7 Billion to Deficit over 10 Year Airlines Get Exemption from ADS-B 2020 Mandate Animation of Air Canada Near Miss at SFO Shows It was Extremely Close Cirrus SR22T - Low Level Chute Pull Killed Pilot ForeFlight Releases Jeppesen Chart Option ForeFlight Introduces New Dual-Band ADS-B Receiver Garmin Announces New Retrofit Autopilots Garmin debuts all-in-one portable ADS-B and SiriusXM Aviation receiver Kitfox introduces Speedster Former Anheuser-Busch CEO Arrested In Helicopter Incident

Jul 14, 2017 • 44min
Beechcraft Bonanza and the American Bonanza Society - Tom Turner Interview
When pilots think about stepping up to a high performance aircraft, the Beechcraft Bonanza, is often on their short list. And for most pilots who rent or own a complex aircraft, such as the Bonanza that one of the best ways to remain safe in these aircraft is to become a member of an aircraft type club, like the American Bonanza Society, which is in the news because it's celebrating its 50th anniversary. We sit down with down with Tom Turner, Executive Director of the American Bonanza Society's Air Safety Foundation, and ask him to talk in general about the many the services and benefits pilots typically get when they join a Aircraft Type Clubs, of which there are more than 100, and then we drill down and talk about the specifics of the American Bonanza Society and the services they provide for Beechcraft Bonanza owners and pilots. Click here for the listener survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email.

Jul 12, 2017 • 52min
Air Canada News Near Miss at SFO, Private Pilot Tips on Squelch and Audio Panels, ATC Privatization + GA News
Air Canada flight 759 had a near miss last week, when it inadvertently lined up to land on a taxiway instead of on the runway. The FlightAware online tracking service showed the Air Canada Airbus 320 dropping to as low as 175 feet before increasing altitude above Taxiway C, flying over three fully loaded United Airlines and one Philippine Airlines airliners. At 11:55 p.m., the time of the incident, Runway 28L was closed with its lights dark, according to the FAA. It's possible that shifted the Air Canada pilot's orientation to the right, leading him to think that Taxiway C was actually runway 28R. We talk about the key reason that a disaster was narrowly averted, and how that applies to pilots flying general aviation aircraft. We also talk about the poorly understood squelch controls on radios and intercoms and how to set them properly. And about how to operate the switches on older audio panels found in 1960s through 1980s Cessnas and Pipers. Plus listener questions: Should you Dive and Drive on an instrument approach? How should a future CFI learn to land from the right seat? What should you do if you violate the minimum altitudes over a wildlife or marine sanctuary? Click here for the survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories Air Canada Near Miss a near disaster at SFO FAA Opens Short Window For ATC Hiring Armed Man Shot and Killed after Failed Helicopter Theft Privatization Update Volvo parent company in China acquires flying-car maker Terrafugia You can now buy the Moller Skycar Van's New Secret Project FAA TO ACTIVATE TEMPORARY RESTRICTED AREAS DESPITE OBJECTIONS Canadian heavy lift Solar Ship has Fossil Fuel Free Flight 1,500th PC-12 Delivered To Royal Flying Doctor Service Of Australia Teachers field test aviation curriculum

Jul 5, 2017 • 47min
Private Pilot Tips, Flight Training Listener Question, ATC Privatization Update + GA News
Please take the Aviation News Talk podcast July 2017 Listener survey! Click here for the survey. Tell us which plane you fly most often. Please visit my new Patreon page and help me with my goal of funding the creation of two apps for my show, one for Apple and one for Google Play, so that non-techie pilots can find the show in the app store. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I'll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. In this podcast, I pass along over 20 tips for student pilots and private pilots that CFIs thought would be so obvious that they didn't need to tell their students. Of course they were all obvious in hindsight! For example, for a first solo, the CFI hops out, the student taxies away, and then flies the around the pattern. You'd think it would be obvious that they need to lock the door after the CFI hops out. But it wasn't obvious to one student, who had the door open in flight….on his first solo. Plus listener email: We talk about how to prevent a jet-fuel aircraft, like the DA42 from being accidentally fueled with Avgas, which would destroy the engines. And, someone asks via Twitter, do people usually do flight training in only one type of aircraft when going for a private pilot certificate? Links Can You Be A Pilot With Diabetes? Teterboro Circling Conundrum News Stories Wheels Up to buy 17 more King Airs Kent State Holds Aviation Hackathon Video of first flight of Belite Chipper A Cessna 172 flew from Nome to Russia New Mufflers for Cessna 150, 152, and 172 All-Electric Eviation Makes Debut at Paris Air Show Airbus Unveils Hybrid Helicopter Design First flight: Sonaca 200 Belgium drops fee for Permit aircraft flights CAA exempts holders of FAA private pilot licences FAA has certified the new GA10 Airvan, turboprop Airservices Australia rolls out online weather cameras Aircraft owners and operators fear higher insurance premiums Long Beach Bids Adieu to DC-3s STC approved for night vision Air Tractor Stockholm Is Turning Its Original Control Tower Into a Vacation Rental


