Interesting petition related to the Coronavirus Pandemic measures form the UK. I'm not opining on it, merely noting it.
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Thursday, February 11, 2021
The 2020 Wyoming Department of Transportation Aviation Economic Impact Study.
Well, worth reading in its many subparts.
2020 Aviation Economic Impact Study
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Lex Anteinternet: February 10, 1941. Threats from the sky.
February 10, 1941. Threats from the sky.
The British, on this day, engaged in their first airborne commando type raid, dropping paratroopers in Calabria, Italy, to destroy on aqueduct. I learned that here:
Today in World War II History—February 10, 1941
All 35 paratroopers were captured.
The operation was called Operation Colossus.
The men of the unit had all been drawn from No. 2 Commando of the Special Air Service and were in fact commandos, so they were not a conventional paratrooper unit.
More on the raid:
First British Airborne Raid
The RAF raided Rotterdam. The Luftwaffe raided Iceland.
Saturday, January 23, 2021
Green Aviation
Boeing announced that it's aircraft will be 100% capable of flying on biofuel by the end of the decade. For reasons that I don't grasp, biofuel would reduce aviation's carbon emissions.
This follows Airbus announcing some months ago that it intends to be 100% emission free by 2035, with hydrogen as the eyed fuel.
Sunday, January 17, 2021
Tuesday, January 5, 2021
Lex Anteinternet: January 5, 1941. The death of Amy Johnson.
January 5, 1941. The death of Amy Johnson.
Today in World War II History—January 5, 1941
Day 493 January 5, 1941
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Practice Fire Suppression Airplane Mock Up, Casper Wyoming
Monday, December 28, 2020
Lex Anteinternet: December 28, 1920. Famous Aviator and Aviatrix, C...
December 28, 1920. Famous Aviator and Aviatrix, Committees, Soviet Subjugation, the Roar from the 20s.
On this day in 1920 a young Amelia Earhart rode in an airplane piloted by Frank Hawks at the California State Fair in Los Angeles. She was 23 years old and her father paid the $10.00 charge for the ten minute flight.
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Lex Anteinternet: December 23, 1940. Aviation construction and disaster
December 23, 1940. Aviation construction and disaster.
On this day in 1940, a photo was taken of some new construction benefiting aircraft at a Naval Air Station in Rhode Island.
On the same day, famous aviator August Eddie Schneider was killed in an aviation accident.
Schneider was a well known daring aviator and had won multiple aviation speed records. He'd also flown for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. On this day he was training a student when his plane was struck by a Navy aircraft, taking it down and killing him.
And of course the war raged on:
Day 480 December 23, 1940
Today in World War II History—December 23, 1940
On this day in the war, Winston Churchill addressed the Italian people and urged them to rebel against Mussolini and take Italy out of the war. The overall poor performance of Italian troops in combat was already effectively achieving that result.
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Lex Anteinternet: Some controversial topics for a new Biden Administion.
Some controversial topics for a new Biden Administration. The Space Force is stupid and ought to go.
Joe Biden will not, I'm sure, take advice from me. I've offered him some already, but I doubt he's one of the 200 to 800 people who stop in here on any particular day.
Still, if he is. . .
If you want to read an enthusiastic view of the Space Force read the Smithsonian's Air & Space magazine. It's an excellent publication anyway and it loves the space force. The last issue had an article on the "black hat squadron" of the now one year old Space Force and what it does.
My view?
M'eh.
The Space Force was basically the Air Force's Space Command and it should revert to it. The Space Force can't and won't be doing any real mission that Space Command was not, but it will have its own budget, its own seat at the Joint Chiefs, and its own bloated budget. Given the habit of the current U.S. military, it won't share anything that it could in terms of obviously common items with the other services, and will have to have its own unique everything.
The Space Force/Space Command really has a mission that's simply auxiliary to the Air Forces and therefore the creation of what essentially is a branch of the military that does nothing other than to deal with menacing Russian satellites and the potential militarization of space is really grossly overweighting that mission and massively trespassing on something the Air Force already does and does well. The Air Force has been in space, frankly, in a militarized way since the launch of the first ballistic missiles that excited the atmosphere and so they've been at this a long, long time. If the Space Force having a seat at the Joint Chiefs makes sense, and its own very special budget, giving the Civil Air Patrol a seat there does as well.
Moreover both balkanization and mission inflation is a problem in the U.S. military as it is. The Air Force itself was once, and rightly, part of the Army but has been busy trying to forget its ground support role ever since it became a separate service, which was a massive military mistake in the first place. Double balkanization of a role that should have just remained with the Army is not help.
Moreover, this recalls the example of the Marine Corps, which I have another thread in the hopper on. I'm not opposed to the Marine Corps by any means and I worry about its current direction towards a new role, but its hard not to recall that the Marine Corps is properly part of the Department of the Navy but since the Second World War its freakishly expanded into its own service in a way. And its one that has developed the habit of never using anything, right down to boots, that other branches of the service do.
All these services, moreover, get a chair with the Joint Chiefs of Staff which now is starting to look as large as a high school graduating class. The Army, Air Force, Space Force, Marine Corps, and the Navy all have seats at the Joint Chiefs and the National Guard gets its own as well.
This is now way overdone. The Marines ought to really revert fully to being part of the Department of the Navy. If they can't do that, they're really just a second Army in disguise. The Air Force ought to revert to being part of the Department of the Army. I'm so so about the National Guard having a seat at the table, but I'd leave that alone for the time being.
At a bare minimum, the Space Force ought to go and on day one of the Biden Administration. If I were he, I'd not only sign an executive order doing away with it immediately on day one, but I'd frankly reduce any officer in grade by one grade if they were foolish enough to go along with this silliness and I'd shift those enlisted men who volunteered for this transfer (and not all of them did) over to the Army rather than the Air Force. They'd have their same jobs, but if they want to be playing musical services they can be in one that might, perhaps, have to call on them to be a "guardian" in the old fashioned way.
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Chuck Yeager passes at age 97.
Brigadier General Charles Elwood Yeager died yesterday at age 97.
Yeager entered the United States Army Air Force in 1941 as a private. He was an aircraft mechanic at first but volunteered for flight training and was promoted to Flight Officer, a rank more or less equivalent to warrant officer. He flew P51s during World War Two and was stationed in the ETO. He became a test pilot following World War Two and famously broke the sound barrier in that role flying the X1 "Glamourous Glennis", which was named after his wife.
Yeager had a long Air Force career which was likely somewhat arrested, as famous as he was, by the fact that he was not a college graduate, having entered the Air Force at a time in which it was still possible to become a pilot without a college degree. The movie The Right Stuff, in which Yeager was played by Sam Shepard (and in which Yeager had a cameo role as a bar tender), based on the book by Tom Wolfe, asserted that he was ineligible to become an astronaut for that reason. Whether or not that is true, he certainly was a justifiably famous character and in some ways his passing on December 7 was oddly symbolic.