JO Flying Service

JO Flying Service JO Flying Service offers quality tailwheel flight training in our safe, affordable 1948 Cessna 140.

Operating at the Manhattan Regional Airport (KMHK) in the beautiful Flint Hills of Kansas, we boast flexible, easy scheduling and are eager to meet your training objectives.

It's been sixty years since Tex Johnston infamously rolled the Boeing Dash-80. This article recounts the details.
08/09/2015

It's been sixty years since Tex Johnston infamously rolled the Boeing Dash-80. This article recounts the details.

Friday is 60 years since Tex Johnston’s famous barrel-roll of the Boeing 707 over Lake Washington. It was the company’s entry into the commercial jet age.

We too often read of the consequences of poor crew resource management and aeronautical decision making. The occasions o...
03/25/2015

We too often read of the consequences of poor crew resource management and aeronautical decision making. The occasions on which crewmembers worked together, followed SOP, and made sound decisions often go unmentioned. Articles like this are rare and are particularly enjoyable because they present the opportunity to learn from a positive outcome.

Foresight and cool-headed teamwork by pilots of a Royal New Zealand Air Force Boeing 757-200 likely saved their aircraft, 11 fellow crewmembers and 117 passengers—including scientists from New Zealand and the U.S. and New Zealand’s minister of foreign affairs—from a crash-landing in near-zero-visibi…

This is actually one of the few accurate about.com articles on aviation. It's a tough road but it's worth it!
03/03/2015

This is actually one of the few accurate about.com articles on aviation. It's a tough road but it's worth it!

There are a lot of reasons to become a pilot: flying is a lot of fun and for most, it's a very satisfying career. But there are a few misconceptions to clear up about the lifestyle of a commercial pilot. Here are 7 reasons that you should not become a pilot.

Battling high density altitudes? Forced to depart with a tailwind? Can't find anybody to help remove your straight float...
01/25/2015

Battling high density altitudes? Forced to depart with a tailwind? Can't find anybody to help remove your straight floats? RATO might be your solution! Many people are familiar with the concept of assisted take off technology applied to large transport aircraft such as the C-130. The idea of using a rocket to reduce an aircraft's takeoff roll is actually older than you may think. Assisted take off research began in the 1920s in Germany as a method for launching gliders. The first rocket-assisted takeoff in the United States was performed by an Ercoupe at March Field, CA in 1941. It was probably an exciting event to see this Cessna 120 take off on straight floats from a dolly with a rocket!

US Airways Flight 1549 was not the first time a flight crew's professional conduct and clear thinking resulted in all ha...
01/18/2015

US Airways Flight 1549 was not the first time a flight crew's professional conduct and clear thinking resulted in all hands surviving a ditching event.

Pan Am Flight 6 departed Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, at 8:26 p.m. HST on the flight's last leg to San Francisco. After passing the point of equal time, the flight received permission to climb to an altitude of 21,000 ft. When that altitude was reached, the No. 1 engine began to overspeed as power was reduced. The First Officer, who was flying the airplane, immediately slowed the airplane by further reducing power and by extending the flaps, and an attempt was made to feather the propeller. The propeller would not feather and the engine continued to turn at excessive RPM. The captain decided to cut off the oil supply to the engine. Eventually, the RPM declined and the engine seized. The propeller continued to windmill in the air stream, causing excessive drag that increased the fuel consumption. As a result, the airplane was forced to fly much slower, below 150 knots, and lost altitude at the rate of 1,000 feet per minute. Climb power was set on the remaining three engines to slow the rate of descent. The No. 4 engine then began to fail and soon was producing only partial power at full throttle. At 2:45 a.m. the No. 4 engine began to backfire, forcing the crew to shut it down and feather the propeller.

The crew calculated the added drag left them with insufficient fuel to reach San Francisco or to return to Honolulu. In the 1950s the United States Coast Guard maintained a ship at Ocean Station November between Hawaii and the California coast. On that night, the ship was the USCGC Pontchartrain. The plane flew to the Pontchartrain's location, leveled off at 2,000 feet, and circled until daylight on the two remaining engines.

The captain decided to wait for daylight, since it was important to keep the wings level with the ocean swells at the ditching impact. As fuel burned off while the plane circled the Coast Guard cutter, the plane was able to climb from 2,000 to 5,000 feet. At that altitude several practice approaches were made to see that the plane would be controllable at low speed (the goal was to have the lowest speed possible, just before touching the water). Delaying ditching until daylight also made the plane lighter so it would float longer.

Aware of the Pan Am Flight 845/26 accident the year before, in which a Boeing 377's tail section had broken off during a water landing, the captain told the flight's purser to clear passengers from the back of the plane. The crew removed loose objects from the cabin, and prepared the passengers for the landing. As on other flights in the era, small children were allowed on their parents' laps, without separate seats or seat belts.[3] The captain planned to land near the ship in full sunlight, to improve the likelihood of rescuing passengers, but became concerned that the ocean waves were beginning to rise.

At 5:40 Captain Ogg notified Pontchartrain that he was preparing to ditch. The cutter laid out a foam path for a best ditch heading of 315 degrees, to aid the captain to judge his height above the water. After a dry run the plane touched down at 6:15, at 90 knots with full flaps and landing gear retracted, in sight of the Pontchartrain at 30°01.5'N, 140°09'W.

One wing hit a swell, causing the plane to rotate, damaging the nose section and breaking off the tail. All 31 on board survived the ditching. Three life rafts were deployed by the crew and passengers that had been previously assigned to help. One raft failed to inflate properly, but rescue boats from the cutter were able to promptly transfer the passengers from that raft. All were rescued by the Coast Guard before the last pieces of wreckage sank at 6:35 a.m.

They were housed in the ship's officers' quarters and returned to San Francisco several days later.

There were a few minor injuries, including an 18-month-old girl who bumped her head during the impact and was knocked unconscious. Forty-four cases of live canaries in the cargo hold were lost when the plane sank.

This happened six years ago today. These aviators instinctively stayed incredibly cool under immense pressure and made f...
01/16/2015

This happened six years ago today. These aviators instinctively stayed incredibly cool under immense pressure and made full use of the basic stick and rudder skills they acquired from flying taildraggers and gliders. They communicated with ATC and, more importantly, with each other. Quite possibly the key to the successful outcome of this event is that they made a very difficult and counterintuitive decision to ditch and stuck with it. Had they confined their thought processes and elected to attempt to return to a runway, this would likely have ended in disaster.

Courtesy NTSB This animation depicts the flight path of U.S. Airways Flight 1549 in Weehawken, New Jersey, on January 15, 2009. The animation begins after th...

If this frigid winter weather is keeping you from getting out and getting your fix of tailwheel action, live vicariously...
01/14/2015

If this frigid winter weather is keeping you from getting out and getting your fix of tailwheel action, live vicariously through Bud Davisson as he reports on what it's like to fly the venerable Ford Trimotor.

The Tin Goose Lives up to Her Name Text by Budd Davisson, Photos: Mike O'Leary and Budd Davisson, Air Progress, June 1986

Flying taildraggers sometimes takes you off the beaten path and away from maintenance support and GSE. In case you've al...
01/09/2015

Flying taildraggers sometimes takes you off the beaten path and away from maintenance support and GSE. In case you've always wondered, there is a procedure for hand-propping a DC-3.

This fantastic read perfectly illustrates the importance of disciplined flying and CRM.
01/08/2015

This fantastic read perfectly illustrates the importance of disciplined flying and CRM.

A friend of mine sent me this story recently. I was so impressed with it I copied it to the blog. Zero/Zero by Charles Svoboda It happened sometime in 1965, in Germany . I was a copilot, so I knew, everything there was to know about flying, and I was frustrated by pilots like my aircraft commander…

Congratulations to Brian, the world's newest tailwheel pilot!
03/21/2014

Congratulations to Brian, the world's newest tailwheel pilot!

Looks like a beautiful day for an Arrow checkout at KMHK.
12/17/2013

Looks like a beautiful day for an Arrow checkout at KMHK.

Enjoying the smooth spring air at 7,000 feet just south of KMHK.
05/31/2013

Enjoying the smooth spring air at 7,000 feet just south of KMHK.

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KMHK
Manhattan, KS
66502

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