News
Russ can Fly on MSN1d
Finally Back in the Cessna 172 Cockpit!The grounding has ended! I'm back in the cockpit and it feels so good! In this video, I go back to my flight lessons and go ...
One of the scariest things that can happen to you is being in an emergency situation while flying. While the absolute majority of pilots can get everything under control and get their passengers to ...
Among the various wave energy technologies, oscillating water columns (OWCs) have shown some of the greatest promise, due to their simplicity of operation and possibility for shore mounting, with ...
The increasing use of distributed power-generation systems, as with the case of wave-power-generation plants, requires a reliable fault-ride-through capability. The effects of grid fault include ...
Because you don’t know what you don’t know, always err on the side of caution. A postflight inspection can go a long way. This column first appeared in the May Issue 958 of the FLYING print ...
LYSEKIL, Sweden — You can’t see the Russian bear from here, but you can hear its growl.
This 1946 Cessna 120 has 3,269 hours on the airframe and 1,089 hours since overhaul on its Continental C-85 engine. The aircraft has a useful load of 517 pounds and is equipped with Hooker safety ...
Hosted on MSN26d
M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns - MSNThe fund named winners across 12 categories from nearly 600 entries nationwide. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns ...
Detroit Free Press columnist M.L. Elrick nabbed another national honor this June. The longtime investigative journalist won the Scripps Howard Journalism Award for excellence in opinion writing ...
Because we’re still having problems due to OpenWeb changing its API on us, I do not know your highest rated comments this week. I’m told I’ll get some comment data next week, but I’m not ...
Opinion I’m a Marine. Trump is putting soldiers in an impossible position. Service members like myself were trained for urban warfare abroad, not crowd control at home.
As summer temperatures rise, so does the pressure from biting and nuisance flies on livestock operations. According to university research, fly infestations cost U.S. producers an estimated $700 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results