For all my aviator friends…

God does not subtract from man’s allotted time the hours spent while flying, but He exacts harsh penalties for those who do not learn to land properly.

The difference between fear and terror: fear is when your calculations show you may not have enough fuel to make it to your destination. Terror is when you realize you were right.

I wore my mask while pulling 9 Gs, checking six, pumping out flares, telling #2 to “BREAK LEFT!”, selecting auto guns, locking up a bandit, selecting the AIM-9, keeping visual while gaining a tally, getting a 1500 MHz tone, watching my altitude, planning an egress, shooting the bandit, telling #2 to “bugout south”, reforming into tactical formation, pushing it up, taking it down, short range radar, and resetting the CAP….and all you gotta’ do is pick up a gallon of milk.

Mommy, I want to grow up and be a pilot. Honey, you can’t do both.

When you see a tree in the clouds, it’s not good news.

Heaven is crowded with civilian pilots who did not get their Instrument Rating.

Aviation’s greatest invention was the relief tube.

My junior high school teacher told me no one would pay me to look out the window. Now I’m an airline captain.

The older I get, the better pilot I was.

I’m at the age when I realize the best thing about flying fighters was free oxygen.

Takeoffs are optional, landings are mandatory.

Never fly the “A” model of anything

Because I’m the Captain, that’s why!

Pilots – looking down on people since 1903.

There are three simple rules for making a smooth landing. Unfortunately, no pilot knows exactly what they are.

The average fighter pilot despite a swaggering personality and confident exterior is capable of feelings such as love, affection, humility, caring and intimacy. They just don’t involve others.

When everything else is going against you, remember an aircraft still takes off into the wind.

Friday Pilots Pat Halloran and Tom Keck in their SR-71s, “Yeah, though I fly through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for I am at 80,000 Ft. and climbing.

An idiot can get an airplane off the ground, It takes a pilot to get it back in one piece.

Pilot dictum: remember, in the end, gravity always wins.

You can only tie the record for flying low.

Black boxes may be replacing pilots, but pilots can be maintained easily and produced by unskilled labor.

Many young, inexperienced pilots have delusions of adequacy.

Flying is the art of learning to throw yourself at the ground and miss.

Richard Reid forced us to remove our shoes in the TSA line. Thank goodness he wasn’t the “underwear bomber.”

Elderly lady to airline captain, “Are you sure you are safe to fly?” Answer, “Lady, how do you think I got this old?”

Optimists invented the airplane. Pessimists invented the parachute.

Scientific fact: the rings of Saturn are composed of lost airline luggage.

Newton’s Law: What goes up must come down. Squadron Commander’s Law: What comes down better be able to go up again!

I was 14 when I wanted to be a pilot. I’m now 80 and still want to be a pilot, but I’d rather be 14 again.

Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Captain speaking. This was the First Officer’s leg and he made that landing you just experienced. I have asked him to stand at the door and receive your comments.

Passenger to Flight Attendant: “John Wayne didn’t use a seatbelt.” Flight Attendant: “John Wayne isn’t going to New York with us and neither are you unless you buckle up!”

Icarus could have flown if he picked a cloudy day.

As George Carlin said, “If black boxes survive crashes, why don’t they make the whole airplane out of that stuff?

Soldier to a pilot: “Why didn’t you join the Army?” Pilot’s answer, “I found out that good food and clean sheets were readily available on nearby Air Force bases.”

“Roger” – a term used by pilots when they can’t figure out what else to say.

“Cone of Confusion” – all radio terminology on JFK ground control.

“Balls-to-the-wall” – FULL THROTTLE, or an EXTREMELY bad landing.

Kennedy Ground Control to female pilot. “I told you to turn on Alpha!” Female pilot, “Don’t be angry, I didn’t understand you!” Controller, “Are you my ex-wife?”

Beer was invented to make pilot stories more interesting.

Pilots have to be brave so they don’t get scared when they can’t see at night, or inside of clouds, or when a motor or wing falls off.

You have never lived until you have almost died. Life has a special flavor the protected will never know.

Helicopter pilots are different from airplane pilots. Airplane pilots are open, clear-eyed, buoyant extroverts. Helicopter pilots are brooders, introspective anticipators of trouble. They know if something bad has not happened, it is about to.

Death is God’s way of telling pilots to watch their airspeed on final.

You can’t fly unless you can land, but you can’t land unless you can fly. So, which is it?

What is the worst thing that can happen when you are flying? – running out of airspeed, altitude and ideas all at the same time.

All engine sounds are magnified over the ocean.

What do you do when you are in trouble flying? Call for help. What if no help is available? Then no sense calling.

What do you do if you don’t like your boss? Go flying. What if he won’t let you go flying? Go anyway, he won’t be your boss for long.

We are reaching the age where “life sentence” is less of a threat.

FAA motto for pilots: “We’re not happy unless you’re not happy.”

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Also, My friend Glenn Bartley is in the hospital with Covid after fighting it off for over a week. If you have the time, please drop a note on his blog- http://ballseyesboomers.blogspot.com/ And let him know you’re thinking about him.

Comments

For all my aviator friends… — 16 Comments

  1. Ah, the relief tube. Haven’t thought about it in years. Newbie flightline guy, go up there and check out the manual cockpit-ground intercom. I can’t hear you, get closer. Still can’t hear you! Louder – CLOSER!

    • Relief tube antics in the P-2… Brand new Nav having to use the tube inflight on a long Market Time mission. The hose ran across the wingbeam within reach of the Julie operator station. Julie operator crimps the hose closed and the cone fills up. Nav shuts off his flow and looks around like “WTF do I do now?” someone yells “Blow on it!”
      So he holds the cone up and puffs at it, Julie operator releases crimp long enough to empty the cone and shuts it off again. This goes on for several iterations of fill and empty the cone. Nav never did catch on, the rest of the crew was in stiches.

    • I think anyone smart enough to fly a fighter can work out the implications of an oxygen supply designed to be sufficient.

      Not any sort of service rivalry speaking.

      I know I’m not together enough to safely operate any form of manned aircraft.

  2. That’s what I liked about the missile biz: they’re already underground, so they can’t crash. Now, Minuteman capsules, could have shock-isolators lose all their air on one side…
    IIRC, that would be about a 20-degree slant. Titan-11s didn’t do that, but if the enlisteds went down to level 3, they could sit on it and push against the concrete, and push again, and again. I was giving a briefing to a maintenance team, and suddenly realized I was swaying. I thought I was getting dizzy, but looked aside and realized we were swinging…

  3. And there is the old saying of a forced landing at night. ” When you think you are near the ground, turn on the landing lights, if you don’t like what you see, turn them off”

    • Well, ya had to be there. You get a little idea of it at
      vtitanmissilemuseum.org/ It’s south of Tucson. Ja, I vass dere. It’s the only one left; all others were blown in.

      • Not sure how that v got there (Bad finger! BAD!!!!); delete it if you try the link.

  4. I’m a son-of-an-aviator. Therefore, I know:
    “There are old pilots, and there are bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots.”
    And I am also familiar with St. Oscar, who sang:
    “Give me operations,
    Way out on some lonesome atoll.
    For I am too young to die,
    I just want to grow old.”

  5. …there was the story of a WW2 B17 tail gunner when asked why he joined the Air Force…”What other unit can retreat at 300 mph?…

    • Not a pilot am I, but I know one or two. I heard this as “the three most useless things to a pilot are runway behind you, altitude above you, and a second ago.”