Van Nuys Airport Announces Friendly Flyer Award Winners | Aero-News Network
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

Airborne Unlimited -- Most Recent Daily Episodes

Episode Date

Airborne-Monday

Airborne-Tuesday

Airborne-Wednesday Airborne-Thursday

Airborne-Friday

Airborne On YouTube

Airborne-Unlimited-05.13.24

Airborne-NextGen-05.14.24

Airborne-Unlimited-05.15.24 Airborne-AffordableFlyers-05.16.24

Airborne-Unlimited-05.17.24

Thu, Jun 30, 2022

Van Nuys Airport Announces Friendly Flyer Award Winners

… Or Forever Hold Your N1

Van Nuys Airport (VNY)—America’s busiest general aviation airport—announced the recipients of its 2021 Friendly Flyer Awards. The awards honor general aviation companies and corporate flight departments for their efforts to reduce the noise of their aircraft operations.

Eighteen aircraft operators received recognition plaques for complying with the airport’s mandatory noise abatement policies. Compliance, in this instance connotes at least 99-percent adherence to all noise-abatement programs and reduced nighttime jet arrivals and departures under the somewhat unimaginatively named Quieter Nights Program.

Over the past four decades, VNY has implemented a wide and aggressive gauntlet of noise abatement programs and policies. Mandatory efforts began with the establishment of a partial nighttime departure curfew in 1981, followed by a rule prohibiting the addition of Stage-II aircraft in 2002, and a noisier jet phase-out in 2009. These regulations, along with voluntary measures – such as the No Early Turn Helicopter Route and Altitude Deviation, Quiet Jet Departure and Quieter Nights Programs – depend on the ongoing compliance of both VNY-based and transient pilots.

Notwithstanding award programs, environmental theater, and institutional self-aggrandizement, overly-aggressive airport noise-abatement procedures present hazards to both aircraft and the communities over which they depart and arrive.

The business of drastically reducing engine-power shortly after takeoff—as many noise-abatement procedures prescribe—is a dangerous one. Contradictory arguments predicated upon the notion that V1 is all the departure speed an aircraft requires are sophistic, and speak to a worrying misunderstanding of rudimentary aerodynamic principles.

Noise-abatement procedures that combine partial-power climbs and low-altitude, post-departure turns are particularly hazardous—especially to aircraft departing into IMC. What’s more, noise-abatement regulations—because they are enforceable by FAA action against both pilot and air-carrier certificates—are apt to shift a pilot’s focus from keeping his aircraft safe to keeping it quiet.

FMI: https://www.iflyvny.com

Advertisement

More News

Bolen Gives Congress a Rare Thumbs-Up

Aviation Governance Secured...At Least For a While The National Business Aviation Association similarly applauded the passage of the FAA's recent reauthorization, contentedly recou>[...]

The SportPlane Resource Guide RETURNS!!!!

Emphasis On Growing The Future of Aviation Through Concentration on 'AFFORDABLE FLYERS' It's been a number of years since the Latest Edition of Jim Campbell's HUGE SportPlane Resou>[...]

Buying Sprees Continue: Textron eAviation Takes On Amazilia Aerospace

Amazilia Aerospace GmbH, Develops Digital Flight Control, Flight Guidance And Vehicle Management Systems Textron eAviation has acquired substantially all the assets of Amazilia Aer>[...]

Hawker 4000 Bizjets Gain Nav System, Data Link STC

Honeywell's Primus Brings New Tools and Niceties for Hawker Operators Hawker 4000 business jet operators have a new installation on the table, now that the FAA has granted an STC f>[...]

Echodyne Gets BVLOS Waiver for AiRanger Aircraft

Company Celebrates Niche-but-Important Advancement in Industry Standards Echodyne has announced full integration of its proprietary 'EchoFlight' radar into the e American Aerospace>[...]

blog comments powered by Disqus



Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

Advertisement

© 2007 - 2024 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC