Idlewild Tower: Instrument Flying in the '50s

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  • Idlewild Tower: Instrument Flying in the '50s

    Here's an article from Air Facts, about the IFR arrival procedures at Idlewild in the early '50s, by Wolfgang Langewiesche. It's fascinating. Ignore the 707 picture in the thumbnail, please.

    A classic from the Air Facts archives: Wolfgang Langewiesche, author of Stick and Rudder, takes readers inside the fog-shrouded operations at New York’s Idlewild Airport—today’s JFK—in 1954. With vivid detail, he explains how radar, radio, and skilled controllers brought transatlantic airliners safely to the runway in any weather.

  • #2
    Thanks for posting that, Scott. Reminded me a bit of the introduction to each chapter in the Peter Dogan IFR training book. When I started instrument training, I wasn't using radar ranges, but I was training with NDB approaches and luckily, two VHF VOR receivers. No GPS, no Loran. I'm curious how today's pilots mentally connect with this history.

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    • #3
      In 1954, I was nine. I grew up east of KYIP (then Detroit's airport) and north-northwest of KDTW. (then ANG,cargo, and inernational). Not only lots of aircraft types back then, but I learned about radio ranges (I lived under "N" of some range), and also heard the buzz of Loran. My father was an electrical engineer, radio hobbyist, and USAAF veteran, so I saw and heard it all.

      Also flew from YIP to MSY and back every summer, spending time with my maternal grandfather in the French Quarter. (DC 3, 4,, 6, Constellation, CV340, and Viscount). "Cute Little Kid" often got invited to the cockpit for a brief visit.
      Geology rocks, but geography is where it's at.

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