Plane & Pilot Year 2018 Magazine Back Issues
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- Cockpit Augmented Reality Is Here: Get Your Free App
- How Old Is Too Old To Fly?
- Inflight Medical Crisis Who Really Decides?
- How To Be A Weather Geek
- Angry Cat Surprises Pilot: Fight For Survival
- Cessna Skyhawk JT-A Turbodiesel 172 Comes Alive
- 15+ Four-Seater Planes Our 2018 Roundup
- Rule#1: The Airplane Doesn't Care
- Cirrus SRs The Planes That Changed Aviation
- What The Controller Says... What The Controller Means
- Flight Review Get Your Money's Worth
- Learjet Model 23 How The Private Jet Was Born
- Flying Through Tornadoes Of Fire
- Is A Used Turbine Right For You?
- Cool Headsets From Budget To Primo
- Can Bad Judgment Be Fixed?
- 6CRM Lessons From Tammie Jo And Other Heroes
- Flight Design Is Back! A High-Tech German LSA
- High Country And Hot
- Looking At Wind In 4 Dimensions
- Malaysia 370: New Clues & Theories Emerge
- Power Unleashed Quest Kodiak Series II
- New Rules For Traffic Patterns
- Unleaded Avgas: Bad News
- Titan T-51 Building And Flying A Pocket Mustang
- Urban Air Taxis: Disruptive Or Delusional?
- I Landed Where? My Off-Airport Adventure
- Technologically Advanced Airplanes: Safer Or Not?
- Our Plane Of The Year: And The Winner Is...
- Oshkosh Gallery 12+Pages Of Amazingness!
- Little-Known Risk For Loss Of Control
- The Coolest Plane That Never Made It
- T-33 Disappearance: What Really Happened?
- Big-Tire Backwoods Fun Maule MX-7-180
- It's Zero-Zero Go Or No-Go?
- Sleeping On The Job How To Do It
- Like-New Dakota Premier's Turbo Hauler
- Tesla, Eclipse And The Agony Of The Early Adopter
- Miracle In The Rockies Hard Lessons Learned
- A Helicopter Rating Part I: The Zen Of The Hover
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No one could possibly have guessed what would happen to the lightplane industry in 1965 when Plane & Pilot magazine coincidentally published its first issue.
For that matter, few could have imagined that Plane & Pilot would be one of only three national aviation publications to survive the economic upheaval that would infect the magazine business and the aviation industry over the next 50 years.
Titles such as Air Progress, Private Pilot, Airways, and a half-dozen other magazines have come and gone, but Plane & Pilot has continued to soldier on, never missing an issue for some 550 months.
During that time, they've watched the industry improve and adjust, and they've monitored the changes to Plane & Pilot, as well.
It's a very different world from December 1965 when the first issue of P&P hit the newsstands. The people on staff have changed progressively, even as the mission of the magazine has remained constant—to keep pilots of piston and turboprop aircraft apprised of the latest happenings in the world of aviation.
More recently, Plane & Pilot has expanded its coverage to include light jets such as the Cessna Mustang and M2, Eclipse 550 and the Phenom 100. They've even done stories slightly farther afield, covering such exotic subjects as the Apollo Moon missions, Space Shuttle and the Mars Rover missions.
Plane & Pilot magazine was the brainchild of Don Werner, a publishing executive who was already active in other motorsport magazines—four-wheel drive vehicles, motorcycles, pickups, off-road ATVs and hot rods. Werner felt P&P would be an excellent fit to his already burgeoning publishing empire.
Don had the good fortune to grow up in Winona, Minnesota, where he befriended a local pilot who was to become famous. “In our early years, we acquired a love of flight and of aircraft,” Werner wrote. “And the airport that we began to visit was in the custody of a fixed-base operator, then rather new in the business, by the name of Max Conrad! Max was phasing out his pair of large biplane Spartan trainers for the new and unique Taylorcrafts of the day. So we got a taste of the old before we were introduced to the new.”
Werner learned to fly with Conrad and went on to become lifelong friends with the personable aviator.
For his part, Conrad was to gain fame, if not fortune, as a world record-setting ferry pilot. Conrad flew just under 200 international deliveries, most for Piper Aircraft, delivering everything from Cherokees to Aztecs across both oceans.
Don Werner dedicated the launch of Plane & Pilot magazine to Conrad in the premier issue. Werner’s editorial column, “Memo From the Publisher,” read, “We are deeply moved that the first news we can carry in this first issue is the award of aviation’s greatest honor to the greatest aviator of our time.” Werner was referring to the 1965 Harmon Trophy awarded to Conrad. “As the founding publisher, we hereby dedicate Plane & Pilot magazine, this issue and all future issues, to Max Conrad.” In Werner’s words, “Max holds so many aviation records, they are too numerous to mention. Some of them probably will never be erased.”
Conrad gained fame for making solo endurance flights as long as 60 hours, and he held nine world records, three of which still stood in 2013. Conrad flew some truly impressive nonstop flights, including from Morocco To Los Angeles and south Africa to Miami.
In later years, Conrad became a sporadic columnist for Plane & Pilot, answering questions from readers in his popular column, “Ask Max.” Conrad gained fame for making solo endurance flights as long as 60 hours, and he held nine world records, three of which still stood in 2013. Conrad flew some truly impressive nonstop flights, including from Casablanca, Morocco, to Los Angeles and Johannesburg, South Africa, to Miami.