 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms

 Jessica Cox suffered a rare birth defect and was born without arms. None  of the prenatal tests her mother took showed there was anything wrong  with her. And yet she was born with this rare congenital disease, but  also with a great spirit. The psychology graduate can write, type, drive  a car, brush her hair and talk on her phone simply using her feet.  Ms  Cox, from Tuscon, Arizona, USA, is also a former 
dancer  and double black belt in Tai Kwon-Do. She has a no-restrictions driving  license, she flies planes and she can type 25 words a minute.
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face

 A British military pilot managed to get twenty passengers to the ground despite a bullet between his eyes. 
Flight Lieutenant Ian Fortune was ferrying the wounded from a battle between 
American  troops and the Taliban in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. As he was  taking off with a full load of casualties, a bullet ricocheted through  the helicopter and struck Fortune in the face. Further rounds then  struck the helicopter's automatic stabilization system, shutting it down  and making it extremely difficult to fly.
Despite blood streaming into his eyes, Flight Lt Fortune battled with the controls for eight minutes and managed to get the casualties back to Camp Bastion. TV 
Presenter  Mike Brewer was on the helicopter when the incident took place. He told  Sky News: “It was terrifying. We came under fire just as the ramp was  closing. Then just after we'd taken off, the Chinook suddenly lurched  from side to side and we heard the pilot had been shot. The only reason  we didn't plunge straight back into the desert was because of the sheer  bravery and skill of Ian and the rest of the crew. They're all heroes.”
  
 
10 Most Outstanding Pilots
 Published on 12/14/2010  under Strange People  - by Gracie Murano - 53,688 views  
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms

 Jessica Cox suffered a rare birth defect and was born without arms. None  of the prenatal tests her mother took showed there was anything wrong  with her. And yet she was born with this rare congenital disease, but  also with a great spirit. The psychology graduate can write, type, drive  a car, brush her hair and talk on her phone simply using her feet.  Ms  Cox, from Tuscon, Arizona, USA, is also a former 
dancer  and double black belt in Tai Kwon-Do. She has a no-restrictions driving  license, she flies planes and she can type 25 words a minute.
The  plane she is flying is called an Ercoupe and it is one of the few  airplanes to be made and certified without pedals. Without rudder pedals  Jessica is free to use her feet as hands. It took her three years  instead of the usual six months to complete her lightweight aircraft  license. She had three flying instructors and practiced 89 hours of  flying, becoming the first pilot with no arms.
 (Link)
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face

 A British military pilot managed to get twenty passengers to the ground despite a bullet between his eyes. 
Flight Lieutenant Ian Fortune was ferrying the wounded from a battle between 
American  troops and the Taliban in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. As he was  taking off with a full load of casualties, a bullet ricocheted through  the helicopter and struck Fortune in the face. Further rounds then  struck the helicopter's automatic stabilization system, shutting it down  and making it extremely difficult to fly.
Despite blood streaming into his eyes, Flight Lt Fortune battled with the controls for eight minutes and managed to get the casualties back to Camp Bastion. TV 
Presenter  Mike Brewer was on the helicopter when the incident took place. He told  Sky News: “It was terrifying. We came under fire just as the ramp was  closing. Then just after we'd taken off, the Chinook suddenly lurched  from side to side and we heard the pilot had been shot. The only reason  we didn't plunge straight back into the desert was because of the sheer  bravery and skill of Ian and the rest of the crew. They're all heroes.” 
(Link | Via)
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike

 Frank Vogt is a traffic pilot whose Cessna lost oil pressure 1200 feet  off the ground.  In the early dawn darkness, the ground looked like one  big mass of black void - except the turnpike. “I knew it was wide  enough, I knew it was straight enough. There weren't any wires, and I  didn't see many overpasses,” Vogt said. He reasoned that since the  traffic was still light, there would be enough space between 
the cars  so that they could slow down and let him in. His hastily concocted plan  worked perfectly. He even managed to pull his Cessna to the side of 
the road,  although the inevitable rubbernecking — completely justified in this  case — still blocked traffic a mile-and-a-half in both directions.
 
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16

 Evan Graham celebrated his 16th birthday (on August 6) by soloing five  different aircrafts: a vintage WWII L-4 Piper Cub taildrager, a R-22  Robinson helicopter, a Cessna 150 Aerobat, a Robinson 44 Raven II and a  1965 Cessna 150-150 - setting the world record for the youngest solo  pilot to fly five different aircrafts. On a grass runway, with three flight  instructors present and three sign offs, Evan logged 2 hours of solo  time in 5 different aircrafts, ending the morning before noon with the  traditional bucket drench.
 
10 Most Outstanding Pilots
 Published on 12/14/2010  under Strange People  - by Gracie Murano - 53,688 views  
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms

 Jessica Cox suffered a rare birth defect and was born without arms. None  of the prenatal tests her mother took showed there was anything wrong  with her. And yet she was born with this rare congenital disease, but  also with a great spirit. The psychology graduate can write, type, drive  a car, brush her hair and talk on her phone simply using her feet.  Ms  Cox, from Tuscon, Arizona, USA, is also a former 
dancer  and double black belt in Tai Kwon-Do. She has a no-restrictions driving  license, she flies planes and she can type 25 words a minute.
The  plane she is flying is called an Ercoupe and it is one of the few  airplanes to be made and certified without pedals. Without rudder pedals  Jessica is free to use her feet as hands. It took her three years  instead of the usual six months to complete her lightweight aircraft  license. She had three flying instructors and practiced 89 hours of  flying, becoming the first pilot with no arms.
 (Link)
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face

 A British military pilot managed to get twenty passengers to the ground despite a bullet between his eyes. 
Flight Lieutenant Ian Fortune was ferrying the wounded from a battle between 
American  troops and the Taliban in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. As he was  taking off with a full load of casualties, a bullet ricocheted through  the helicopter and struck Fortune in the face. Further rounds then  struck the helicopter's automatic stabilization system, shutting it down  and making it extremely difficult to fly.
Despite blood streaming into his eyes, Flight Lt Fortune battled with the controls for eight minutes and managed to get the casualties back to Camp Bastion. TV 
Presenter  Mike Brewer was on the helicopter when the incident took place. He told  Sky News: “It was terrifying. We came under fire just as the ramp was  closing. Then just after we'd taken off, the Chinook suddenly lurched  from side to side and we heard the pilot had been shot. The only reason  we didn't plunge straight back into the desert was because of the sheer  bravery and skill of Ian and the rest of the crew. They're all heroes.” 
(Link | Via)
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike

 Frank Vogt is a traffic pilot whose Cessna lost oil pressure 1200 feet  off the ground.  In the early dawn darkness, the ground looked like one  big mass of black void - except the turnpike. “I knew it was wide  enough, I knew it was straight enough. There weren't any wires, and I  didn't see many overpasses,” Vogt said. He reasoned that since the  traffic was still light, there would be enough space between 
the cars  so that they could slow down and let him in. His hastily concocted plan  worked perfectly. He even managed to pull his Cessna to the side of 
the road,  although the inevitable rubbernecking — completely justified in this  case — still blocked traffic a mile-and-a-half in both directions.
Watch CBS News Videos Online (Link | Via)
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16

 Evan Graham celebrated his 16th birthday (on August 6) by soloing five  different aircrafts: a vintage WWII L-4 Piper Cub taildrager, a R-22  Robinson helicopter, a Cessna 150 Aerobat, a Robinson 44 Raven II and a  1965 Cessna 150-150 - setting the world record for the youngest solo  pilot to fly five different aircrafts. On a grass runway, with three flight  instructors present and three sign offs, Evan logged 2 hours of solo  time in 5 different aircrafts, ending the morning before noon with the  traditional bucket drench. 
(Link)
 James Terry: the pilot who could fix his airplane from the outside while flying
 James Terry: the pilot who could fix his airplane from the outside while flying

 One of the difficulties of air travel is the impossibility of making repairs outside of the cockpit while the ship is in flight.  This holds particularly true when the trouble is centered around the  tail. Look closely at the photo: yup, that's James Terry of Miami,  Florida, an inventor who demonstrated his safety device for repairing  airplanes while flying! From the June 1930 edition of Modern Mechanic.
  
10 Most Outstanding Pilots
 Published on 12/14/2010  under Strange People  - by Gracie Murano - 53,688 views  
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms
 Jessica Cox: the first pilot with no arms

 Jessica Cox suffered a rare birth defect and was born without arms. None  of the prenatal tests her mother took showed there was anything wrong  with her. And yet she was born with this rare congenital disease, but  also with a great spirit. The psychology graduate can write, type, drive  a car, brush her hair and talk on her phone simply using her feet.  Ms  Cox, from Tuscon, Arizona, USA, is also a former 
dancer  and double black belt in Tai Kwon-Do. She has a no-restrictions driving  license, she flies planes and she can type 25 words a minute.
The  plane she is flying is called an Ercoupe and it is one of the few  airplanes to be made and certified without pedals. Without rudder pedals  Jessica is free to use her feet as hands. It took her three years  instead of the usual six months to complete her lightweight aircraft  license. She had three flying instructors and practiced 89 hours of  flying, becoming the first pilot with no arms.
 (Link)
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face
 Ian Fortune: the pilot who managed to safely land a helicopter with 20 people after being shot in the face

 A British military pilot managed to get twenty passengers to the ground despite a bullet between his eyes. 
Flight Lieutenant Ian Fortune was ferrying the wounded from a battle between 
American  troops and the Taliban in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. As he was  taking off with a full load of casualties, a bullet ricocheted through  the helicopter and struck Fortune in the face. Further rounds then  struck the helicopter's automatic stabilization system, shutting it down  and making it extremely difficult to fly.
Despite blood streaming into his eyes, Flight Lt Fortune battled with the controls for eight minutes and managed to get the casualties back to Camp Bastion. TV 
Presenter  Mike Brewer was on the helicopter when the incident took place. He told  Sky News: “It was terrifying. We came under fire just as the ramp was  closing. Then just after we'd taken off, the Chinook suddenly lurched  from side to side and we heard the pilot had been shot. The only reason  we didn't plunge straight back into the desert was because of the sheer  bravery and skill of Ian and the rest of the crew. They're all heroes.” 
(Link | Via)
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike
 Frank Vogt: the traffic pilot who landed on Jersey turnpike

 Frank Vogt is a traffic pilot whose Cessna lost oil pressure 1200 feet  off the ground.  In the early dawn darkness, the ground looked like one  big mass of black void - except the turnpike. “I knew it was wide  enough, I knew it was straight enough. There weren't any wires, and I  didn't see many overpasses,” Vogt said. He reasoned that since the  traffic was still light, there would be enough space between 
the cars  so that they could slow down and let him in. His hastily concocted plan  worked perfectly. He even managed to pull his Cessna to the side of 
the road,  although the inevitable rubbernecking — completely justified in this  case — still blocked traffic a mile-and-a-half in both directions.
Watch CBS News Videos Online (Link | Via)
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16
 Evan Graham: the solo pilot who could fly five different aircrafts by the age of 16

 Evan Graham celebrated his 16th birthday (on August 6) by soloing five  different aircrafts: a vintage WWII L-4 Piper Cub taildrager, a R-22  Robinson helicopter, a Cessna 150 Aerobat, a Robinson 44 Raven II and a  1965 Cessna 150-150 - setting the world record for the youngest solo  pilot to fly five different aircrafts. On a grass runway, with three flight  instructors present and three sign offs, Evan logged 2 hours of solo  time in 5 different aircrafts, ending the morning before noon with the  traditional bucket drench. 
(Link)
 James Terry: the pilot who could fix his airplane from the outside while flying
 James Terry: the pilot who could fix his airplane from the outside while flying

 One of the difficulties of air travel is the impossibility of making repairs outside of the cockpit while the ship is in flight.  This holds particularly true when the trouble is centered around the  tail. Look closely at the photo: yup, that's James Terry of Miami,  Florida, an inventor who demonstrated his safety device for repairing  airplanes while flying! From the June 1930 edition of Modern Mechanic. 
(Link | Via)
 Brian Bews: the pilot who managed to eject seconds before the crash
 Brian Bews: the pilot who managed to eject seconds before the crash

 That man in the top of this photo? That's Captain Brian Bews and he's  lucky to be alive. The skilled pilot barely managed to eject before his  CF-18 fighter jet crashed during a practice flight. The practice flight took place at Lethbridge County Airport and was apparently in preparation for the weekend 
airshow in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. There are no details as to exactly why 
the jet fighter went down. We do know that Captain Bews was taken to 
the hospital for injury treatment.
  Doug White: the passenger who managed to land the plane after the pilot died during the flight
 Doug White: the passenger who managed to land the plane after the pilot died during the flight

 When the pilot of the twin-engine Beech aircraft passed out and died mid-flight,  passenger Doug White of Archibald, Louisiana, took over the plane and  landed it safely. White, his wife and two daughters were flying from  Marco Island, Florida, to Jackson, Mississippi, on Sunday after  attending a funeral for White's brother when he realized there was  something wrong with his pilot. The plane's autopilot was on, and the  plane was at about 5,000 feet and climbing, White said. Although he was a  certified single-engine pilot and had about 130 flying hours, he had no  idea how to fly the much larger Super King Air two-engine turboprop  plane. He told his daughters, " 'Y'all go back there, and I want you to  pray hard." Although White sounded fairly calm, some tension is evident  on recordings released by the Federal Aviation Administration as  controllers at Fort Myers, Florida, attempted to talk him through  landing at the airport there. At one point, a controller asked whether  the autopilot is still on or whether White is flying the aircraft  himself. "Me and the good Lord are hand-flying this," White replied. 
The  cause of Cabuk's death has not been released. The Federal Aviation  Administration has not given any of the involved air traffic controllers  permission to 
speak about the incident.
 The pilot who fixed a plane torn down by a bear using duct tape
 The pilot who fixed a plane torn down by a bear using duct tape

 Did a bear tear your airplane to bits in a remote part of Alaska? No  problem – we can fix that with a little duct tape. During a private  "fly-in" fishing excursion in the Alaskan wilderness, the chartered  pilot and fishermen left a cooler and bait in the plane. And a bear  smelled it. This is what he did to the plane. The pilot used his radio  and had another pilot bring him 2 new tires, 3 cases of duct tape, and a  supply of sheet plastic. He patched the plane together, and flew it  home!
 Tom Attridge: the fighter pilot who managed to shoot himself down
 Tom Attridge: the fighter pilot who managed to shoot himself down

 On September 21, 1956, test pilot Tom Attridge was flying Grumman's new  F-11F-1 Tiger. He fired a burst from his 20mm cannon while diving and  accelerating. The cockpit was then struck by an outside object. Attridge  immediately radioed that he was returning to base. While attempting to  land, the jet lost power and crash-landed on the runway. Attridge,  thankfully, escaped safely. A subsequent examination found three bullet  impacts and one intact 20mm bullet in the plane. Attridge had managed to  shoot his own fighter down.
How did this happen? The combination  of conditions responsible for the event was: (1) the decay in  projectile velocity and trajectory drop; (2) the approximate 0.5-G  descent of the F11F-1, due in part to its nose pitching down from firing  low-mounted guns; (3) alignment of the boresight line of 0° to 
the line of flight.  With that 0.5-G dive, Attridge had flown below the trajectory of his  bullets and, 11 seconds later, flew through them as their flight paths met.
 Mason Dunn: the helicopter pilot who saved a stranded deer
 Mason Dunn: the helicopter pilot who saved a stranded deer

 The pilot of an Oklahoma City 
TV news  helicopter used the wind from the aircraft's rotor to push a stranded  deer to safety after it lost its footing on a frozen lake and could not  get up. A small crowd had gathered to watch the deer struggling, its  hooves repeatedly slipping, near the shore of Lake Thunderbird, near  Norman, Oklahoma.
With the helicopter's camera rolling, KWTV  pilot Mason Dunn used the wind from the rotor to push the deer,  initially sending it into a break in the ice where the animal managed to  hold onto the ice with its front legs. Dunn then lowered the helicopter  and the wind sent the deer sliding on its belly across the ice until it  reached shore and scampered into a nearby wooded area.
 
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