Max Conrad was 56 years old when he flew a single-engine Piper Comanche from Casablanca to Los Angeles in 1959, setting a light-aircraft world distance record — 7,668 miles nonstop — that stood until 1987. He had stripped out every non-essential item from the Comanche to fit extra fuel tanks. The aircraft weighed nearly twice its normal maximum on takeoff. He flew it anyway. Then he landed in Los Angeles, refuelled, and went home to Winona, Minnesota.
Quick Facts
| Nationality | American 🇺🇸 |
| Achievement | Nine official FAI world records in light aircraft, including the 1959 Casablanca–Los Angeles distance record |
| Aircraft | Piper Comanche, Piper Twin Comanche, Piper Aztec |
| Nickname | “The Flying Grandfather” — still setting records into his 60s |
| Born / Died | 21 Jan 1903 – 3 Apr 1979 (age 76) |

Conrad had been flying since the 1920s and was deeply unfashionable in aviation terms: he flew light, civilian aircraft, not military hardware. No jets, no prototypes, no classified research. Just a man and a single-engine aeroplane and an ocean in between. But the oceans he crossed and the distances he covered put him in a category of his own. Over a career spanning five decades, he set nine official FAI world records for long-distance flight in light aircraft — three of which still stand.
He was deeply Catholic, and before every long flight he would spend time in prayer. His cockpit always carried a rosary. This was not superstition — Conrad was a careful, methodical pilot who prepared obsessively. The prayer was, by his account, about accepting what he could not control. The preparation was about controlling everything else. He flew with extraordinary fuel loads — his aircraft were typically overloaded by the standards of any safety regulator — but he had calculated the numbers himself, with the precision of an engineer and the experience of a pilot who had crossed oceans before and intended to cross them again.
Records That Outlived Their Era
Conrad set records for flights across the Atlantic, the Pacific, and around the world. He flew nonstop from Casablanca to El Paso — 6,967 miles in a single-engine aircraft — a distance record for the class that stood for decades. He flew from the Canary Islands to San Juan, Puerto Rico. He set speed records, distance records, and records for specific aircraft classes. By the time he was in his 70s, aviation magazines had stopped counting and simply called him a legend.
Max Conrad in Action
Rare footage of Max Conrad and his record-setting solo flights across the Atlantic. Conrad made his famous Chicago-to-Rome nonstop flight in a Piper Comanche in 1959, covering roughly 4,800 miles alone in a single-engine aircraft.
For Conrad, the ocean rewarded preparation, not luck — and nobody prepared more thoroughly.
— On Max Conrad, “The Flying Grandfather”Conrad died on 3 April 1979, at the age of 76, in Summit, New Jersey. To the end, he kept planning flights that aimed to go further than anyone thought possible in a small aeroplane. It was the only way he knew how to fly.




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