The Fighter That Shot Itself Down

Quick Facts DateSeptember 21, 1956 PilotThomas W. Attridge Jr., Grumman test pilot AircraftGrumman F11F-1 Tiger (BuNo 138620) LocationOff Long Island, New York ArmamentFour 20mm Colt Mk 12 cannons OutcomeAircraft destroyed; pilot survived with injuries The Grumman...
How the Ejection Seat Was Invented

How the Ejection Seat Was Invented

They aimed to launch a man out of an aircraft at 600 miles per hour and have him survive the journey. It was 1945, and James Martin, a British engineer, had set out to solve a problem that had killed countless pilots: when your fighter is hit and burning and you’re...

The MiG-21: 60 Countries, One Legend

The MiG-21: 60 Countries, One Legend

Over 11,000 built. More nations flew it than any supersonic fighter in history. The Soviets created something extraordinary: a machine so brutally efficient that seven decades later, it still haunts the skies of multiple continents. The MiG-21 Fishbed wasn’t the...

Asia’s Fuel Panic: Airlines Burning Cash as Oil Hits $195

Asia’s Fuel Panic: Airlines Burning Cash as Oil Hits $195

Jet fuel just did something it hasn’t done in a decade. In a matter of weeks, it doubled. Airlines across Asia woke up in mid-March facing a crisis: the Strait of Hormuz—through which nearly 20 percent of the world’s crude oil flows—was becoming a war zone, and every...

Why Fighter Jets Have Two Tails

Why Fighter Jets Have Two Tails

There’s a reason the most lethal fighter jets on Earth look like they were built in pairs. The twin vertical stabilizer isn’t decorative—it’s an engineering solution to a physics problem that becomes impossible to ignore once you’re pulling 9 Gs and dancing with...

The Pilot Who Stole a MiG-25 to Defect

The Pilot Who Stole a MiG-25 to Defect

On September 6, 1976, Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko made a choice that would reshape Western understanding of Soviet aviation. He pointed the nose of his MiG-25 Foxbat toward Japan and flew. What the West would discover in that intercepted fighter would send shockwaves...

China’s J-35A Stealth Fighter Takes Flight

China’s J-35A Stealth Fighter Takes Flight

In January 2026, two sleek silhouettes pierced a Chinese sky in perfect formation. The J-35A, Shenyang Aircraft Corporation’s answer to the F-35, had taken to the air. What appeared on video footage was a signal: China’s stealth program had moved from theoretical to...

Lightning Strikes Your Plane Twice a Year

Lightning Strikes Your Plane Twice a Year

A blinding flash. A sound like the earth splitting open. Your coffee cup rattles. The cabin lights flicker. Then everything goes back to normal. Most passengers sleep through it. Statistically, commercial aircraft get struck by lightning roughly once or twice every...

Both Engines Fail at 40,000 Feet — Now What?

Both Engines Fail at 40,000 Feet — Now What?

It shouldn’t be survivable. Two massive turbofan engines—the only things keeping a 600,000-pound aircraft aloft—both quit simultaneously at 40,000 feet. No thrust. No electrical power. Dead silent cockpit except for the wind screaming past the fuselage. It’s the...

Seven Hours of Silence: The FAA’s Phantom Lockdown Over El Paso

Seven Hours of Silence: The FAA’s Phantom Lockdown Over El Paso

At 11:30 p.m. on February 10, the FAA did something it hadn’t done since 9/11: locked down an American city’s airspace with zero public warning. No press release. No email to local authorities. No heads-up to the airport. Just a NOTAM that went live and suddenly El...

The F-15 That Landed With One Wing

The F-15 That Landed With One Wing

On a spring morning in 1983, Israeli pilot Zivi Nedivi was locked in a dogfight when an A-4 Skyhawk appeared in his six o’clock. The collision that followed should have been fatal. Instead, it became aviation’s most impossible survival story. The right wing of...

Night Landing Traps — What Your Eyes Won’t Tell You

Night Landing Traps — What Your Eyes Won’t Tell You

You're on a three-mile final. The runway lights are visible — two neat rows of white dots floating in a sea of black. Everything looks normal. You hold the descent. Then, 200 feet above the ground, something feels off. The VASI lights are screaming red. You're way too...

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