The Freedom to Comply

Dealing with the move and keeping up with the business of being in business had kept me busy 24-7 for a while. The process of this move has given me reason for significant concern. We have moved quite often. This is our fourth transatlantic move (yes, I know, we are suckers for punishment) This is […]

Copyright And How Not To Do It

This is a cautionary tale of an individual’s perception of copyright law and how not to deal with a perceived infringement of an interpretation of copyright law. Our web supremo, Mike, let me know a few weeks ago that we had several DMCA claims against the site. Specifically against four sentences that are used in […]

Guilt by Association

I have resumed traveling again after a few years of COVID restrictions. When I am traveling I am not working all the time (this is a rarity) and traveling gives me time to think. This Christmas we spent some time in France, which is always enjoyable. What a beautiful country and such great people. We […]

The Unbearable Lightness of Being Stupid

We have returned back to the UK. This has been great after over 20 years away. Everything is the same and everything has changed. Anna and I were in a typical English town over the weekend nostalgically wandering around ‘Boots the Chemist’ complaining about the lack of human manned checkouts. We were accompanied by the […]

Composites, Manufacturing Planning and Potential Problems

I have two clients at roughly the same point in their respective programs. They have both successfully completed a multi-year prototyping phase, they are zeroing in on a realistic and viable production configuration and they are both looking at the best way to get through the minefield of production R&D, certification, volume manufacturing setup, commercial […]

Advice to Young Engineers

As I get older and I see more young engineers enter the industry, including my own daughter, it is interesting to reflect on what characteristics result in success. How you define success is another discussion.

Joby and the Fine Art of Certification

The FAA has published the airworthiness criteria for the Model JAS4-1 Powered-lift aircraft. (https://public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2022-23962.pdf) If you read the preamble, Joby applied for the type certificate on November 2 2018. It has taken over 4 years to establish the certification criteria. Well, you might think, this will mean that they can drive forward through the certification […]

ITPS

I was privileged to spend a day at ITPS in London Ontario. Giorgio Clementi and his family are old friends and ITPS is a true family business with his wife Bev and all his sons involved.  If you get a chance to tour the facility you should. As well as the wildly diverse fleet of aircraft they have extensively […]

Boundary Conditions and the Affliction of Intelligent Management

All analysts know that a solution to a problem is only as good and the boundary conditions used to define the problem. The same principle can be applied to other aspects of product development. It can also be applied (in a similar sense) to life. If there are no boundaries, rules or limitations the social […]

Unfiltered Progressivism

In aerospace engineering there is a natural conservatism forced on us by the laws of physics, the regulatory framework and the market. Interestingly, as much as they may believe differently, the market is almost as conservative as the laws of physics.

Morals of Convenience

How far do you have to go to put yourself in the clear with regard to ethics in engineering? This is an issue that I always have trouble managing for myself.

My Scratch Drawing Checklist

Metal part drawing checklist – this list is not comprehensive. Any and all errors will not be tolerated whether they are on this list or not.

Uniqopter – An Honest eVTOL Program

Towards the end of 2021 I connected with Eugene Pik on Linkedin. Eugene is an interesting guy – raised in Soviet Belarus, moved to Israel and has been running his business in Canada for many years. He wanted to produce a eVTOL aircraft that would serve the medical evacuation (medevac) market better than the helicopters […]

eVTOL – Making or Repeating History?

A version of this article recently appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. OK – upfront, the data for the Wright Flier I am using is taken from the Wright Flier Model B wikipedia page (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wright_Model_B).This was the last iteration of the original Wright Flier configuration and was sold in 1910. Their famous first […]

Electric Aviation and the Problem of the Cold Cabin

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. All the numbers used in this article are Rough Order of Magnitude (ROM) numbers. Nothing nuanced here – just back of the napkin numbers. If you disagree with my assessment let me know, send me your numbers and I will publish […]

Eulogy for an Astronaut

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. This month I attended the celebration of life for astronaut and test pilot Bjarni Tryggvason. He was the test pilot for the Otto Aviation flight test program and was instrumental in getting the 500L prototype aircraft into the air and providing […]

The Responsibility of an Engineer

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. My daughter is shortly to graduate from Ryerson University and recently took part in the ritual of ‘The calling of the Engineer’ She told us about it and my first reaction was that it was all rather silly. However, being […]

eVTOL and the Contempt of Familiarity

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. It has been a difficult few months for eVTOL. Front runner Joby Aviation suffered the loss of a prototype aircraft. Thankfully the aircraft was being remotely piloted at the time. Outside of the industry it is not understood how disruptive […]

The Endgame

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. I am hoping that this will be the last COVID post. I know, I know, I said this last time. Things have gone from stupid and destructive to full fascist in a way that no one, no one outside of […]

Mandatory vs Voluntary, Force vs Choice

A version of this article first appeared in our free newsletter, to subscribe click here. Considering the situation in Canada now, this article from only a few weeks ago looks prophetic. This is not a good thing. There is something we need to talk about. There are moves in several countries, Canada included, to make the […]