An early Stormscope (left) provided far less weather information than a relatively inexpensive tablet computer today.
Pilots who pine for a return to a bygone era in which the world of general aviation was so much better can certainly point to today’s well-known woes of high fuel costs, astronomical new aircraft prices, and a waning pilot population.
But all the nostalgia overlooks some important advances that have made general aviation safer, more enjoyable, and—in some ways—a real bargain compared to the past.
Looking at an avionics story in a 1983 issue of AOPA Pilot magazine illustrates the point. Thirty years ago, King Radio had brought to market a wondrous new technology that seemed almost too good to be true. “Area Navigation” made user-defined waypoints a reality and promised vastly simpler and more precise IFR flying. King’s top-of-the-line KNS-80, at a price of $7,600 (in unadjusted dollars), let you be part of the revolution.
Of course, $7,600 then is more like $17,650 now—and for that you can get a Garmin GTN 750 that stores 1,000 user-defined waypoints (instead of four on the KNS 80). The GTN also shows them to you on a vibrant, color touch screen with terrific com and nav radios; a comprehensive database; and an intercom, audio panel, and transponder, too. If that isn’t enough, the GTN 750 also can show you weather and traffic, futuristic safety tools that would have seemed like the stuff of fantasy in the early 1980s.
Area navigation was beyond the means of many IFR pilots 30 years ago, but those who flew in the clouds and wanted to improve their situational awareness could buy a cutting-edge “horizontal situation indicator.” HSIs took the guesswork out of intercepting VOR radials and localizers, and dramatically increased flight accuracy—and who could say no to a KI-152A at a retail price of $5,035? In today’s dollars, that’s about $11,690, or enough to buy and install a top-of-the-line WAAS GPS/com, or a single-screen Aspen PFD glass panel with reliability and capabilities that could scarcely be imagined then.
So far I’ve only mentioned high-end IFR stuff, so what about VFR flying in the early 1980s? Surely pilots could get by with less fancy and costly equipment, right?
Absolutely! And since GPS hadn’t become available, you could buy a rugged King KX 175B nav/com for $2,500. That’s $5,800 today, more than enough to buy two of the best nav/com radios on the market. The only difference is that today’s solid-state models are smaller, lighter, and offer additional features (such as intercoms, the ability to monitor standby frequencies, and music inputs) that weren’t even on the drawing boards back then.
Another sometimes forgotten aspect of pre-GPS flying is that pilots used to get lost a lot, even when they were following stationary objects like roads and railroad tracks. And the idea of a terrain database such as those that have become commonplace in GPS units was unheard of in GA.
But what if you only wanted to fly VFR and just avoid dangerous weather? Well, pilots in the early 1980s had an amazing new tool for doing just that. It was called Stormscope and the WX-9 version could help keep you away from thunderstorms for just $6,175. That’s about $13,350 today, or enough to buy a decade of XM Weather service as well as a device to display it on—or a portable ADS-B weather receiver (such as the Garmin GDL 39 or Appareo Stratus) and about a dozen iPads.
Did I say iPad? Well, a long time ago, pilots had to carry with them paper charts, and approach plates, and Airport/Facility Directories, and none of them were downloadable and they weighed a lot. They all had to be mailed to you, or to your local flight school or FBO, and annual subscriptions cost far more than an iPad Mini and an EFB subscription.
The point in all this is that pilots have never been satisfied. We’re always pushing to do more, and to do it better, and sometimes we succeed. Things are far from perfect today. But let’s not let our idealized reminiscences of the past keep us from recognizing progress, or fairly evaluating our prospects for the future.
Email dave.hirschman@aopa.org.