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Tropical Storm Chantel: The Impact On Aviation

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    The Tropical depression formed on the afternoon of July 4th, 2025, east of Jacksonville, Florida. Throughout the next day, it developed into Tropical Storm Chantel on the night of July 5th. The storm continued to strengthen and made landfall near Litchfield Beach, South Carolina, at around 4 am on July 6th with winds of 60 mph and a pressure of 1002 millibars. The storm brought along heavy rains, flash flooding, poor visibility, heavy winds, and even a tornado, resulting in over 100 flights canceled or delayed.      As previously mentioned, the storm brought many hazards to areas near it, which also resulted in airports not directly in the path of the storm being affected. At 4:27 am a tornado was confirmed to have touched down east of Wilmington International Airport (KILM) in the Kings Grant community and traveled for over a mile, damaging homes. Weather radar of Tropical Storm Chantel as shown by the National Weather Service       Due to it...

What Ethics in Aviation Mean to Me

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    Ethics is defined by Webster's dictionary as  a set of moral principles: a theory or system of moral values. To me, ethics is having the integrity to uphold yourself to do the right thing, even when nobody is looking. Making ethical decisions ensures a job is done properly and people are kept safe as a result.     Working in aviation maintenance, we constantly make decisions that could impact the lives of many people whom we have never met. Many people want to work quickly and, as a result, whether intentionally or not, end up doing procedures improperly. Having good ethics ensures maintenance procedures are done correctly and constantly inspected, so pilots, aircrew, and their families never have to worry about a problem with the aircraft leading to an accident that could change their lives forever.       I'm choosing to discuss Alaska Airlines Flight 261, as it could have been prevented by proper maintenance. On January 21st, 2000, at 1...