Air Racing


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Take a look at air racing and the role women have played in it and still are today

Air Race Classic

The 2013 Air Race Classic will be held June 18-21, 2013.  The start will be Pasco, Washington and terminus in Fayetteville, Arkansas.  There will be a limit of 55 race teams accepted for this race.  For more information or to register for the race, click on the logo above or visit the website at airraceclassic.org.

Women’s air racing all started in 1929 with the First Women’s Air Derby. Twenty pilots raced from Santa Monica, CA to Cleveland, OH, site of the National Air Races. Racing continued through the ‘30’s and was renewed again after WWII when the All Women’s Transcontinental Air Race (AWTAR), better known as the Powder Puff Derby, came into being. The AWTAR held its 30th, final and commemorative flight in 1977. When the AWTAR was discontinued, the Air Race Classic, Ltd., (ARC) stepped in to continue the tradition of transcontinental speed competition for women pilots and staged its premier race. The Air Race Classic was reincorporated in 2002 into the Air Race Classic, Inc., a non-profit 501(c)3 organization.

The early air races were the “on to” type, with noon and night control stops, and the contestants more or less stayed together. In that manner, weather and flying conditions were practically the same for each entrant and the race officials could release standings to the media after each day of racing.

The current race routes are approximately 2,400 statute miles in length, and the contestants are usually given four days, flying VFR in daylight hours, to reach the terminus. Each plane is assigned a handicap speed – and the goal is to have the actual ground speed be as far over the handicap speed as possible. The pilots are thus given the leeway to play the elements, holding out for better weather, winds, etc. The objective is to fly the “perfect” cross-country. In this type of race, the official standings cannot be released until the final entrant has crossed the finish line. Actually, the last arrival can be the winner.

Women in Air Racing
A look at the history of women's air racing
 
1929 Air Race
It all started with an air race...
 
Flying in the "Around New Zealand" 2004 Air Race
99s take on the challenge of flying 3,000 miles over the varied terrain of New Zealand

"Palms to Pines" Air Race 2009


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