All Hail The Aero-Heroes of 2008!
Final Compilations by ANN Editor-In-Chief/Corporate Insomniac,
Jim Campbell
It is both the most "fun," and most difficult, task facing the
ANN staff at the end of every year -- determining who, or what, did
the most to promote the cause of aviation in the past 365 days...
while also chastising those people or entities that did all they
could to undermine the many successes the aviation/aerospace
community has managed to accomplish.

Thankfully, 2008 was a year in which we saw the best and
brightest among us step forward and work tirelessly on behalf of us
all. No doubt about it... the challenges we faced in 2008 were
numerous, and ongoing... so was the quality of expertise and
passion brought to our defense by those who heroically demonstrated
to the world the very best side of aviation... via their deeds,
words and actions.

It is ANN's honor to recognize Ten persons/organizations or
groups that qualify as our Aero-Heroes for 2008... in something of
an informal order, starting from the 1st to the 10th. Let us know
what you think of our selections... whom YOU would have liked be
included or omitted from such a list. In the meantime, we thank the
folks who made this year's list. Thank you, folks... we really
needed you this year, and you didn't let us down.
Diamond Aircraft
There was a minor character in the Charlie Brown comics, as I
recall… a poor little guy who walked around with an
ever-present cloud over his head… well, if you ever wondered
what happened to him when he grew up, it seems he went to work for
Diamond Aircraft last year.

One of the superstars of the general aviation world for the
better part of a decade, Diamond Aircraft seemingly could do no
wrong. They've come up with airframe after airframe, great idea
after great idea, meeting specific needs within the general
aviation community, and always seemed to hit a home-run with each
new product introduction. They have been innovative, professional,
demonstrated extraordinary marketing savvy, and were just plain
good for all that we love about aviation.

However; 2008 was not their year. Not by a long shot. Despite
all the smarts and excellent planning that have been accomplished
at Diamond over the years, we have little doubt that they didn't
have a whole lot of warning of problems coming their way and that
most of what truly vexed them was well out of their
control.

We speak, of course, of the troubles that Diamond incurred as a
result of the failures of the Thielert engine program. We've
written quite a bit about what went wrong at Thielert, but few
could have seen the speed with which that program came apart, and
the complications that followed it, as governmental entities made a
slow and laborious process far more painful than it
could/should have been. This left Diamond holding the bag, if you
will, for a whole new generation of exquisitely designed airplanes
-- specifically the quite properly renowned DA 42, as well as the
single-engine DA 40s that had been previously Thielert
equipped.

The failure of a critical supplier, especially one that seems
irreplaceable, has been the downfall (or the start of) for a number
of aircraft manufacturing programs. No aircraft company
encountering the failure of the supplier as critical as a unique
powerplant vendor can possibly emerge unscathed and
undamaged… but Diamond, God bless them, seems to have a
plan.
Diamond has been involved in the development of a replacement
engine series for quite some time (which is a MONUMENTAL
undertaking) and seems destined to see certification of a
Thielert-equivalent engine (the Austro, shown above) within the
next year -- and if that isn't enough for those who are now
permanently soured on the diesel aircraft revolution, they have
Lycoming replacements for the DA 42 already certified and in the
pipeline for the future. Engine replacement programs for those
birds already in the field, and grounded either through the lack of
parts, or costs that went from reasonable to astronomical with the
failure of Thielert, have been made available for surprisingly
swift implementation.

There are a few unhappy folks (mostly lawyers, it seems) who
will say the Diamond had this coming, that they should have seen
this failure much sooner, and that they have failed in their
responsibilities to their customer base… but
honest-to-goodness, we just don't see it. This company could easily
have closed its doors over this mess - it could easily have thrown
its hands up in the air and claimed no responsibility for what was,
definitely, something that was not their fault - but each time they
are presented with a problem (no matter how insurmountable it may
seem at the onset), they come up with a solution. Some of the
solutions are a bit raw, some of them are certainly not going to be
cheap, and none of them happen overnight -- but this is a company
that does not sit around and bemoan their fate… it finds
solutions.

Yeah… we can all Monday-morning quarterback every
decision that they've made, and I'm sure there are lots of things
that could have been done better -- but after watching a number of
companies fail to deal with far less critical issues, and
especially in a climate where the aviation world seems under attack
at every corner, Diamond Aircraft has marked itself as a survivor,
an innovator and a firm that just does not know the meaning of
surrender.

We remain impressed, and optimistic, for the future of Diamond
Aircraft, and with time, its customer base. And heading into 2009,
that's not an easy thing to say--about anyone.