All Hail The Aero-Heroes of 2007!
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, 2007 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 2007 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 a solid dozen of our Aero-Heroes
for 2007... in something of an informal order, starting from 12th
to the 1st. 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.
From the Hero's List... #8: Eclipse Aviation's Vern
Raburn
Having Vern on this list is likely to earn me as much hate mail
as praise... and for (pretty much) all the same reasons. Still; I
truly believe that this guy demands a prominent spot on the heroes
list.

Yeah, I know all the nay-sayers will talk about busted
schedules, the rumors of financial problems (more from hope than
actual evidence, we think), and dozens of other issues, but the
fact of the matter is that Raburn and the Eclipse troops have
pushed the entire industry to react, and adapt, to the challenges
he has put before a biz that was so mired in the same old BS, that
many honestly feared (at times) the business would sink out of
sight and no one would notice.

But let's get real here... there is much to congratualte them on
this year. Raburn and Eclipse will have pushed out some 100 jet
aircraft in their first year of production, adapted a number of new
technologies into a single airframe, totally turned the
Single-Engine jet game on its ear with a surprise prototype,
conquered a GREAT number of problems (and are honestly on their way
to vanquishing many others), pioneered new production technologies
and programs here-to-fore unseen in small jet production (or
anywhere else, in many cases), and totally flaunted the
conventional wisdoms that chained too much of aviation into doing
the "same old thing" day after day. He can be brash, outspoken,
smart, arrogant, insightful, a real smart-ass, controversial and
overly optimistic (C'mon Vern, you know its true), not to mention
many other attributes -- but darned if it doesn't take those
properties and a number of others to change aero-history. That
said, we think that when this story is a bit more complete, we have
a sneaking suspicion that biz-aviation's "bad boy" will be proven
to have been (mostly) what so many of this enemies deeply feared
all along... i.e., Vern may just turn out to have been (dare we say
it?) "RIGHT." One of the main reasons we root for Raburn's success
(as we would for any proper aviation venture), is because its going
to be so darned entertaining watching people come up with new
recipes for crow...

Watching Raburn has been some of the most entertaining
journalism I have ever undertaken... I mean, they should sell
popcorn in the lobby of the Eclipse HQ building, for God's sake --
the entertainment value is THAT good...

When all is said and done, it takes people who are willing to
take great risks, embrace and conquer their inevitable problems and
failures (Folks, if you're not failing now and then, than OBVIOUSLY
you're not trying hard enough), and do what all those around them
say "can't be done," to make an industry turn on its ear.
Revolution (by and large) is a good thing... it shakes the cobwebs
out of moldy conventional thinking, it invites those with dreams to
act upon them, and the inevitable result is often an escalation in
the good fortunes of those whom such events ultimately
affect.

In our opinion, the Eclipse program (as led by Raburn), has made
the industry sit up and take critical notice of they way that
business is being done and look at ways to make solid positive
changes... so that Raburn's revolution doesn't bury them a few
year's hence. As painful as that may be, (to Raburn, et al, most of
all), this has to be a good thing. Years from now, win or lose, I
hope we get to look back at Eclipse and see the beginnings of one
of the most intriguing revolutions in the aviation business. We
shall see... but we have feeling that he's going to surprise us
all.