Ken Swain:
- Retired career professional pilot
- BS Mechanical Engineering, Texas Tech 1974
- USAF Undergraduate Pilot Training Class 75-08, 1974 - 1975
- USAF / USAFR Pilot: 20 years, 1974 - 1994
- United Airlines Pilot: 32 years total, 1985 - 2017
- Flight Experience: Flying for over 50 years
- 3 1/2 YEARS of flight time (do the math...)
- Former USAF Instructor Pilot
- Smallest airplane flown: VariEze
- Largest airplane flown: C-5 Galaxy
- Married to wife Nancy for 50 years with twin daughters
Ken Swain began flight training as an ROTC cadet in the fall semester of 1973 at Texas Tech University, where he was in his senior year studying mechanical engineering. He earned his Private Pilot license that October. The following summer he began active duty with the US Air Force and was assigned to Undergraduate Pilot Training Class 75-08 at Reese AFB in west Texas. One day a classmate showed him an article about a homebuilt airplane called the VariViggen and it's young designer, Burt Rutan. Ken was intrigued but UPT is intense and leaves little time for sleep, let alone hobbies.
A year later found Ken flying the C-141 Starlifter at Travis AFB, CA, and his friend stationed just up the highway in Sacramento at Mather AFB. During a visit, his friend asked, "Have you heard about Burt Rutan's NEW airplane, the VariEze?" Ken read the article and was absolutely hooked and subscribed to the newsletter. In July of 1976, the issue arrived that announced plans were finally available and he bought his by return mail. When his copy of the plans arrived, he immediately began the project and 18 months later his new VariEze N4ZZ flew for the first time. It made its first trip to Oshkosh that summer in 1978 and has flown to the airshow every year since.
Ken's VariEze was the first west of the Mississippi to fly with an O-235 engine, long before there were 'official' Lycoming plans. In November of 1978 it also became the first 4 place VariEze when he and his wife Nancy took their 3 week old twins flying for the first time. The desire to optimize his particular engine airframe combination eventually prompted Ken to learn how to design and carve his own propellers.
1982 saw Ken reassigned to Offutt AFB, NE, where he became an Instructor Pilot in the T-39 Sabreliner, and president of Omaha's EAA Chapter 80. In 1985 he was hired by an Air Force Reserve squadron that was converting from the C-130 to the C-5 Galaxy and he went to training that spring. That summer he began a 32 year career with United Airlines. United sent him to the Chicago crew base where he remained his entire career. Late in August, 1990, his AF Reserve squadron was called to active duty to fly in support of the first Gulf War, Desert Storm, and Ken was gone from United for almost a year. He was released from active duty just in time to fly N4ZZ to Oshkosh 1991.
The one constant in Ken's life through all the career moves and airplane changes has been his Varieze. In a very real way it helped him maintain his ability to fulfill the demands of professional flight operations at the highest level. It allowed him to reliably reconnect with grass roots flying and decompress whenever the challenges of the 'big airplane' world became exceptionally stressful. In a similar way the good folks who populate the canard composite world are a very real constant as well. Neighbors and work colleagues come and go, but as time goes on seeing old canard friends at various airshows and gatherings becomes every bit as enjoyable as seeing the airplanes.
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