NEED FOR SPEED: Dianna Stanger uses formation training to prepare for racing jets

Published 1:41 pm Friday, April 8, 2022

MOUND, La. — Among the pilots flying out of the Vicksburg-Tallulah Regional Airport at the recent Classic Jet Aircraft Association’s formation clinic was a woman with a need for speed.

A resident of Calhoun County, Texas, Dianna Stanger is the owner of Dark Star Air Racing and a unique aircraft — an L-139 trainer/attack aircraft built by Aero Vodochody for the Czechoslovakian Air Force — that she has flown in the jet class of the National Championship Air Races at Reno, Nevada, where speeds reach 500 mph.

The L-139, Stanger said, “Is one of a kind. It came available; it was sitting in three parts in a crate. The gentleman I bought it from put it together.”

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Stanger, who is a principal stockholder in a Connecticut company that manufactures close tolerance flight safety-critical turbine engine components, said she has been flying since 1994, starting with helicopters.

“I had lived on an island in the Bahamas and it was the only way I could get there,” she said. “I kept improving; I added two more seats, two more seats, two more seats and now I’m into twin turbines.”

She made the transition to propeller-driven planes and then into jets, which she began flying in 2014. And while the L-139 has raced at Reno in the past, Stanger said she first flew it in 2021 Reno Races — the only woman in the jet class.

“I did cross-country racing and won a few times so I thought, ‘Why not try something else?’ So I tried (jet) racing,” she said.

As she prepares for her second year of competition, Stanger said, “Formation flying gets me ready for racing, because we fly formation in the race and then it’s in and around flying close to somebody. We go 500 mph, so getting close to somebody is the only way we can pass.”

She added the planes fly in heats of between four to 10 planes.

“This is the safety that keeps racing,” Stanger said. “The more of this I can do, the better racer I am.”

“I’m working on my first (formation) certification,” she said. “I just started a year ago; I had no idea this existed and then once I did, I fell in love with the training because it’s precise and they all operate under the same standards.”

Stanger earned her Formation and Safety Team, or FAST, cards during the formation clinic. Does that mean she will move into formation flying?

“I think I would add it to the racing,” she said. “The racing is only once a year.”

About John Surratt

John Surratt is a graduate of Louisiana State University with a degree in general studies. He has worked as an editor, reporter and photographer for newspapers in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. He has been a member of The Vicksburg Post staff since 2011 and covers city government. He and his wife attend St. Paul Catholic Church and he is a member of the Port City Kiwanis Club.

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