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#131
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On Dec 14, 2:27 pm, Jose wrote:
Why? It will never take off. Must resist biting troll hook.... |
#132
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Mark Hickey writes: It's important to remember that the would-be pilot/savior would have tremendous motivation to get it right the first time. Yes. That could help or hurt, depending on the personality of the individual. When thinking through that scenario, I always pictured having three or four people in the cockpit - each with a limited job that they'd be walked through by an expert on the radio... maybe each with a cell phone connecting them to individual team members on the ground. Then it's just up to those experts on the ground to talk each of them through about 1/4 of the process of getting the plane on the ground in one piece (as opposed to making a flawless landing on the numbers). That seems unnecessarily complicated. Especially with automation, as long as the person in the left seat can push a button, turn a dial, and move a lever, he can land the plane--provided also that he can follow simple instructions on the radio. hehehe, he said "get it right the first time": http://www.micom.net/oops/Airbus320_trees.mp4 |
#133
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Darrel Toepfer writes:
hehehe, he said "get it right the first time": It's not hard to get it right the first time. While most people can't fly airplanes by hand without making mistakes, everyone has pushed buttons, turned dials, and moved levers countless times in his life, and if he can also understand and follow instructions, he can land a 747, which requires no more than the manipulations just mentioned when the automation is used. The incorrect assumption made by most people is that the non-pilot would be trying to fly the aircraft by hand. That happens in Hollywood movies, but not in reality. There would be absolutely no reason to fly the aircraft by hand, and it would be dangerous without a qualified pilot in charge (and qualified means on the aircraft in question, not just someone with a PPL). |
#134
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Darrel Toepfer writes:
Mxsmanic wrote: No circumstances have ever required it in airliners, but it's certainly doable. http://imdb.com/title/tt0080339 http://imdb.com/title/tt0083530 http://imdb.com/title/tt0065377 http://imdb.com/title/tt0071110 http://imdb.com/title/tt0367085 These are works of fiction. Note also that they don't generally involve non-pilots flying the aircraft. |
#135
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"ManhattanMan" wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Yeah, john wayne, robert stack and randolph scott on speed dial just in case they all have the fish. You forgot Moses, errrr, Charlton Heston.............. ****, anyone that can be air dropped into a 747 can't be all bad! Great actor. I never liked the way he did airline pilots. Not enough "oh ****"s. Bertie |
#136
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#137
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Jim Logajan wrote in
: "muff528" wrote: "Dudley Henriques" wrote: My first time was in the back of a Nash. What's a "Nash" ? ........ ;^) ,The younger generation A Nash, as in Nash Rambler!? This video will enlighten you: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4W7oZBhAJg :-) AMC had dropped the Nash brand by the time that one was built. Rambler was the oldest name in that group and they eventually narrowed it down to that one badge before dropping it in favor of AMC in the late sixties. The whole history of Nash is here.. http://www.histomobile.com/histomob/...16/histo02.htm Bertie |
#138
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Jim Logajan wrote: "muff528" wrote: "Dudley Henriques" wrote: My first time was in the back of a Nash. What's a "Nash" ? ........ ;^) ,The younger generation A Nash, as in Nash Rambler!? This video will enlighten you: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4W7oZBhAJg :-) It was a little convertible with solid rails forming the top sides of the car where the top slid up over them instead of the way a usual convertible functioned. It was a strange little car to say the least. Not a Metropolitan? Sex in a Metropolitan could not have been a good experience unless you are a dwarf or a contortionist! My uncle ha one of those. It was a British car made by austin, though styled by Nash loosely based on the exotic Healy Nash's from a few years earlier. They're tiny! Bertie |
#139
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Looked it up. The Stanleys set a record in 1906 of 127 mph. Interestingly, in the very early days, land speed records were dominated by electric cars, the fastest of which was 65.79 mph in 1899.. Bertie Can you imagine what it must have felt like for those early guys at 127 indicated on that frame and chassis? Those guys had guts!! They don't call it the heroic age for nothing. I have driven a 1911 car at about 70 and that was actually not too bad at all. Braking was not what you could call the best . I once drove this car dwon the side of a mountain with the wrong gear selected at the top and didn't dare try to change once i had ealised I was going too fast. It had a transmission brake as well as the tiny rear wheel brakes, but they were all on fire and almost completely useless by the time I reached the bottom. The cars handled better than you might imagine, though. There were no shocks on them, but the leaf springs were very long and very supple and that damped out the ride better than you might imagine. The steering was fairly good on many of them as well. Tires were skinny, but they were usually about 45 psi or moe on the larger cars so didn;t deform much on corners, so that was usually OK. the brakes, though... the other big concern was that if you had artillery wheels (wood) they could collapse under side loads. IIRC this was th ecause of the very first auto fatality. Bertie Sounds exciting. Best I've ever done on land was a souped up 500 Kawasaki racing cycle. I got it through the gears balanced on the rear suspension then took it out to well over 100 and developed a "vibration" in the front forks. I'll tell you the truth, it was as scary as I've ever been in or on a machine :-) How those guys ride those things at Daytona, fall off and survive is beyond me. You see it happen and watch them get up and back on a bike. More nerve than sense I guess. I really shouldn't talk. Putting a fighter on her back at 100 feet didn't scare me a bit.....but I wouldn't want to do it TODAY :-))) Yeah, it's all what you're comfortble with. I've been over 100 on a bike and it felt fine, but the terrifying aspect is other road users. All it takes is some asshole in an SUV to be at the wrong place at the wrong time! I can;t even imagine doing aerobatics below 500 feet nowadays.. In fact, i doubt I'd do them below 1500 when I get going again. (the airplane is moving along anyway.. ) Bertie That's good. Stay up there out of the marbles. It's a lot better on your health for sure. If I had it to do over again I'd take it up higher myself as the average air show fan wouldn't know the difference anyway. Well, I won't be doing any shows anyway! Bertie |
#140
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: F. Baum writes: Jim, I caught just the parts of the show where J and A tried to land the plane with some coaching from the sim instructor (Mainly to see how the instructor would do this). These portions of the show were amazingly brief (Possibly for security reasons ?) . The stuff they did show was scary and I doubt they could have gotten awhay with some of it in a real plane. I do watch the show for its "Infotaiment" value but I remain unconvinced that someone could actually be talked down in an airliner. I think it has been tried a time or two in GA after the pilot became incapacitated. A small GA airplane is completely different from an airliner, Wrong again, asshole. Bertie |
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