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#11
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"Saryon" wrote in message ... You should pay more attention, sock. Um, nice try but I'm also not a sock. Don't even know and haven't met anyone from any of these groups in the real world. What does your sock name and fake email address represent? |
#12
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"Saryon" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 13:01:42 -0800, "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Saryon" wrote in message .. . You should pay more attention, sock. Um, nice try but I'm also not a sock. Don't even know and haven't met anyone from any of these groups in the real world. What does your sock name and fake email address represent? A wish to not have any additional spam sent to me. I get enough junk email already. I'm assuming your email is correct? I'll drop it a note from my real email. There are a number of things that I probabally am, but a sock I'm not. Of course my email is real, only a sock troll hides beind a fake name and email address. |
#13
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Sorry. Gotta jump in here. I work in the airline industry and we use 744,
733, etc regularly. Have never heard anyone, not even people at Boeing, drop the first 7. Not saying it isn't done, just not in this sector of the industry. Shawn "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Saryon" wrote in message ... B762 L2J/H 767-200 BOEING B763 L2J/H 767-300 BOEING B764 L2J/H 767-400 BOEING Your assertion was that it's a "673" because you always drop the leading 7. I can't find 673 anywhere in the list. I expect those would be apropriate contractions for your correspondence with FAA, but here in the real world, the first 7 is dropped. Note carefully that you have been corrected by an engineer, an air traffic controller and pilots. If you want to use an insider secret code, don't expect anyone to know what you are gibbering about. |
#14
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"ShawnD2112" wrote in message ... Sorry. Gotta jump in here. I work in the airline industry and we use 744, 733, etc regularly. Have never heard anyone, not even people at Boeing, drop the first 7. Not saying it isn't done, just not in this sector of the industry. Shawn, welcome to Tarverland. :-) JK "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Saryon" wrote in message ... B762 L2J/H 767-200 BOEING B763 L2J/H 767-300 BOEING B764 L2J/H 767-400 BOEING Your assertion was that it's a "673" because you always drop the leading 7. I can't find 673 anywhere in the list. I expect those would be apropriate contractions for your correspondence with FAA, but here in the real world, the first 7 is dropped. Note carefully that you have been corrected by an engineer, an air traffic controller and pilots. If you want to use an insider secret code, don't expect anyone to know what you are gibbering about. |
#15
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Amen Jim, another one for the Tarver chronicles.
I am an engineer, and I worked for Boeing for 8 years, primarily on the AIMS Display System for the 777. Airline equipment codes on every ticket I have ever purchased always read 73x, 74x, 75x, 76x, 77x where x is the first digit of the dash number. Tarver, once again you are talking out of your ass. Below is the official listing of equipment codes used by the FAA for flight plan filing: B17 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress B29 Boeing B-29 Superfortress B52 Boeing BJ-52 Stratofortress B701 Boeing 707-100 (C-137b) B703 Boeing 707-300 (C-18, C-137c,E-8 J-Stars,Ec/Kc- B712 Boeing 717-200 B720 Boeing 720 B721 Boeing 727-100 (C-22) B722 Boeing 727-200 B72Q Boeing 727 Stage 3 (Us Only) B731 Boeing 737-100 B732 Boeing 737-200 Surveiller(CT-43, VC-96) B733 Boeing 737-300 B734 Boeing 737-400 B735 Boeing 737-500 B736 Boeing 737-600 B737 Boeing 737-700, Bbj, C-40 B738 Boeing 737-800 B739 Boeing 737-900 B73Q Boeing 737 Stage 3 (Us Only) B741 Boeing 747-100 B742 Boeing 747-200 (E-4, VC-25) B743 Boeing 747-300 B744 Boeing 747-400(International, Winglets) (AL-1) B74D Boeing 747-400 (Domestic, No Winglets) B74R Boeing 747sr B74S Boeing 747sp B752 Boeing Model 757-200 (C-32) B753 Boeing 757-300 B762 Boeing 767-200 B763 Boeing 767-300 B764 Boeing 767-400 B772 Boeing Model 777-200 B773 Boeing 777-300 There, squashed a flea with a hammer... Dean Wilkinson B.S.E.E. "Jim Knoyle" wrote in message ... "ShawnD2112" wrote in message ... Sorry. Gotta jump in here. I work in the airline industry and we use 744, 733, etc regularly. Have never heard anyone, not even people at Boeing, drop the first 7. Not saying it isn't done, just not in this sector of the industry. Shawn, welcome to Tarverland. :-) JK "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Saryon" wrote in message ... B762 L2J/H 767-200 BOEING B763 L2J/H 767-300 BOEING B764 L2J/H 767-400 BOEING Your assertion was that it's a "673" because you always drop the leading 7. I can't find 673 anywhere in the list. I expect those would be apropriate contractions for your correspondence with FAA, but here in the real world, the first 7 is dropped. Note carefully that you have been corrected by an engineer, an air traffic controller and pilots. If you want to use an insider secret code, don't expect anyone to know what you are gibbering about. |
#16
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"Dean Wilkinson" wrote in message m... Amen Jim, another one for the Tarver chronicles. You mean the Knoyle idiot detector, or the Miller sub-idiot detector. I'd like to know just how incompetent you are, Wilkinson. Common usage is to suppress the first "7". |
#17
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Way more competent than you Tarver, but that is self evident.
Common usage to drop the first 7? Common with whom? Not the FAA, or the airlines... "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Dean Wilkinson" wrote in message m... Amen Jim, another one for the Tarver chronicles. You mean the Knoyle idiot detector, or the Miller sub-idiot detector. I'd like to know just how incompetent you are, Wilkinson. Common usage is to suppress the first "7". |
#18
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"Dean Wilkinson" wrote in message m... Way more competent than you Tarver, but that is self evident. If you buy into either of the archive trolls you are an idiot. What did you do on the little display you worked? |
#19
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The codes listed in below message in first column are typically ICAO codes
(usually 4 characters). E.g. for Airbus the may look like A332 for A330-200 A346 for A340-600 etc. Or others: AT72 for ATR 72 A124 for AN-124 CRJ7 for CRJ-700 The codes the thread was started are IATA codes which have typically 3 characters, e.g. 763 for B-767-300 343 for A340-300 Airlines typically use the IATA codes in their schedules, while ATC (at least in Europr) is using the ICAO codes. The same is applicable for airport codes, e.g. IATA ICAO Name YYZ CYYZ Toronto ORD KORD Chicago O'hare FRA EDDF Frankfurt FCO LIRF Rome/Fiumicino Regards -Thorsten "Dean Wilkinson" wrote in message m... Amen Jim, another one for the Tarver chronicles. I am an engineer, and I worked for Boeing for 8 years, primarily on the AIMS Display System for the 777. Airline equipment codes on every ticket I have ever purchased always read 73x, 74x, 75x, 76x, 77x where x is the first digit of the dash number. Tarver, once again you are talking out of your ass. Below is the official listing of equipment codes used by the FAA for flight plan filing: B17 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress B29 Boeing B-29 Superfortress B52 Boeing BJ-52 Stratofortress B701 Boeing 707-100 (C-137b) B703 Boeing 707-300 (C-18, C-137c,E-8 J-Stars,Ec/Kc- B712 Boeing 717-200 B720 Boeing 720 B721 Boeing 727-100 (C-22) B722 Boeing 727-200 B72Q Boeing 727 Stage 3 (Us Only) B731 Boeing 737-100 B732 Boeing 737-200 Surveiller(CT-43, VC-96) B733 Boeing 737-300 B734 Boeing 737-400 B735 Boeing 737-500 B736 Boeing 737-600 B737 Boeing 737-700, Bbj, C-40 B738 Boeing 737-800 B739 Boeing 737-900 B73Q Boeing 737 Stage 3 (Us Only) B741 Boeing 747-100 B742 Boeing 747-200 (E-4, VC-25) B743 Boeing 747-300 B744 Boeing 747-400(International, Winglets) (AL-1) B74D Boeing 747-400 (Domestic, No Winglets) B74R Boeing 747sr B74S Boeing 747sp B752 Boeing Model 757-200 (C-32) B753 Boeing 757-300 B762 Boeing 767-200 B763 Boeing 767-300 B764 Boeing 767-400 B772 Boeing Model 777-200 B773 Boeing 777-300 There, squashed a flea with a hammer... Dean Wilkinson B.S.E.E. "Jim Knoyle" wrote in message ... "ShawnD2112" wrote in message ... Sorry. Gotta jump in here. I work in the airline industry and we use 744, 733, etc regularly. Have never heard anyone, not even people at Boeing, drop the first 7. Not saying it isn't done, just not in this sector of the industry. Shawn, welcome to Tarverland. :-) JK "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Saryon" wrote in message ... B762 L2J/H 767-200 BOEING B763 L2J/H 767-300 BOEING B764 L2J/H 767-400 BOEING Your assertion was that it's a "673" because you always drop the leading 7. I can't find 673 anywhere in the list. I expect those would be apropriate contractions for your correspondence with FAA, but here in the real world, the first 7 is dropped. Note carefully that you have been corrected by an engineer, an air traffic controller and pilots. If you want to use an insider secret code, don't expect anyone to know what you are gibbering about. |
#20
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"Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ...
"Saryon" wrote in message news On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 17:40:06 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Saryon" wrote in message .. . What's a 763? Boeing 767-300. A Boeing 767-300 is a B763. Assuming the original poster meant B763 is not unreasonable. People say/post 744 or 733 and have it interpreted to Boeing 747-400 or Boeing 737-300 all the time. Not saying it's technically correct, or even right to do, but even I'm not that pedantic in the absense of similar designators to confuse it with... Even though I knew what he ment, if you look at it he is dislexic. Correctly and common is: 673 utter ****ing ******** as usual little man. tell us again how the words "average" and "total" are interchangeable in aircraft manuals. tell us again how part 25 only applies to a minority of aircraft. those LSD flashbacks of yours must be bitch. never mind, you can always down another bottle of thunderbird with your meds little man. |
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