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#81
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"Blueskies" wrote Nothing to do with down wind turns, but ever notice how a helium filled balloon fixed inside a car leans toward the inside of a turn, or leans backward when a car stops, or leans forward when it accelerates? Yep, and I have another good one for you. Inside a big motor home, on a cold night, if you get in, and get the engine powered heater going, the front of the vehicle will get nice and warm, while way in the back is still nearly as cold as it was before you fired it up. If you stop suddenly, all of the cold air in the back will rush up to the front, and you will be cold again, almost instantly! -- Jim in NC |
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#82
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"Jim Macklin" writes:
What they showed with landing the NASA simulator is that any person with some level experience with a cockpit display can control an airliner. Most FAA controllers would not have the experience to describe the cockpit and give useful instruction in how to manually fly with the autopilot or where the switches are located, or how to use the radio to even start the "rescue." FAA controllers can find pilots and put them on the radio, if required. |
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#83
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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, but in any case, it has been done successfully in small planes. No circumstances have ever required it in airliners, but it's certainly doable. |
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#84
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I don't think anybody here really cares, but it would be undeniably
cool to see an aeroplane hurtling down a massive treadmill. My guess is that they would use a model airplane. It would just be too unsafe to do anything else. Why? It will never take off. g,d,rlh Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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#85
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Jose wrote:
I don't think anybody here really cares, but it would be undeniably cool to see an aeroplane hurtling down a massive treadmill. My guess is that they would use a model airplane. It would just be too unsafe to do anything else. Why? It will never take off. g,d,rlh Jose Oh, you're so subtle you little devil you :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
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#86
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Mxsmanic wrote:
"Jim Macklin" writes: What they showed with landing the NASA simulator is that any person with some level experience with a cockpit display can control an airliner. Most FAA controllers would not have the experience to describe the cockpit and give useful instruction in how to manually fly with the autopilot or where the switches are located, or how to use the radio to even start the "rescue." FAA controllers can find pilots and put them on the radio, if required. Who is this fool???? |
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#87
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cavelamb himself wrote in
: Mxsmanic wrote: "Jim Macklin" writes: What they showed with landing the NASA simulator is that any person with some level experience with a cockpit display can control an airliner. Most FAA controllers would not have the experience to describe the cockpit and give useful instruction in how to manually fly with the autopilot or where the switches are located, or how to use the radio to even start the "rescue." FAA controllers can find pilots and put them on the radio, if required. Who is this fool???? You want him? He'll probably try to te you how to build an airplane using plane constructor and photoshop next. Bertie |
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#88
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cavelamb himself wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: "Jim Macklin" writes: What they showed with landing the NASA simulator is that any person with some level experience with a cockpit display can control an airliner. Most FAA controllers would not have the experience to describe the cockpit and give useful instruction in how to manually fly with the autopilot or where the switches are located, or how to use the radio to even start the "rescue." FAA controllers can find pilots and put them on the radio, if required. Who is this fool???? :-)) Welcome to the club! -- Dudley Henriques |
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#89
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Mxsmanic wrote:
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, but in any case, it has been done successfully in small planes. No circumstances have ever required it in airliners, but it's certainly doable. It's important to remember that the would-be pilot/savior would have tremendous motivation to get it right the first time. 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). Of course, then they'd all be arrested upong landing for using their cellphones in flight. Mark "it's the price you pay for survival I guess" Hickey |
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#90
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
cavelamb himself wrote in : Mxsmanic wrote: "Jim Macklin" writes: What they showed with landing the NASA simulator is that any person with some level experience with a cockpit display can control an airliner. Most FAA controllers would not have the experience to describe the cockpit and give useful instruction in how to manually fly with the autopilot or where the switches are located, or how to use the radio to even start the "rescue." FAA controllers can find pilots and put them on the radio, if required. Who is this fool???? You want him? He'll probably try to te you how to build an airplane using plane constructor and photoshop next. Bertie PASS! |
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