Planes
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Pilots love 4 engines, as do fuel companies and engineers. Accountants not so much.
Knew a BA captain quite well in the late '90's- early 2000's who flew 747's. Raved about them and how strong they were.
Once, after a couple of bottles of wine, I asked him how confident he was if things went really wrong. His answer was "as long as I have an engine, tailplane and one and half wings I'm fine"
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Planes:
Pilots love 4 engines, as do fuel companies and engineers. Accountants not so much.
Knew a BA captain quite well in the late '90's- early 2000's who flew 747's. Raved about them and how strong they were.
Once, after a couple of bottles of wine, I asked him how confident he was if things went really wrong. His answer was "as long as I have an engine, tailplane and one and half wings I'm fine"
Here’s what Moody said:”Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them going again. I trust you are not in too much distress.”
Read more at https://www.businessinsider.com.au/captain-announcement-after-all-four-engines-failed-2013-2#YeGIFjieAh1WwQFe.99 -
Pretty harrowing listening to the guys who had the fun task of collecting the bodies (parts) from the crash.
The term body grease is used a bit, plus they had to fight off local birds who kept trying to eat the dead.
Sounds like no one knew what they were doing, just something that had never happened before in our historyI worked with a guy who did mountain rescue and was later involved in the rescue/recovery. He had worked in the Antarctic on a number of tours and used to love telling us tales of his exploits - which were pretty true.
But from what I've heard, he has never, ever talked about Mt Erebus
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Planes:
For all you aircraft-heads, a visit to RAF Duxford is a must.
Not only do you see some great museum pieces and aircraft history, but you can walk thru the restoration hangers and watch them actually restoring some really famous aircraft. On one shelf they had box after box of genuine RR Merlin engines...
And the walkway and entrance to the USAF Museum section is both moving and shocking.
You’re right it’s awesome.
If you are ever in the area there’s a Rolls Royce dealer in Great Dunmow in Essex, P&A Wood. They are the only outfit in the UK authorised to repair Rolls Royces and Bentleys (mostly pre-German). They have some amazing old cars there and are happy to give you a tour of their Showroom and the car hospital out the back where they often have everything from old 60s Phantoms through to leather bodied racers from the 20s and back to the beginnings of RR and Bentley. Anyway their original owners were two brothers, one (Paul) who did the coachwork and sales and the other (Andrew) who did the mechanicals. And Andrew is (was? they’d have to be pretty elderly now) an aero engine nut. He had a fully restored Merlin on a stand in the main showroom and was working on a radial BMW out the back. They gleamed and looked like beautiful sculptures. I could have stayed there all day.
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@jegga My old neighbours were on that BA flight. There was a story published in Readers Digest in which they were quoted.
There’s a short book about it . It mentions one old duck was reading a book , heard the announcement and went back to reading the book because she didn’t want to die without finding out what happened in the end .
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An ex Tornado guy has brought all the bits from various sources, and set up the sim. It's a no visual sim, just the cockpits (was always night IMC
) used mostly for emergency training but some other stuff, too. He's added a VR headset to it, so you can have a play.
Nice bloke, written a good book too, for spotters rather than general public
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@Machpants said in Planes:
Sorta planes, one of my buddies now training in Dubai saw this
DDay era roundel and invasion stripes!
Needs sharks teeth like a p 40
http://warbirdsnews.com/wp-content/uploads/P40-Warhawk.jpg
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@Machpants said in Planes:
More appropriate to the roundel
I had a client who was trained to fly those in preparation for huge losses on d-day . That never happened though and he never got to actually fly in combat , still he got to fang around the sky in one of those beasts for a few months before he went home to his old job selling cars.
They were Richie McCaws grandads ride for the latter part of the war flying out of Tangmere. If anyone has a link to the clip of him blowing up the German train with rockets I’d be stoked if you posted it .