Let's talk about flying...
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2007-06-07 9:20 AM |
Champion 5615 | Subject: Let's talk about flying... LHablas provided a list of good humor this morning in TAN, which led to some pretty funny/scary stories about flying in general. I wanted to see what other stories could be coaxed from the Speaking of planes...here's a bit of humor for today's edition of TAN: Remember, it takes a college degree to fly a plane but only a high After every flight, Qantas pilots fill out a form, called a "gripe P: Left inside main tire almost needs replacement. P: Test flight OK, except auto-land very rough. P: Something loose in cockpit. P: Autopilot in altitude-hold mode produces a 200 feet per minute P: Evidence of leak on right main landing gear. P: DME volume unbelievably loud. P: Friction locks cause throttle levers to stick. P: IFF inoperative. P: Suspected crack in windshield. P: Number 3 engine missing. P: Aircraft handles funny. P: Target radar hums. P: Mouse in cockpit. And the best one for last . P: Noise coming from under instrument panel. Sounds like a midget |
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2007-06-07 9:28 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Crystal Lake, IL | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... I spent a summer learning to skydive. I hung out there for 3 months, taking classes, hanging out with divers, learning, handling gear, packing chutes, the whole thing. Made 30 jumps myself. Worked ground crew for a 3-day Women's World Record Attempt Camp (largest formation). A short time later my wife and I flew to a friend's out of town wedding and I was fine the whole flight until we began to descend. It was the weirdest thing, but going down IN a plane started freaking me out. I felt like I was on the edge of a panic attack the whole way down. Weird. I had flown before and never had this problem. I was just too used to getting out at 14,000 ft. |
2007-06-07 9:29 AM in reply to: #833872 |
COURT JESTER 12230 ROCKFORD, IL | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... |
2007-06-07 9:30 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 34263 Chicago | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... My brother, the pilot, is afraid of heights. |
2007-06-07 9:36 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 6285 Beautiful Sonoma County | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... I have a friend who loves to send me Pilot Humor. Why? I don't know. He's not a pilot and neither am I. But it's still funny.
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2007-06-07 9:44 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. |
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2007-06-07 9:50 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 6742 The Green Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... |
2007-06-07 9:51 AM in reply to: #833917 |
Crystal Lake, IL | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... Rynamite - 2007-06-07 9:44 AM I already posted some of my stories in TAN. My instructor likes to play little "tricks" on me to test me. One day it was sooooo freaking windy that my little Cessna 150 wasn't having a very good time. It was all I could do just to attempt to keep it coordinated. I was sweating like crazy, and pretty nervous. A gust would throw me into a 60° bank in an instant. So I was already having a rough time... and my instructor reaches over and cuts my throttle. "Now what are you gonna do?" he says with an evil smile. That was the most terrible time flying I've had. I was trying to pitch to best glide speed and trim for it (impossible with that much wind), look for a field to land in, then figure out where to put my pattern legs, run through my checklists, and stay coordinated. I felt like I was playing dance dance revolution with the rudder pedals. With that much wind, and no engine, there's no room for error if you come up short on your landing. At about 300 ft AGL he finally gave me full throttle again and said "Good job". I'm sure it taught me a lot.... but it was pretty terrifying. I realize that this was a lesson and your response was probably the correct one. I wonder if he would have approved if you had restarted the engine and told him "do that again and I'll kick your ." That's a more realistic real world response if that's what he was trying to simulate. |
2007-06-07 9:53 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Master 2379 Alpharetta, GA | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... My father attended the USAFA and flew B-52's in 'Nam. My cousin's hubby is a retired Marine pilot (Harriers primarily) and their son is a USNA grad now flying F-18's off the USS Stennis, currently located in the Persian Gulf. I'd like to learn to fly before it's all over. My closest experience was the tandem jump I did ~8 years ago. It was a BLAST! Nothing like hopping out of a perfectly good airplane at 13,500' on a beautiful day. Awesome, awesome experience! |
2007-06-07 9:53 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 6742 The Green Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... |
2007-06-07 9:57 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Master 4101 Denver | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... I Want To Fly A Helicopter, Not Look At A Bunch Of Crazy Dials By Bob Kuhtz February 11, 2004 | Issue 40•06 Okay, so since time began, man has dreamed of flight, right? I know I have. I've always wanted to swoop between the mountains and hang suspended high above the earth and all that jazz. So naturally, I decided to try my hand at flying a helicopter. But here's the problem: Everyone makes such a damn big deal out of operating one. I want to fly a helicopter, not look at a bunch of crazy dials. You know what man has not dreamed of since time immemorial? Keeping an eye on his H-over-G indicator. Cavemen did not look to the hawks in the heavens and wonder about their approximate yaw angle, whatever the hell that is. Old Orville and Wilbur sure as hell didn't dream about zeroing the VOR needle for bearing correction—I'll tell you that for free. So why in hell is some instructor screaming at the top of his lungs for me to look down at the console when I'm in the middle of trying to avoid crashing into a barn?! Something tells me there's no barn-missing meter down there! A helicopter has about 40 different instruments. I suppose there's a chance that I'll be curious about a couple of them someday, but for now, they're just getting in the way of the view. In fact, all that blinky-blinky nonsense seems downright dangerous. In the Bell Jet Ranger, I had to sit on a couple of extra cushions, because otherwise, the airspeed indicator and the artificial horizon were right in front of my face! Isn't it more important for me to see the real horizon? For one thing, it'd help me figure out the damn helicopter speed—one thing they don't have a dial for! Half of these dials don't even mean anything. What's "ROTOR ANGLE/ATTACK" supposed to stand for? Am I really expected to know what the "COLLECTIVE DEG INCL" is at all times? You can tell me all the scary stories you want, but I doubt old Icarus fell to his death by ignoring his "MANIFOLD PRESS/TEMP IN/HG." All those dials just jump around like crazy, with no rhyme or reason. And if "LBS FUEL PAYLOAD L/R" is supposed to be some sort of gas gauge, it should read "E" to "F" instead of displaying a bunch of arbitrary numbers that go all jangle-dangle when I'm having fun with the stick. And when's the last time anyone ran out of gas, anyway? Everyone knows that there's always a few gallons left, even when the needle's pegged. Hey, if it would make everyone feel better, I guess I could choose one meter and look at it whenever there's nothing to do. We'll compromise: I choose a go-to meter; you bite your tongue. Having a hot-read meter wouldn't be so bad, anyway, so long as it didn't interfere with the serious business of flying around and swooping. But I wouldn't want to let it get in the way of just plain hovering. Because I don't want to be futzing with some meter when I'm trying to do the hovering-around-in-the-air thing I love. Come on, there's a lot to look at when you're flying. Things are spinning around and coming right at you, and the helicopter seems to have a mind of its own. And then there's the crazy- instructor, hollering and grabbing at things and telling you everything except how to deal with the telephone poles that keep popping up right in front of you. I can't wait to go solo. It's hard to soar with the eagles when you're scratching with the chickens! Seriously, how important could all those dials be? It seems like any problem would come with a lot of smoke, which I'd smell, or a loud explosion or shrieking metal sound, which I'd hear. Or by a bunch of landscape right in front of my field of vision. If any of that happened, it'd be too late anyway. Flying a copter isn't for the faint of heart. Those loud warning buzzers that start up 30 seconds into your flight will drive you crazy. Sometimes, you get so turned around, you can barely say which way's up. Given how hard it all is to start with, I really don't see why they have to go and complicate things more with a bunch of dials, buttons, lights, and levers. The next guy can futz with those things all he wants; I, for one, am ready to fly. |
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2007-06-07 9:58 AM in reply to: #833940 |
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2007-06-07 10:03 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 6742 The Green Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... |
2007-06-07 10:07 AM in reply to: #833944 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. |
2007-06-07 10:12 AM in reply to: #833936 |
Master 2379 Alpharetta, GA | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... |
2007-06-07 10:18 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. |
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2007-06-07 10:37 AM in reply to: #834008 |
Master 2379 Alpharetta, GA | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... Rynamite - 2007-06-07 11:18 AM Nice, drewb8. I was laughing. These stories are going to keep making me think of stories, so if you don't want to read them... just skip over to the next posts. I was in the pattern one time trying to remember everything I was supposed to do. My instructor was just sitting quietly not saying anything. I thought things were going pretty well until he calmly said "You might wan to slow down, you're gonna rip the wings right off this thing". My airspeed was in the yellow... getting close to the red." Those pesky gauges... Another time I was coming in for a landing... and for once my instructor wasn't barking orders in my ear. I was feeling pretty good about myself. The next 20 seconds of coversation went like this. Him "We're dead" me "uh, what?" him "four red, we're dead" (referring to the lights at the front of the runway that let you know if your altitude is where it should be. I hadn't learned that yet, I was coming in too low) me "What do you mean?" him "2 red, 2 white, you're alright. 4 red, you're dead" A few seconds of silence. him "I'd probably give'er some throttle and see if we can make it over those lights" me "right" (hit the throttle and and up landing about halfway down the runway) I like the economy your instructor uses during conversation... |
2007-06-07 10:40 AM in reply to: #834049 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. Edited by Rynamite 2007-06-07 10:42 AM |
2007-06-07 10:41 AM in reply to: #834056 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. Edited by Rynamite 2007-06-07 10:42 AM |
2007-06-07 11:03 AM in reply to: #833903 |
Extreme Veteran 832 Podunk County, MN | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... Madkat - I was stifling giggles throughout that whole list. Not good, as I'm actually working in an office setting today with people in nearby cubes! |
2007-06-07 11:14 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 34263 Chicago | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... Southwest Airlines uses a lot of those. My favorite: `If you haven't been in a car since 1947, this is a seatbelt.' `If exiting through the side door make sure the person ahead of you has taken the door off BEFORE knocking him down and stepping over him.' |
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2007-06-07 11:24 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Champion 6285 Beautiful Sonoma County | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... More from my friend:
San Jose Tower Noted: |
2007-06-07 11:49 AM in reply to: #833872 |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. |
2007-06-07 12:03 PM in reply to: #833872 |
Elite 3130 | Subject: RE: Let's talk about flying... My favorite announcement from United a long time ago: "In the extremely unlikely event of a water landing between Denver and Albuquerque..."
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