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xxx
March 29th 08, 05:25 PM
interesting article:

http://www.mensvogue.com/business/blackbook/articles/2008/03/freight_dogs

Bob Gardner
March 30th 08, 02:42 AM
Having been one, I consider freight dogs those poor souls who fly general
aviation planes carrying small boxes, not cargo-carrying jets. DC-3s, Twin
Beeches, 310s, Chieftans, et al...that's the essence of freight-doggery.

Bob Gardner

"xxx" > wrote in message
...
> interesting article:
>
> http://www.mensvogue.com/business/blackbook/articles/2008/03/freight_dogs

Dan Luke[_2_]
March 30th 08, 04:13 AM
"Bob Gardner" wrote:

> Having been one, I consider freight dogs those poor souls who fly general
> aviation planes carrying small boxes, not cargo-carrying jets. DC-3s, Twin
> Beeches, 310s, Chieftans, et al...that's the essence of freight-doggery.

Agree.

I see these guys in their jeans and tennis shoes loading war-weary Barons and
210s at BFM and taking off into weather I wouldn't try on a bet.

Those are some no-**** airmen, baby, and they have my respect.

--
Dan
T-182T at BFM

Bob Gardner
March 30th 08, 08:28 PM
I worked for an outfit that had two Chieftans and a P-Navajo...the Navajo
was used when the Chieftans were in for maintenance. One dark night, taking
off from Oakland in the P-Navajo with the plane so packed that I had to
crawl over the packages to get to the cockpit (the truck driver closed the
door for me), the left engine stumbled at about 400 feet entering the clouds
but cleared up as soon as I retarded the left throttle. I thanked the
controller for his "cleared to land any runway" transmission and continued
to Seattle. After landing, I had to call ground control to have them send
someone over to open the door. The Navajo had a fuel controller problem and
never flew again (for that company). After thinking about what I would have
done had there been a fire or similar mishap, I quit.

Bob Gardner

"Dan Luke" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Bob Gardner" wrote:
>
>> Having been one, I consider freight dogs those poor souls who fly general
>> aviation planes carrying small boxes, not cargo-carrying jets. DC-3s,
>> Twin Beeches, 310s, Chieftans, et al...that's the essence of
>> freight-doggery.
>
> Agree.
>
> I see these guys in their jeans and tennis shoes loading war-weary Barons
> and 210s at BFM and taking off into weather I wouldn't try on a bet.
>
> Those are some no-**** airmen, baby, and they have my respect.
>
> --
> Dan
> T-182T at BFM
>

Blueskies
March 30th 08, 11:22 PM
"Bob Gardner" > wrote in message . ..
>I worked for an outfit that had two Chieftans and a P-Navajo...the Navajo
> was used when the Chieftans were in for maintenance. One dark night, taking
> off from Oakland in the P-Navajo with the plane so packed that I had to
> crawl over the packages to get to the cockpit (the truck driver closed the
> door for me), the left engine stumbled at about 400 feet entering the clouds
> but cleared up as soon as I retarded the left throttle. I thanked the
> controller for his "cleared to land any runway" transmission and continued
> to Seattle. After landing, I had to call ground control to have them send
> someone over to open the door. The Navajo had a fuel controller problem and
> never flew again (for that company). After thinking about what I would have
> done had there been a fire or similar mishap, I quit.
>
> Bob Gardner
>

That is the reason there is a STC for a door up front for those 'freighters'.

Blueskies
March 30th 08, 11:22 PM
"xxx" > wrote in message ...
> interesting article:
>
> http://www.mensvogue.com/business/blackbook/articles/2008/03/freight_dogs


;-)

Mortimer Schnerd, RN[_2_]
March 31st 08, 03:06 AM
Bob Gardner wrote:
> Having been one, I consider freight dogs those poor souls who fly general
> aviation planes carrying small boxes, not cargo-carrying jets. DC-3s, Twin
> Beeches, 310s, Chieftans, et al...that's the essence of freight-doggery.


I also was one, and would concur. If you made it to flying heavy anything, you
ain't a dog any more. You've made it to the big time.



--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com

Bertie the Bunyip[_24_]
March 31st 08, 03:12 AM
"Mortimer Schnerd, RN" <mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com> wrote in
:

> Bob Gardner wrote:
>> Having been one, I consider freight dogs those poor souls who fly
>> general aviation planes carrying small boxes, not cargo-carrying
>> jets. DC-3s, Twin Beeches, 310s, Chieftans, et al...that's the
>> essence of freight-doggery.
>
>
> I also was one, and would concur. If you made it to flying heavy
> anything, you ain't a dog any more. You've made it to the big time.
>
>
>

Enh. They';re all airplanes. I'd be pretty much just as happy flying a
twin beech again for the same dough. A lot nore deaf, but happy.




Bertie

Dan[_10_]
March 31st 08, 04:52 PM
On Mar 30, 10:21 am, John Smith > wrote:

>
> NPR did an interview along this line, Saturday, 29 March. Might have
> been the people cited in the article.
>
> http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89209781

Susan Stanberg is just sooooooooo annoying......

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