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#1
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Just saw this video on thatvideosite.com:
http://www.thatvideosite.com/view/1524.html That's a crazy landing. Is it real? If so, does anyone have any details, new reports, etc? Paul. |
#2
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There is no way that is real, unless it was some sort of test flight -
maybe an coupled approach test gone awry? First off, it doesn't look or sound like there were any nasty winds that would've caused that (you can hear people in the video, and not the sound of wind rushing over a microphone), and if there had been any PAX onboard, there would have been numerous injuries. If that had been a normal commercial flight, the pilot would have gone around as soon as the plane began sliding that bad. I also question the ability of the nosegear to take that sort of punishment. I fly all the time in commercial jets for business purposes, and the worst landing I've ever had was flying in to Las Vegas on a Southwest 737. Las Vegas is always bumpy, due to the desert heat (I suppose), but on this particular landing it suddenly felt as if the plane got smacked by the hand of God herself, felt like we suddenly dropped a good 30 feet straight down. Overhead bins were popping open, stuff like that. Regardless, we didn't land like that - as soon as that happened, the engines fired up, flaps started retracting and the pilot went around. Came on the intercom a few minutes later and said the winds had shifted suddenly, and they were going to land from the opposite direction. Any pilots want to comment? I'm just a sim-jockey, PP student with 0.5 hours in the cockpit ;-). Bryan == |
#3
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wrote in message
oups.com... There is no way that is real, unless it was some sort of test flight - maybe an coupled approach test gone awry? First off, it doesn't look or sound like there were any nasty winds that would've caused that (you can hear people in the video, and not the sound of wind rushing over a microphone), and if there had been any PAX onboard, there would have been numerous injuries. If that had been a normal commercial flight, the pilot would have gone around as soon as the plane began sliding that bad. I also question the ability of the nosegear to take that sort of punishment. I fly all the time in commercial jets for business purposes, and the worst landing I've ever had was flying in to Las Vegas on a Southwest 737. Las Vegas is always bumpy, due to the desert heat (I suppose), but on this particular landing it suddenly felt as if the plane got smacked by the hand of God herself, felt like we suddenly dropped a good 30 feet straight down. Overhead bins were popping open, stuff like that. Regardless, we didn't land like that - as soon as that happened, the engines fired up, flaps started retracting and the pilot went around. Came on the intercom a few minutes later and said the winds had shifted suddenly, and they were going to land from the opposite direction. Any pilots want to comment? I'm just a sim-jockey, PP student with 0.5 hours in the cockpit ;-). Bryan Here in Phoenix it's almost as sure a thing as death and taxes to "turn" Sky Harbor around each afternoon due to the wind shift. I would think Vegas would be similar. Your flight may have been on the very tail end of the early ops and had you arrived five minutes later, they probably would have already turned the airport and not had the wild ride. I've only had three true "white knuckle" experiences flying commercially and all three were on DC10s within about 20 miles of landing at Philadelphia International during the winter. Maybe the Delaware River has some weird effect on surface winds? Jay B |
#4
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This was a commerical. I believe it was from Norway. There is another
internet version that includes the sound byte afterwards. -Robert |
#5
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Yeah, not real! Sorry.
-- John Huthmaker PPL-SEL P-28-161 http://www.cogentnetworking.com "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... This was a commerical. I believe it was from Norway. There is another internet version that includes the sound byte afterwards. -Robert |
#7
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Do a frame by frame and it is clear that it is a real aircraft and not
a model... The playback has been speeded up to make the PIO look more dramatic... denny |
#8
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#9
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![]() The really interesting point is that video is hosted on a porn site... Now those of us who clicked on that url will be recorded as 'porn searchers' when google turns over their data to the feds and they will... Nice, eh? denny |
#10
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Denny wrote:
The really interesting point is that video is hosted on a porn site... Now those of us who clicked on that url will be recorded as 'porn searchers' when google turns over their data to the feds and they will... Nice, eh? denny Why would the feds care about people looking at porn, the most searched item on the internet? |
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