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Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-)



 
 
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  #11  
Old November 23rd 05, 02:04 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-)

Years ago, on a flight from Tenerife to Madrid I sat next to an old
lady - who just happened to be from the same town as me.
We talked for awhile, then the plane hit some CAT. It felt like the
bottom dropped out - a gasp went up from everyone at once.
The turbulence was soon behind us, and my seat mate was quiet
afterwards. Soon she got up and headed for the rear of the
cabin - and I didn't see her again. After we landed, someone told me
that she had gone to the rear door and tried to open it.

Later that same day I experienced the worst CAT I have ever seen - in a
747 crossing the Atlantic. Nobody tried to get out of that one.

David Johnson

  #13  
Old November 23rd 05, 05:17 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-)

Dale wrote:
In a pressurized airplane. Back in the '80s an intoxicated male
decided he wanted out of a Twin Otter. He managed to get the door
open but people inside kept him from getting out. I heard that he did
complain later and wanted compensation for the shoe he lost.


I remember when the following story happened back in 2000, where a woman
managed to exit a Twin Otter while in flight:

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIP...16/smn.13.html

"MILES O'BRIEN, CNN ANCHOR: That's something they don't teach you in
pilot school. Police in California still not sure whether it was an
accident or a suicide that led to the death of a woman who plunged to
her death from a plane.

We get more on the story from CNN's Rusty Dornin.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RUSTY DORNIN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): There was a routine
charter flight for five Hewlett-Packard employees who boarded this
DeHaviland twin Otter aircraft in Sacramento Wednesday afternoon. One
woman boarded last and sat in the rear of the plane.

It's a short flight to San Jose, a commuter flight. After takeoff, the
pilot noticed the emergency door light was on so the plane made an
unscheduled landing here, at Executive Airport, about 10 miles south of
Sacramento. The door was fixed, the plane took off again.

Then about three minutes after it resumed the flight, passengers heard a
whooshing sound.

ANDREW BLACK, FBI: The male passenger seated directly in front of the
female passenger turned around and observed that the female passenger
was now halfway outside of the plane. He made a very valiant effort and
took extraordinary measures in an attempt to rescue her. He lunged over
his own seat, grabbed a hold of her shoulder and arm while she was
partially outside of the plane and attempted to pull her back in.

Unfortunately, due to the wind, the motion of the plane and his position
in attempting to rescue her, he was unsuccessful.

DORNIN (on camera): Apparently it was so loud inside the aircraft the
distraught passengers said they couldn't explain to the pilot or
co-pilot what had happened. It was 45 minutes after the plane had landed
in San Jose that someone made the 911 call to report the woman missing.

(voice-over): Within hours of the Sacramento Sheriff's Department
launching aerial and ground searches, residents in a neighborhood three
miles south of the airport discovered the body of a woman in a community
garden. LT. SAM SOMERS, SACRAMENTO COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT: They had
found a female white who appeared to be dead and called the Sacramento
Police Department, at which point police units and also fire units were
dispatched to the area out here to check on the body. At which point
because of the similarities in the body that they located and that of
the person who was, who had departed the plane, we came out here as
follow-up.

DORNIN: The woman was a purchasing agent for Hewlett-Packard. No strange
behavior was noticed on the plane. No foul play is suspected. The
unanswered question -- did the woman commit suicide or did the door
malfunction?

Rusty Dornin, CNN, Sacramento, California."
  #14  
Old November 23rd 05, 08:15 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-)

On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 20:00:54 GMT, "Dudley Henriques"
wrote in
. net::

Don't really know what the answer is for this one


Perhaps the cabin attendants should limit the number of alcoholic
beverages passengers consume while airborne. Anything less is
irresponsible, and grounds for a reckless endangerment suit by the
rest of those on the flight.
  #15  
Old November 23rd 05, 08:18 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-)

On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 20:11:12 GMT, "Steve Foley"
wrote in
::


Here's the solution:

mms://68.178.174.134/BigMan/BatDay.WMV


Is that 'The Big Man' or the 'Pig Man'?
 




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