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#11
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C J Campbell writes:
Just so you know, Msxmanic does not know any more about flight than you do. He is not a pilot. Correction: Actually, Mxsmanic knows a great deal, _despite_ not being a pilot. This is particularly true with respect to large aircraft, since most of the pilots here are familiar only with the tiny aircraft they fly, whereas he has studied both small and large aircraft. More to the point: If you see an error in anything I've said, feel free to point it out. He is just some nut who hangs out here and pretends to know what he is talking about. He doesn't have to pretend. Nor is he so insecure that he must engage in personal attacks if someone else seems to know more. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#12
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A movement of a few centimetres at the wingtip is nothing to worry about.
Aircraft in flight may show various oscillating motions. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_dynamic_modes. During landing, crosswind gusts may sometimes require significant corrective input from the pilot. In some rare cases even a go-around is necessary if the wind blows hard. If there would be some technical problem, the pilots have a large set of checklists, diagnostic procedures and automatic diagnostic systems available which can pinpoint the problem and give instructions how to continue the flight. "megaMAX" wrote Hello everybody, I want to tell you what's happened during a Finnair flight from Helsinki to Milan, I'm not an expert of flight. During the entire flight, I noticed that the aircraft was continuosly rolling to right, and the pilot was correcting every 10-20 seconds the attitude. I noticed this, because I was looking to the right wing and the wing was continuosly going down of few centimeters, and after few seconds there was a slight correction. During landing, the aircraft was definitively rolling clockwise, in fact when we touched the ground, it was really yawing and sliding, and the pilot had to take a decise correction in order to align the aircraft to the track. I'm really not an expert, but I was wondering: - what could have been the problem? The right engine? - the pilot behaved correctly, completing the flight until destination and trying this landing? An intermediate step could have been better? - we have been in some danger, during the flight or at the moment of landing? - this episodes are made pubblic in some register, or the companies try to hide them as much as possible? Thanks! Max |
#13
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Soooo..
How come he (MX) was able to give a rather complete and correct answer to the poster's question? Care to give it a try? Dave On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 22:44:15 -0700, C J Campbell wrote: On 2007-03-13 17:43:50 -0700, megaMAX said: On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 01:18:33 +0100, Mxsmanic wrote: Most commercial flights are flown on autopilot for the vast majority of the trip. Thus you would have seen autopilot corrections, not pilot corrections. Just so you know, Msxmanic does not know any more about flight than you do. He is not a pilot. He is just some nut who hangs out here and pretends to know what he is talking about. |
#14
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![]() I was flying in an Air Jamaica jet many years ago and while cruising noticed large reddish flames from the exhaust of the Rolls Royce engine. How "normal" would that be? -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY"© "Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason." "Follow The Money" ;-P |
#15
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On Mar 14, 1:06 pm, megaMAX
wrote: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 23:45:10 GMT, B A R R Y wrote: Hello everybody, I want to tell you what's happened during a Finnair flight from Helsinki to Milan, I'm not an expert of flight. Obviously... And so what? I'm just asking since I don't know if it's normal or what... Middle ear infection? |
#16
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On Mar 15, 11:59 am, Dave wrote:
Soooo.. How come he (MX) was able to give a rather complete and correct answer to the poster's question? Care to give it a try? More than possible that the poster had a middle ear infection. Not having instruments and the training to use them while back among the self loading cargo how could any-one tell what the aircraft was doing? |
#17
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**THE-RFI-EMI-GUY** writes:
I was flying in an Air Jamaica jet many years ago and while cruising noticed large reddish flames from the exhaust of the Rolls Royce engine. How "normal" would that be? It depends on the exact conditions. Were you cruising? Climbing? Descending? What altitude? How did the engine sound? How long did the flames last, and what did they look like, exactly? Normally visible flames don't extend beyond the engine, although if you look directly into the exhaust of a jet engine you may well be able to see glowing internal parts. High-performance engines may glow externally as well. And of course afterburners can produce long flames that extend well beyond the engine. And so on. There is jet fuel burning inside a running jet engine all the time, so a visible flame isn't necessarily a cause for panic or concern. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#18
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george writes:
More than possible that the poster had a middle ear infection. I don't see the connection between a middle-ear infection and what he saw or believed. Not having instruments and the training to use them while back among the self loading cargo how could any-one tell what the aircraft was doing? One can estimate visually, but with limited visibility this is difficult. Even pilots cannot depend on visual cues alone, which is why they have instruments. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#19
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Even pilots cannot depend on visual cues alone, which is why they have
instruments. Yes, they can. But what do I know, I only fly tiny planes. -Kees |
#20
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Google Plex writes:
Under which of these conditions, exactly, would large reddish flames from the exhaust of a Rolls Royce engine be 'normal'? I don't know. Ask Rolls-Royce. Does Air Jamaica use afterburners? It's a question of the aircraft and engines, not the airline. Air France and British Airways have, in the past. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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