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James Sleeman wrote:
On Feb 5, 4:17*am, Ron Wanttaja wrote: http://www.aerofiles.com/stin-sm1b.jpg Thanks but, I don't think it was that one I was thinking of :-/ I know you also don't mean the pilot "Rosie" played by Brian Dennehy in the film "Never Cry Wolf" but there was a memorable scene in that movie where the engine of Rosie's plane starts to falter and... Rosie: Take the stick... Aaaaaaah! Tyler: What's wrong? Rosie: Boredom, Tyler. Boredom - that's what's wrong. And how do you beat boredom, Tyler?... Adventure. Adventure, Tyler. Tyler: Where are you going, Rosie? Rosie, what are you doing? I can't fly this thing! What do I do? ....and Rosie has grabbed a tool (a wrench?), opens the door of the plane in flight and steps onto the wing struts to fix the problem. Wish I knew what plane he flew in that scene - it was a real patchwork of ugly repairs. |
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Jim Logajan wrote in
: James Sleeman wrote: On Feb 5, 4:17*am, Ron Wanttaja wrote: http://www.aerofiles.com/stin-sm1b.jpg Thanks but, I don't think it was that one I was thinking of :-/ I know you also don't mean the pilot "Rosie" played by Brian Dennehy in the film "Never Cry Wolf" but there was a memorable scene in that movie where the engine of Rosie's plane starts to falter and... Rosie: Take the stick... Aaaaaaah! Tyler: What's wrong? Rosie: Boredom, Tyler. Boredom - that's what's wrong. And how do you beat boredom, Tyler?... Adventure. Adventure, Tyler. Tyler: Where are you going, Rosie? Rosie, what are you doing? I can't fly this thing! What do I do? ...and Rosie has grabbed a tool (a wrench?), opens the door of the plane in flight and steps onto the wing struts to fix the problem. Wish I knew what plane he flew in that scene - it was a real patchwork of ugly repairs. That was Never Cry wolf, wasn't it? I saw it a loooong time ago. I can't remember but I think it was a Twin Beech. For an even more gripping real life adventure like that, see if you can find an account of Kingsfor Smith's second crossing of the Tasmin Sea in the Southern Cross.. The lost one engine due to a busted prop and were losing oil out of another. The only thing to do was transfer oil from oned engine to the other manually by climbing out on the landing gear struts, ripping open the cowling with a screwdriver, draining the oil from ( the left, I think) into his leather briefcase, the only vessel capable of holding oil on board, then climbing out the other side and pouring it into the running right engine. The guy who did this is one of the fathers of long distance navigation. Can't remember his first name, but his last name was Taylor. Bertie |
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On Feb 5, 7:01 am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
That was Never Cry wolf, wasn't it? I saw it a loooong time ago. I can't remember but I think it was a Twin Beech. deHavilland Beaver, IIRC. For an even more gripping real life adventure like that, see if you can find an account of Kingsfor Smith's second crossing of the Tasmin Sea in the Southern Cross.. The lost one engine due to a busted prop and were losing oil out of another. The only thing to do was transfer oil from oned engine to the other manually by climbing out on the landing gear struts, ripping open the cowling with a screwdriver, draining the oil from ( the left, I think) into his leather briefcase, the only vessel capable of holding oil on board, then climbing out the other side and pouring it into the running right engine. The guy who did this is one of the fathers of long distance navigation. Can't remember his first name, but his last name was Taylor. I have that story in an anthology. Great reading. It was a tri-motor, and just before the flight they'd had one of the engines all apart. During the flight, one engine quit (the left, I think), then the right started losing oil. They couldn't maintain altitude on one, so they dumped the mail overboard and started the oil transfer. Made it to shore. The only engine that hadn't given any trouble was the nose engine: the one that had been apart all over the hangar floor. Dan |
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