I think flying might be the only thing that bites harder than two wheelers.
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The Best Pilot In The History Of Mankind
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Gimli glider
Anyone ever see the movie made about an actual event happened in the early 80s in Canada....I think it was a 737 that was involved please correct me if wrong anyway the plane was not given enough fuel for the flight to Calgary and glided for 300 miles after running out of fuel to land on an abandoned airbase outside of Winnipeg, Manitoba, the crew had no hydraulics no power, the plane landed roughly with some damage no injuries to anyone and the plane was repaired after the event and was just retired from service this year......I guess they had one hell of a time with the controls trying to line it up with the runway no hydraulics and all..
BruceBruce Doucette
Phone #1 902 827 3217
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Man and Machine
Originally posted by SFerinTEXAS View PostSome great stories.Brought to mind a Youtube I watched recently about an F15 that lost a wing. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kk1KBQ96_DI
Superior pilot, superior aircraft.
The F-15 is undefeated in air to air combat. Brought to you in part by the late great genius/crazy man: John "40 second" Boyd.
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Doug Mitchell
82 XJ1100 sold
2006 Suzuki C90 SE 1500 CC Cruiser sold
2007 Stratoliner 1900 sold
1999 Honda Valkyrie interstate
47 years riding and still learning, does that make me a slow learner?
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This was really good flying the RC Model then...LOL
Thanks for the F-15 video. When I worked at Flight Safety I got to fly all the Multi Million Dollar Simulators. Worlds best video game.
The G forces are great and the sound and video are unsurpassed.
I've rolled a 737 and flew a British Shorts through a hanger. If you ever get a chance to fly a real Sim jump on it."We are often so caught up in our destination that we forget to appreciate the journey." "
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If you like this stuff read Chuck Yeager's autobiography, some pretty cool stuff in it.Current Rides: '82 XJ w/Jardine 4-1's, GIVI flyscreen, '97 Triumph Trophy 1200
Former Rides: '71 CB350, '78 400 Hawk, '75 CB550/4;
while in Japan: '86 KLR250, '86 VT250Z, '86 XL600R, '82 CB450(Hawk II), '96 750 Nighthawk, '96 BMW F650
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Wow, makes me feel like small-time. My biggest stick time was in a Grumman HU-16 Albatross, but the biggest in-flight emergency was when my mother and I were flying a rented Cessna 172 and we lost the engine. Good thing we had just flown over a nearby airport, and a buddy of ours was there in his Beechcraft so we got a nice ride home. Still scared the daylights out of me though, I was only 8 at the time!
But I still fly to this day, and I'm planning to start skydiving this spring.1981 XS1100S (former)
2006 Suzuki Katana 600 "BLKMGE"
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"Scary" was the following ten to fifteen minutes that a friend of mine with the USBP let me take the controls of his helicopter over the Florida Keys. I drove patrol boats for US Customs back then.
The final straw was when he asked if I saw the pelican coming towards us. I told him I had had enough fun and he could take back over. Too much work for me. Think I'll stick to the boats.
Doncurrently own;
1980 Yamaha XS1100 SG
2009 Yamaha Star Raider
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I wish I had some photos or film footage to share with you all when some of our USCS UH-60A Black Hawks would pratically land on suspect boats we were chasing. On the pursuit boat, I was a little busy at the time. Dark, sometimes raining, windy, didn't matter...these pilots were nuts.
How'd ya like a 50', 17,000 lbs (with fuel tank in cabin) aircraft hovering only feet above your boat as you are fleeing at 60+ knots? That with maybe about 150 mph rotor wash will give you something to think about.
Doncurrently own;
1980 Yamaha XS1100 SG
2009 Yamaha Star Raider
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For sure
I'm sure in those kind of situations, nobody has the time to take movies....!!!You can't stay young forever, but you can be immature for the rest of your life...
'78E "Pathfinder" Show bike...
Lovingly restored by Dave Delzell
Drilled airbox
Tkat fork brace
Hardly mufflers
late model carbs
Newer style fuses
Oil pressure guage
Custom security system
Stainless braid brake lines
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767
Hi Bruce,
the Gimli Glider was a Boeing 767. It was the first Air Canada plane to have a video game dash instead of real instruments, be calibrated in metric units and to fly without a flight engineer. When the pilot went to secondary methods to calculate how much fuel he'd need for the planned flight the conversion factors in the manual gave an answer in kilos but he thought it was in lbs so he ended up with only half the required fuel. So yes, he was awarded a prize for his incredible skills in dead-sticking his plane to a safe landing but he did break the pilot's first rule:- "A good pilot lets his careful planning obviate the need to display his incredible skill" As even I know (after many years riding with no fuel gauge in my bike) the ONLY safe thing to do when your fuel gauge is out is to top off the tanks, not rely on a pocket calculator.Fred Hill, S'toon
XS11SG with Spirit of America sidecar
"The Flying Pumpkin"
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Originally posted by fredintoon View PostHi Bruce,
the Gimli Glider was a Boeing 767. It was the first Air Canada plane to have a video game dash instead of real instruments, be calibrated in metric units and to fly without a flight engineer. When the pilot went to secondary methods to calculate how much fuel he'd need for the planned flight the conversion factors in the manual gave an answer in kilos but he thought it was in lbs so he ended up with only half the required fuel. So yes, he was awarded a prize for his incredible skills in dead-sticking his plane to a safe landing but he did break the pilot's first rule:- "A good pilot lets his careful planning obviate the need to display his incredible skill" As even I know (after many years riding with no fuel gauge in my bike) the ONLY safe thing to do when your fuel gauge is out is to top off the tanks, not rely on a pocket calculator.Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.
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Originally posted by fredintoon View PostHi Bruce,
the Gimli Glider was a Boeing 767. It was the first Air Canada plane to have a video game dash instead of real instruments, be calibrated in metric units and to fly without a flight engineer. When the pilot went to secondary methods to calculate how much fuel he'd need for the planned flight the conversion factors in the manual gave an answer in kilos but he thought it was in lbs so he ended up with only half the required fuel. So yes, he was awarded a prize for his incredible skills in dead-sticking his plane to a safe landing but he did break the pilot's first rule:- "A good pilot lets his careful planning obviate the need to display his incredible skill" As even I know (after many years riding with no fuel gauge in my bike) the ONLY safe thing to do when your fuel gauge is out is to top off the tanks, not rely on a pocket calculator.1981 XS1100S (former)
2006 Suzuki Katana 600 "BLKMGE"
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