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procon

(15,805 posts)
29. That was a nail-biter!
Tue Oct 29, 2013, 07:52 PM
Oct 2013

I thought it was an except from a really good novel and I was looking for a link to go download the book to my Kindle.

Your friend has an untapped talent as a writer and I'd love to read more.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I enjoyed this. mgc1961 Oct 2013 #1
Thanks for sharing this, trof. Ptah Oct 2013 #2
Well that's nuthin'... ret5hd Oct 2013 #3
Wow! What a gripping story, my dear trof... CaliforniaPeggy Oct 2013 #4
Agreed mcp37 Oct 2013 #103
welcome to DU gopiscrap Oct 2013 #106
Wonderful story Blue_Tires Oct 2013 #5
I haven't been in a passenger plane since October of '70 madokie Oct 2013 #6
That sounds absolutely hair-raising. The Velveteen Ocelot Oct 2013 #7
Perfect micro of the macro. dchill Oct 2013 #8
Thanks. 1000words Oct 2013 #9
Great read. Liberal In Texas Oct 2013 #10
I am absolutely gobsmacked at the reception and recs here. trof Oct 2013 #11
Wow. It's great. I hung on every word and am still "on the edge of my seat" Thor_MN Oct 2013 #18
Same here! laundry_queen Oct 2013 #68
you're a long trusted and valued DUer, trof Skittles Oct 2013 #22
Would you like to go steady? trof Oct 2013 #27
I got my fill of pilots in USAF LOL Skittles Oct 2013 #44
Are you kidding? I'd read your stories for days Blue_Tires Oct 2013 #35
yup Skittles Oct 2013 #55
It was a visual feast with few words. Spitfire of ATJ Oct 2013 #67
It's not the length of the post... krispos42 Oct 2013 #99
What did he mean by being outside? hootinholler Oct 2013 #12
He was looking out the windshield for visual clues. trof Oct 2013 #17
Makes perfect sense hootinholler Oct 2013 #36
"which does that for you with a computer"... bvar22 Oct 2013 #113
Fantastic! LeftofObama Oct 2013 #13
Recommended. NYC_SKP Oct 2013 #14
I'll be darned. It does stand for "I Follow Roads". Scuba Oct 2013 #15
Ha! IFR trof Oct 2013 #20
I'm writing some code for the FAA hootinholler Oct 2013 #40
Cool. n/t JimDandy Oct 2013 #96
He couldn' t do that today, of course, JimDandy Oct 2013 #97
Absolutely worth the read! Thanks for posting... (nt) petronius Oct 2013 #16
LOVE this Skittles Oct 2013 #19
Good read mikebl Oct 2013 #21
Gann was the master. trof Oct 2013 #25
I knew Ernie Gann slightly but PearliePoo2 Oct 2013 #101
Didn't kmow about Gann's wife. Thanks. trof Oct 2013 #124
Great Story! I learned to fly out of Stapleton in the early 70s' MindPilot Oct 2013 #23
AA Pilot in family...I loved this read...and will pass along KoKo Oct 2013 #24
Even though a bit of it was too technical for me rock Oct 2013 #26
excellent article. littlewolf Oct 2013 #28
That was a nail-biter! procon Oct 2013 #29
I have about 100 hours in a C172 and have tried flying commercial jets on flight sim and..... yourout Oct 2013 #30
Very, very true nadinbrzezinski Oct 2013 #31
Good read, thank you. I knew Stapleton well. n/t Egalitarian Thug Oct 2013 #32
Very much worth the read, Trof. dixiegrrrrl Oct 2013 #33
That's a pretty freaking cool story! hatrack Oct 2013 #34
Thanks, trof. enlightenment Oct 2013 #37
What an exccellent post malaise Oct 2013 #38
Pilot Here - Good Read cantbeserious Oct 2013 #39
excellent icarusxat Oct 2013 #41
I really appreciate you sharing this. n/t Wilms Oct 2013 #42
Of course... Aviation Pro Oct 2013 #43
But when all else fails, that pilot better know what to do.. mountain grammy Oct 2013 #49
I had a chance to meet Al Haynes... Aviation Pro Oct 2013 #125
Great story.. printed it for my retired aircraft mechanic husband mountain grammy Oct 2013 #45
fanfuckingtastic pasto76 Oct 2013 #46
One of the best reads in a while here. longship Oct 2013 #47
Best story I've ever read on DU. Thanks for this ! nt steve2470 Oct 2013 #48
I think in my lifetime we might see "drone planes." MADem Oct 2013 #50
Under good conditions Stapleton was a difficult field. HubertHeaver Oct 2013 #51
thanks for that Locrian Oct 2013 #52
K and R panader0 Oct 2013 #53
Great read. n/t louslobbs Oct 2013 #54
Outstanding. westerebus Oct 2013 #56
A subject near and dear to my heart! Thanks, trof! DemoTex Oct 2013 #57
Wow. Great story. And a hell of a lesson in that. K&R n/t jtuck004 Oct 2013 #58
I loved it. Great read. BlueJazz Oct 2013 #59
Didn't they pay the pilots a decent wage in those days? YBR31 Oct 2013 #60
Wow, what a great story. NealK Oct 2013 #61
awesome alato Oct 2013 #62
hats off to a real professional heaven05 Oct 2013 #63
What my husband, who's a pilot, has told me is that "any landing you can walk away from calimary Oct 2013 #64
Flying a jet liner with needle, ball and airspeed... zeemike Oct 2013 #65
I hope DemoTex sees this. WilliamPitt Oct 2013 #66
+1 bullwinkle428 Oct 2013 #71
He did. See post #57. n/t CaliforniaPeggy Oct 2013 #82
Great story. mn9driver Oct 2013 #69
k+r ...nt TeeYiYi Oct 2013 #70
Taking flight lessons now. riderinthestorm Oct 2013 #72
Get yourself a copy of "Stick and Rudder". by Wolfgang Langewiesche. AdHocSolver Oct 2013 #88
Many thanks! I'm 15 hours in and loving it! nt riderinthestorm Oct 2013 #100
Wow catchnrelease Oct 2013 #73
Heart-Pounding! Great writing - Thanks, trof NBachers Oct 2013 #74
Very cool. blackspade Oct 2013 #75
Excellent. Very nice. Thanks for posting. n/t A HERETIC I AM Oct 2013 #76
K&R Change has come Oct 2013 #77
I love reading this stuff as I am a pilot and my dad flew with united for 30yrs litlbilly Oct 2013 #78
25 years in Airline bus, I fearlessly flew with Ozark, TWA and United, but no more.... joanbarnes Oct 2013 #79
You flew Ozark? HubertHeaver Oct 2013 #87
That was too cool! Gidney N Cloyd Oct 2013 #80
A nice yarn, but caraher Oct 2013 #81
Nice research and follow up, thanks! Nt Logical Oct 2013 #84
sorry some of my details were wrong, it was in 72 so i forgot a few things, here it is litlbilly Oct 2013 #93
As I recall litlbilly Oct 2013 #95
Always appreciate a good read hueymahl Oct 2013 #107
Well, air travel is safer than ever, so something good is happening. Nt Logical Oct 2013 #83
I am always amazed at how much trust people put in electronics and computer software. AdHocSolver Oct 2013 #85
Great story - kept me locked in to the end Not Sure Oct 2013 #86
K&R! n/t Lugnut Oct 2013 #89
I think we studied this in flight attendant training! flygal Oct 2013 #90
wow. hung on every word. holding my breath. finally ... I could exhale. whew. made it. Tuesday Afternoon Oct 2013 #91
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Oct 2013 #92
Wonderful post! Thanks! (nt) Recursion Oct 2013 #94
The key to learning well is over-learning. Excellent lesson well told. Thanks. nt Bernardo de La Paz Oct 2013 #98
Definitely worth the read! alcibiades_mystery Oct 2013 #102
k&r for exposure. n/t Laelth Oct 2013 #104
That was a great read, trof! Thank you for sharing. CrispyQ Oct 2013 #105
Great post! ScreamingMeemie Oct 2013 #108
Thanks.. ewagner Oct 2013 #109
Wonderful story arikara Oct 2013 #110
should computer programmers know how to use punchcards, too? jon10 Oct 2013 #111
not a valid comparison. bvar22 Oct 2013 #114
very valid, there were days when mech altimeters were "gadgets" uponit7771 Oct 2013 #115
That doesn't make any sense. bvar22 Oct 2013 #116
I believe he is saying that even a mechanical altimeter isn't needed to fly a plane whopis01 Oct 2013 #130
"Denver weather was 300 feet with visibility one-half mile in heavy snow" bvar22 Oct 2013 #134
Who is saying you wouldn't? n/t whopis01 Oct 2013 #135
So people didn't fly BEFORE altimeters? Yes, they did... they prolly thought the altimeter was a fan uponit7771 Oct 2013 #137
YES!!!... Brilliant!!! ...You are really "showing your stuff" in THIS thread!!! bvar22 Oct 2013 #140
No one said it was useless just like stick feedback isn't useless today... same thing no? tia uponit7771 Nov 2013 #141
UM...they guy who said pilotage was like computer punch cards bvar22 Nov 2013 #142
+1 uponit7771 Oct 2013 #136
Wrong analogy. Should be "should computer programmers know binary?" Xithras Oct 2013 #122
Indeed they should. onyourleft Oct 2013 #139
This story was so good, even a few lurking Freeps probably liked it! Patiod Oct 2013 #112
K&R SlipperySlope Oct 2013 #118
K&R excellent read passiveporcupine Oct 2013 #117
I loved reading this! I worked for a Denver-based airline for Turn CO Blue Oct 2013 #119
From an old air traffic controller billh58 Oct 2013 #120
K & R fadedrose Oct 2013 #121
I wish my Dad (a career Naval Aviator) was alive to read this. He could describe a "night trap" ... 11 Bravo Oct 2013 #123
As I read through the OP I think about new car commercials - truedelphi Oct 2013 #126
Just WOW! Did this story ever have legs. trof Oct 2013 #127
Very cool cvoogt Oct 2013 #128
Way overstates the role of autopilot! HERVEPA Oct 2013 #129
I made a zero-zero autoland at Heathrow in an L-1011 back in the day. trof Oct 2013 #131
Loved that! Grew up in Denver, flew in and out of Stapleton many times! likesmountains 52 Oct 2013 #132
Fascinating. (n/t) spin Oct 2013 #133
I read this... onyourleft Oct 2013 #138
Professionalism is not outmoded in an age of technology (KnR) Agony Nov 2013 #143
Thanks so much curlyred Nov 2013 #144
thank you KentuckyWoman Nov 2013 #145
The Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 brought me back to this ... SomeGuyInEagan Mar 2014 #146
Wow! Talk about resurected. trof Mar 2014 #147
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