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In reply to the discussion: This is what airline pilots USED to know. [View all]procon
(15,805 posts)29. That was a nail-biter!
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.
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I have about 100 hours in a C172 and have tried flying commercial jets on flight sim and.....
yourout
Oct 2013
#30
What my husband, who's a pilot, has told me is that "any landing you can walk away from
calimary
Oct 2013
#64
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
sorry some of my details were wrong, it was in 72 so i forgot a few things, here it is
litlbilly
Oct 2013
#93
I am always amazed at how much trust people put in electronics and computer software.
AdHocSolver
Oct 2013
#85
wow. hung on every word. holding my breath. finally ... I could exhale. whew. made it.
Tuesday Afternoon
Oct 2013
#91
The key to learning well is over-learning. Excellent lesson well told. Thanks. nt
Bernardo de La Paz
Oct 2013
#98
I believe he is saying that even a mechanical altimeter isn't needed to fly a plane
whopis01
Oct 2013
#130
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
I wish my Dad (a career Naval Aviator) was alive to read this. He could describe a "night trap" ...
11 Bravo
Oct 2013
#123
Loved that! Grew up in Denver, flew in and out of Stapleton many times!
likesmountains 52
Oct 2013
#132