Danke, do something

My Pilot’s Nickname Is “Bottom Gun”

https://www.takimag.com/article/my-pilots-nickname-is-bottom-gun/

by Joe Bob Briggs

August 08, 2019

WILLIAMSBURG, Va.—I have this strong suspicion that the airlines are lying to us every time they say, “We have some weather ahead.”

“Some weather ahead” means…a rainstorm.

There’s no need to turn back.

Didn’t America invent the airplane? Haven’t we had 116 years to figure out how to fly through a rainstorm? Don’t they have guys at Boeing running weather algorithms on the aerodynamics of pushing through a Category 5 hurricane with military cargo planes because the fate of the Western world might depend on it?

I have a little app on my phone that tells me all the flights I’ve taken this year. Its purpose is to keep track of frequent flyer miles, but I’m gonna use it right now to establish my credentials for discussing the issue of Wimp Pilots or, what is more likely, Wimp Airline Executives.

I have taken 73 flights since January 1, 2019.

I would say about a third of those flights have been delayed, canceled (meaning I was supposed to take a previous flight), or diverted. Eighty percent of the time the reason is “a weather event.” The other 20 percent involve late-arriving aircraft, late-arriving crews—no doubt due to other “weather events” in other parts of the country—or mind-boggling excuses like the time the pilot said he had too much fuel in the right tank and too little fuel in his left tank (causing a 30-minute delay to “balance the tanks”), or the time the compartment holding the oxygen masks fell on my head. I had to refuse medical attention eight times because it was just a bump on the head, it didn’t break the skin, so I kept saying, “Naw, let’s go, you can make me happy by taking off”—but we couldn’t go because a maintenance guy had to come on board and pound the metal back up into the ceiling while listening to me say, “Duct tape, man, duct tape,” and then we had to wait even longer for some dude to fill out an official report on the Man Beaned By Overhead Compartment/Refused Medical Attention.

But here’s the thing. Whenever I do get to my destination, I say to my host/handler/driver, “Sorry I’m late, it was due to all the bad weather here.”

“What bad weather?”

The next day I search in vain for the headline-generating “weather event” that caused us to (a) sit on the tarmac, (b) return to the gate, (c) divert to another airport, (d) exit the plane so we can be bused to “a more relaxing space for waiting,” or (e) all of the above. Meanwhile I hunt for the photos of downed tree limbs and power lines, demolished homes and dead farm animals, the detritus of the previous day’s horrific massively dangerous mother of a superstorm that endangered aircraft all over a third of the country.

There was no weather event.

I know what you’re gonna say. “Maybe the bad weather was higher up in the stratosphere so that ground-dwellers didn’t notice it.” But I don’t think so because we’re cruising all over the place up there in the stratosphere, vectoring, circling, diverting, and eventually “landing in an effort to save fuel.” They always scare you with the “run out of fuel” scenario.

Last Thursday I was on a two-hour flight that lasted 10 hours. The plane was supposed to fly from Liberty International Airport in Newark to Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, where I would presumably connect to my little tree-topper flight to Richmond. By the way, those Last Stop Airlines that fly the final 200 miles of your journey, the ones that fly to Harrisburg and Fort Smith and Sioux Falls—they use Bombardier and Embraer planes that were originally designed as corporate jets. I gotta think those things are made for plowing through the weather no matter how crazy violent the wind bumps get.

Here’s the short version of my journey:

“We’re in a holding pattern because of weather in Charlotte.”

“We’re diverting to Knoxville, Tennessee, due to the weather.”

“We’re going to taxi to the end of the runway so we’ll be ready to go as soon as the weather clears in Charlotte.”

“We’re going to bring some stairs up to the front door so the passengers who want to leave can do so, but unfortunately we have to wait for a manager to drive to the airport.”

“Thank you to our wonderful flight attendants for going into the terminal and finding some additional food.”

(He was using the word “food” metaphorically. It was Doritos and Grandma’s Vanilla Crème Cookies. I don’t like to criticize the elderly, but Grandma can’t bake.)

“Please return to your seats and fasten your seat belts. Flight attendants, prepare for takeoff. We’re only 40 minutes away from Charlotte.”

“We have a ground hold from Charlotte. It will be another hour. We are returning to our parking spot.”

“Okay, we should be good to go in about 20 minutes now.”

“Charlotte has reinstituted the ground hold. It will be at least another 45 minutes.”

“We are going to open the door one more time for those passengers who have found alternative transportation.”

“All right, we are finally cleared for takeoff.”

“Most of the weather has cleared, so a few of you should be able to connect to late flights.”

“We’re going to hold here on the tarmac because there is no available gate for us.”

Meanwhile my little app on the phone is rebooking my connecting flight, over and over again—until the final plane to Richmond has been…canceled.

The clear skies notwithstanding, the last flight to Richmond was canceled.

This leads to the following conversation:

“You need to comp a hotel for me.”

“We don’t comp hotels when the cancellation is caused by weather.”

“The cancellation wasn’t caused by weather. It was announced after the weather had cleared.”

“I would imagine they need that plane for a morning flight out of here.”

“That’s still not a weather reason. That’s a logistical reason.”

“I’m sorry, sir. I’m not authorized…”

Followed by booking a hotel, Ubering to that hotel, being turned away because the confirmation was in error, Ubering to a second hotel, trying to track the progress of my luggage on the app (impossible), and—oh yeah—maneuvering the next morning through 3,000 Boy Scouts—yes, 3,000, that wasn’t a typo—on their way home from the World Jamboree in Mount Hope, West Virginia.

I ended up in Norfolk, Virginia. My luggage ended up in Richmond, Virginia. Through a very complicated series of maneuvers, we were reunited in Williamsburg, Virginia, where I pulled together a show.

All because of a “weather event.”

The late Herb Kelleher, founder of Southwest Airlines, whose pioneering use of the 737 was the subject of my obituary earlier this year, had a rule for his pilots: Wheels up on time, wheels down on time. You saw the turbulence coming and you flew through the turbulence. Of course, all the pilots he hired from the Navy and the Air Force would know that already because they had thousands of missions in horrendous weather with ridiculous landing situations. When the winds are 20 knots and the aircraft carrier is bobbing in 30-foot seas, you still keep the plane right-side up and get the fucking wheels down. They know how to do this.

Or they used to. It occurred to me during my 10 hours of dead time that I can’t remember the last time I flew through a really heavy thunderstorm, the kind that creates 30-foot drops and rattles the wings. I used to experience that all the time as various proficient pilots would get the wheels up and get the wheels down. When did they stop doing that? I would really like to know. Beat me up, twirl me around, give me that weightless feeling when the bottom drops out, just don’t cancel flights for thunderstorms that don’t even register on the USA Today weather map. Are our American aircraft—made by the same companies that supply our military fleet—really that flimsy? Is this why we sometimes end up flying on aircraft manufactured by Airbus? They make those in France.

France!

The Wright brothers are ashamed of us.

That article is worse than your POW postings. Asinine.

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We did something.

United Airlines ‘perv hid video camera in first class plane bathroom to spy on fellow passengers’

A UNITED Airlines passenger was arrested after he was apparently caught installing a hidden camera in the first class bathroom of the plane to film fellow travellers and flight crew.
The camera was discovered after a female passenger spotted a "device with a blue blinking light" near the bathroom cabinet and close to a door hinge.

2

A United Airlines passenger was arrested after spying on travellers with a hidden bathroom camera (stock image)Credit: AlamyThe Malaysian traveller named as Choon Ping Lee has since been accused of planting the camera on board United flight 646 from San Diego to Houston on May 5, according to KTRK.

After the woman spotted the blinking light, the woman finished using the bathroom and grabbed the item with a paper towel and gave it to a member of the flight crew.


After landing in Houston, crew members turned the device over to airline security officials, who quickly determined that it was a video recording device.
The United officials then handed it over to the FBI.

2

A United Airlines passenger spotted the camera and handed it to the crewCredit: EPAFederal agents were able to identify the clothing and accessories worn by the person who installed the creepy camera in the United bathroom, KHOU reported, and connected it to Choon Ping, who was seen in surveillance footage boarding the flight while wearing the same outfit.

United officials confirmed that Choon Ping, a native of Malaysia and employee of Halliburton, also sat in first class on United flight 646 on May 5.


After reviewing the camera, the FBI said that the device also contained illicit footage filmed in the bathroom of an Emirates flight.
Choon Ping has been charged with video voyeurism within the maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.

If convicted, he faces up to twelve months, a fine or both.

He is being held in a Houston-area detention facility ahead of a bond hearing, the Houston Chronicle reported.

A United spokesperson told Fox News: "The safety and security of our customers is our top priority.

"When our crew was alerted of this issue they acted quickly to notify the appropriate authorities.
"We will fully cooperate and support this investigation as it moves forward."

A Halliburton spokesperson added: "Halliburton is aware of the situation and is cooperating with the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s office in their investigation.
"We have a robust Code of Business Conduct and expect every employee to abide by the standards contained in the Code and all applicable laws."
 
It's being proposed as prostitution with the safety and convenience of an Uber. A historic airport in Berlin is the proposed site of "Verichtungsboxen" orpublicly available prostitution booths where sex workers can meet clients at what's considered a relatively safe and regulated venue.

The mayor of Berlin's central Mitte district is leading the initiative to turn the city's former Tempelhof airport, which was famous for being a Nazi airfield in WWII and afterwards site of the Berlin airlift during the Cold War, into a "drive-in" prostitution site.


According to CNN, the plans will include "drive-in booths, where customers can meet sex workers in their own vehicles."
Since going out of service in 2008, Tempelhof has since been turned into a sprawling public park and recreation area, but previously claimed the title of the world's oldest operating commercial airport.

Germany legalized street prostitution in the early 2000's, and especially over the last decade has seen the sex industry boom, with prostitutes enjoying "worker's rights" the same as if they were in transportation or the food industry. Berlin has long been known as having among the world's most liberal prostitution laws.

But similar to the situation the The Netherlands recently, there's been a slow public backlash given the simultaneous sex worker health crisis, influx of drugs, pimps, human trafficking, and rampant unreported abuse of women.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-08-13/historic-berlin-airport-could-get-drive-sex-booths
 
It's being proposed as prostitution with the safety and convenience of an Uber. A historic airport in Berlin is the proposed site of "Verichtungsboxen" orpublicly available prostitution booths where sex workers can meet clients at what's considered a relatively safe and regulated venue.

The mayor of Berlin's central Mitte district is leading the initiative to turn the city's former Tempelhof airport, which was famous for being a Nazi airfield in WWII and afterwards site of the Berlin airlift during the Cold War, into a "drive-in" prostitution site.


According to CNN, the plans will include "drive-in booths, where customers can meet sex workers in their own vehicles."
Since going out of service in 2008, Tempelhof has since been turned into a sprawling public park and recreation area, but previously claimed the title of the world's oldest operating commercial airport.

Germany legalized street prostitution in the early 2000's, and especially over the last decade has seen the sex industry boom, with prostitutes enjoying "worker's rights" the same as if they were in transportation or the food industry. Berlin has long been known as having among the world's most liberal prostitution laws.

But similar to the situation the The Netherlands recently, there's been a slow public backlash given the simultaneous sex worker health crisis, influx of drugs, pimps, human trafficking, and rampant unreported abuse of women.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-08-13/historic-berlin-airport-could-get-drive-sex-booths

If Danke does something about this, I hope he uses protection ...
 
Miracle of the cornfield! Hero pilot safely belly-lands a flaming Russian jet carrying 233 people on farmland after a flock of birds got sucked into both engines during take-off

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...arrying-233-people-crash-lands-cornfield.html

Ural Airlines A321 plane was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport Thursday when it hit a flock of birds
One of the engines caught fire while the other one spluttered and then stopped working, Russian media says
Hero pilot Damir Yusupov brought the plane down in a cornfield, leaving 23 people with just minor wounds
Russian media compared crash to Miracle on the Hudson, when jet successfully crash-landed in New York
By CHRIS PLEASANCE FOR MAILONLINE and WILL STEWART IN MOSCOW FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 03:49 EDT, 15 August 2019 | UPDATED: 12:08 EDT, 15 August 2019

A Russian pilot has been hailed as a hero after he successfully crash-landed a passenger plane in a cornfield today after birds were sucked into both engines, causing them to fail.

Ural Airlines Flight U1678 was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport at 6.10am local time bound for Simferopol, Crimea, when it suffered a double bird strike, causing one engine to burst into flames and the other to stop working.

Captain Damir Yusupov, 41, radioed the airport asking to make an emergency landing but was forced to ditch into a cornfield a mile away after realising he was not going to make it.

Yusupov brought the plane down with no power in either engine and with the landing gear retracted.

17305236-7359351-The_plane_was_taking_off_from_Moscow_s_Zhukovsky_airport_when_a_-a-55_1565859031290.jpg
 
Miracle of the cornfield! Hero pilot safely belly-lands a flaming Russian jet carrying 233 people on farmland after a flock of birds got sucked into both engines during take-off

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...arrying-233-people-crash-lands-cornfield.html

Ural Airlines A321 plane was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport Thursday when it hit a flock of birds
One of the engines caught fire while the other one spluttered and then stopped working, Russian media says
Hero pilot Damir Yusupov brought the plane down in a cornfield, leaving 23 people with just minor wounds
Russian media compared crash to Miracle on the Hudson, when jet successfully crash-landed in New York
By CHRIS PLEASANCE FOR MAILONLINE and WILL STEWART IN MOSCOW FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 03:49 EDT, 15 August 2019 | UPDATED: 12:08 EDT, 15 August 2019

A Russian pilot has been hailed as a hero after he successfully crash-landed a passenger plane in a cornfield today after birds were sucked into both engines, causing them to fail.

Ural Airlines Flight U1678 was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport at 6.10am local time bound for Simferopol, Crimea, when it suffered a double bird strike, causing one engine to burst into flames and the other to stop working.

Captain Damir Yusupov, 41, radioed the airport asking to make an emergency landing but was forced to ditch into a cornfield a mile away after realising he was not going to make it.

Yusupov brought the plane down with no power in either engine and with the landing gear retracted.

Impressive. Russkies seem to have a knack for this sort of thing ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUfcL1Muz6M
 
Miracle of the cornfield! Hero pilot safely belly-lands a flaming Russian jet carrying 233 people on farmland after a flock of birds got sucked into both engines during take-off

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...arrying-233-people-crash-lands-cornfield.html

Ural Airlines A321 plane was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport Thursday when it hit a flock of birds
One of the engines caught fire while the other one spluttered and then stopped working, Russian media says
Hero pilot Damir Yusupov brought the plane down in a cornfield, leaving 23 people with just minor wounds
Russian media compared crash to Miracle on the Hudson, when jet successfully crash-landed in New York
By CHRIS PLEASANCE FOR MAILONLINE and WILL STEWART IN MOSCOW FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 03:49 EDT, 15 August 2019 | UPDATED: 12:08 EDT, 15 August 2019

A Russian pilot has been hailed as a hero after he successfully crash-landed a passenger plane in a cornfield today after birds were sucked into both engines, causing them to fail.

Ural Airlines Flight U1678 was taking off from Moscow's Zhukovsky airport at 6.10am local time bound for Simferopol, Crimea, when it suffered a double bird strike, causing one engine to burst into flames and the other to stop working.

Captain Damir Yusupov, 41, radioed the airport asking to make an emergency landing but was forced to ditch into a cornfield a mile away after realising he was not going to make it.

Yusupov brought the plane down with no power in either engine and with the landing gear retracted.

17305236-7359351-The_plane_was_taking_off_from_Moscow_s_Zhukovsky_airport_when_a_-a-55_1565859031290.jpg

Is it not possible to mount some kind of screen in front of the engines to prevent birds from entering?
 
Is it not possible to mount some kind of screen in front of the engines to prevent birds from entering?

No.

IIRC what happens is that a screen in front of a high bypass turbofan causes "wave harmonics" in the incoming airflow that weakens and ends up breaking blades, with the catastrophic engine failure that follows.

Don't hold a gun to my head on that however: I know that is the case with water and propellers, but I could have it wrong...I just recall reading that somewhere.
 
No.

IIRC what happens is that a screen in front of a high bypass turbofan causes "wave harmonics" in the incoming airflow that weakens and ends up breaking blades, with the catastrophic engine failure that follows.

Don't hold a gun to my head on that however: I know that is the case with water and propellers, but I could have it wrong...I just recall reading that somewhere.

Can't you just put a "No birds allowed" sign in front of the engine?
 
Well, since it's the Russkies, and they have yet to lose their collective minds like we have, I suspect they'll just go and shoot the birds.
 
But similar to the situation the The Netherlands recently, there's been a slow public backlash given the simultaneous sex worker health crisis, influx of drugs, pimps, human trafficking, and rampant unreported abuse of women.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-08-13/historic-berlin-airport-could-get-drive-sex-booths

The reason they are finding they are having some of these problems is because they have become what is known as a "haven".

Las Vegas and Atlantic City have the same issues.

While we know that overall, women would be much safer if the prostitution industry is legal because they can access police resources and operate in safer venues, if you only legalize prostitution in one small area while it is still illegal everywhere else then that area attracts all of the worst elements of whatever that activity may be - drugs, gambling, prostitution, whatever.

So many people go to Vegas and Atlantic City to gamble, they end up having more issues than they otherwise would because that is the only place to legally gamble besides reservations.
 
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The reason they are finding they are having some of these problems is because they have become what is known as a "haven".

Las Vegas and Atlantic City have the same issues.

While we know that overall, women would be much safer if the prostitution industry is legal because they can access police resources and operate in safer venues, if you only legalize prostitution in one small area while it is still illegal everywhere else then that area attracts all of the worst elements of whatever that activity may be - drugs, gambling, prostitution, whatever.

So many people go to Vegas and Atlantic City to gamble, they end up having more issues than they otherwise would because that is the only place to legally gamble.

That sounds like the argument that blames the US for gun violence in Canada.
 
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