Danke, do something


Meh.


This is more like it:



Passengers on a Southwest Airlines flight got more than a small bottle of water when they boarded their plane.They received a Nintendo Switch system and a download code for the digital version of the "Super Mario Maker 2" game to enjoy as Flight 2246 traveled from Dallas to San Diego on Wednesday. Many of the passengers were headed to Comic Con in the California city.


More at: https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/passengers-southwest-flight-nintendo-switch-121225995.html
 
Man jumps on plane wing as it prepares for takeoff

https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/19/africa/nigeria-man-climbs-plane-intl/index.html

By Bukola Adebayo, CNN

Updated 2:14 PM ET, Fri July 19, 2019

Lagos, Nigeria (CNN)

A man who climbed onto the wing of a plane as it prepared for takeoff at the airport in Nigeria's Lagos city has been arrested, authorities said.

190719133557-man-climbs-plane-nigeria-intl-0719-exlarge-169.jpg


The man, who has not been identified, walked towards the aircraft on the runway and was spotted by the pilot, who slowed down and later turned off the engine as the man continued to wander around the aircraft, Azman Air said in a statement.

He then jumped onto a wing of the plane and tried to access the cabin, the airline said. The pilot radioed the tarmac to report the incident, according to the airline.

The incident happened Friday morning at the domestic wing of the Murtala Muhammed International airport in Lagos.

A video taken by a passenger on the aircraft shows the man moving around the wing of the plane as frightened passengers called on the crew to open the exit doors.

The man has been taken into custody and is being questioned, Nigeria's airport authority said in a statement.

The incident did not delay the flight that was headed to Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Niger Delta, however, passengers and crew members disembarked for another round of security checks, the airline said.
 
Port Harcourt
Man jumps on plane wing as it prepares for takeoff

https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/19/africa/nigeria-man-climbs-plane-intl/index.html

By Bukola Adebayo, CNN

Updated 2:14 PM ET, Fri July 19, 2019

Lagos, Nigeria (CNN)

A man who climbed onto the wing of a plane as it prepared for takeoff at the airport in Nigeria's Lagos city has been arrested, authorities said.

190719133557-man-climbs-plane-nigeria-intl-0719-exlarge-169.jpg


The man, who has not been identified, walked towards the aircraft on the runway and was spotted by the pilot, who slowed down and later turned off the engine as the man continued to wander around the aircraft, Azman Air said in a statement.

He then jumped onto a wing of the plane and tried to access the cabin, the airline said. The pilot radioed the tarmac to report the incident, according to the airline.

The incident happened Friday morning at the domestic wing of the Murtala Muhammed International airport in Lagos.

A video taken by a passenger on the aircraft shows the man moving around the wing of the plane as frightened passengers called on the crew to open the exit doors.

The man has been taken into custody and is being questioned, Nigeria's airport authority said in a statement.

The incident did not delay the flight that was headed to Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Niger Delta, however, passengers and crew members disembarked for another round of security checks, the airline said.


I didn’t know Jules was home trying to visit his relatives in Port Harcourt.
 
Man jumps on plane wing as it prepares for takeoff

https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/19/africa/nigeria-man-climbs-plane-intl/index.html

By Bukola Adebayo, CNN

Updated 2:14 PM ET, Fri July 19, 2019

Lagos, Nigeria (CNN)

A man who climbed onto the wing of a plane as it prepared for takeoff at the airport in Nigeria's Lagos city has been arrested, authorities said.

190719133557-man-climbs-plane-nigeria-intl-0719-exlarge-169.jpg


The man, who has not been identified, walked towards the aircraft on the runway and was spotted by the pilot, who slowed down and later turned off the engine as the man continued to wander around the aircraft, Azman Air said in a statement.

He then jumped onto a wing of the plane and tried to access the cabin, the airline said. The pilot radioed the tarmac to report the incident, according to the airline.

The incident happened Friday morning at the domestic wing of the Murtala Muhammed International airport in Lagos.

A video taken by a passenger on the aircraft shows the man moving around the wing of the plane as frightened passengers called on the crew to open the exit doors.

The man has been taken into custody and is being questioned, Nigeria's airport authority said in a statement.

The incident did not delay the flight that was headed to Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Niger Delta, however, passengers and crew members disembarked for another round of security checks, the airline said.

Nigerians , [MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION].
 
Boeing's unprecedented stumble with the 737 MAX 8, along with President Trump's trade war, have taken a toll on Boeing's commercial aerospace business, as its Q2 earnings report, released earlier this week, confirmed. And although Airbus, Boeing's greatest rival, is now the undisputed leader in building planes for commercial flight, but a scandal or setback could easily shake investors' confidence in Airbus, and with good reason: reports about potentially dangerous software glitches like this one shouldn't be ignored.
Screen%20Shot%202019-07-25%20at%205.25.16%20PM.png

The Register, a British tech news website, reports that some models of Airbus's A350 airliners, the company's 'workhorse' model, still need to be rebooted after exactly 149 hours of continuous use, even after the EU's aviation authority ordered Airbus to fix the glitch ASAP.
Now, the EU is issuing a reminder to pilots to make sure to turn their planes on and off again after 149 hours of power-on time, or risk the loss of critical systems in-flight.
In a mandatory airworthiness directive (AD) reissued earlier this week, EASA urged operators to turn their A350s off and on again to prevent "partial or total loss of some avionics systems or functions."
The revised AD, effective from tomorrow (26 July), exempts only those new A350-941s which have had modified software pre-loaded on the production line. For all other A350-941s, operators need to completely power the airliner down before it reaches 149 hours of continuous power-on time.
Of even greater concern, the regulator and Airbus weren't aware of the glitch until 2017, when the original AD was issued, as pilots started suffering unexplained losses of certain systems, putting them and their passengers and crew in a very risky situation.
And this glitch apparently went undetected for years. It was only after a few planes suffered in-flight systems failures that they started to look into it.
Concerningly, the original 2017 AD was brought about by "in-service events where a loss of communication occurred between some avionics systems and avionics network" (sic). The impact of the failures ranged from "redundancy loss" to "complete loss on a specific function hosted on common remote data concentrator and core processing input/output modules."
In layman's English, this means that prior to 2017, at least some A350s flying passengers were suffering unexplained failures of potentially flight-critical digital systems.
The glitch is similar to one of the problems that afflicted Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, as the Register explains.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019...-years-risked-failure-critical-flight-systems
 
[MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION]

Today they were doing a segment on CNBC about female Pilots. It was all about encouraging women to become Pilots, because there are not enough of them.

Seems to me that it's a profession that should be based upon merit and skill, not some kind of social engineering diversity goals.
 
@Danke

Today they were doing a segment on CNBC about female Pilots. It was all about encouraging women to become Pilots, because there are not enough of them.

Seems to me that it's a profession that should be based upon merit and skill, not some kind of social engineering diversity goals.

Are you trying to ruin Danke's dating life?
 
[MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION]

Today they were doing a segment on CNBC about female Pilots. It was all about encouraging women to become Pilots, because there are not enough of them.

Seems to me that it's a profession that should be based upon merit and skill, not some kind of social engineering diversity goals.

Pffft...when has that ever stopped them before?
 
United Airlines canceled a flight from Scotland to New York on Saturday after two pilots were arrested on suspicion of being drunk.
The police in Scotland were called to Glasgow Airport at 7:35 a.m. local time and took a 45-year-old man and a 61-year-old man into custody, the BBC reported.
They had failed a breathalyzer test, the BBC and Scotland's Herald newspaper reported.
The pair, who were not named, were due to pilot Flight 162 to Newark Liberty International Airport at 9 a.m.
A Glasgow Airport spokesman told The Herald that United canceled the flight shortly after the arrests and rerouted the passengers on other airlines.
014d7c1c692226389b59e50a76dcb688


More at: https://news.yahoo.com/united-airlines-flight-scotland-york-120156886.html
 
United Airlines canceled a flight from Scotland to New York on Saturday after two pilots were arrested on suspicion of being drunk.
The police in Scotland were called to Glasgow Airport at 7:35 a.m. local time and took a 45-year-old man and a 61-year-old man into custody, the BBC reported.
They had failed a breathalyzer test, the BBC and Scotland's Herald newspaper reported.
The pair, who were not named, were due to pilot Flight 162 to Newark Liberty International Airport at 9 a.m.
A Glasgow Airport spokesman told The Herald that United canceled the flight shortly after the arrests and rerouted the passengers on other airlines.
014d7c1c692226389b59e50a76dcb688


More at: https://news.yahoo.com/united-airlines-flight-scotland-york-120156886.html


All states have set .08% Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) as the legal limit for Driving Under the Influence. For commercial drivers, a BAC of .04% can result in a DUI conviction nationwide.

In Scotland, 0.02% gets you busted as a pilot.


Have a layover there, just don't have a drink, not one beer!

But bugger a child as a priest, that is still OK.

 
OK, I am in no way saying a Pilot should have any traces of alcohol in their system. But not that long ago, European pilots could have a glass of wine with their meals while flying.

I once flew to The Old Course in Scotland for some golf in a four ship of F-16s. I partied a bit that night and flew (solo) out early the next morning over the North Sea with no land in sight without much sleep...I survived and landed at military airbase just north of Copenhagen. The four of us were wondering around downtown looking for a beer (everything seemed to be closed) and heard some signing coming from a Karaoke bar...so we wondered in to have a drink. Still afternoon and I guess too early for regular bars to be open yet. Anyway, as we were quenching our thirst, we began to look around...the "guy" on stage was singing a Barry Manilow song...and there were no girls in the bar...I had to pee, so I asked my copatriots to come look for me in the restroom if I don't return in a few minutes. Anyway, we quickly finished our drinks and left the bar.

Where am I going with this...I don't know, just be careful out there.
 
OK, I am in no way saying a Pilot should have any traces of alcohol in their system. But not that long ago, European pilots could have a glass of wine with their meals while flying.

I once flew to The Old Course in Scotland for some golf in a four ship of F-16s. I partied a bit that night and flew (solo) out early the next morning over the North Sea with no land in sight without much sleep...I survived and landed at military airbase just north of Copenhagen. The four of us were wondering around downtown looking for a beer (everything seemed to be closed) and heard some signing coming from a Karaoke bar...so we wondered in to have a drink. Still afternoon and I guess too early for regular bars to be open yet. Anyway, as we were quenching our thirst, we began to look around...the "guy" on stage was singing a Barry Manilow song...and there were no girls in the bar...I had to pee, so I asked my copatriots to come look for me in the restroom if I don't return in a few minutes. Anyway, we quickly finished our drinks and left the bar.

Where am I going with this...I don't know, just be careful out there.

Especially in Scotland?
 
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