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onetrack

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Everything posted by onetrack

  1. According to my info, all Spitfires had undercarriage lowered indicators, early ones were mechanical, later ones used lights. Why didn't this pilot have a checklist for gear down indication? Especially important with such a rare and valuable machine.
  2. .....all the lessons were in the Queens English and Xi was still having trouble understanding it. Plus, he got laughed at a lot, because of his Chinglish style of writing and speaking. However, Xi persisted at the UWA, and came back to China with a Masters in Chinglish - thus the reason all our Chinese products come with instructions in Chinglish today. Furthermore, Xi learnt many good Aussie swear words while at UWA (as well as learning how to drink like an Aussie - Oi, Oi, Oi!) The problems started when Xi met up with foreign leaders and started using all the lessons he'd learnt at the drinking sessions at Steves in Nedlands. So, when Xi met up with Donald Trump, he slapped Donny on the back and said, "How the hell are ya, ya fat bastard! You look like ya slept with the.....................
  3. The blokes who've been there, tell me, every field S of Mexico has a DC-3 parked in it! But most of them will never fly again, though. They nearly all got parked in unplanned landings, so I'm told.
  4. The weather conditions are looking a bit vicious between Paynes Find and Cue, Moneybox. You're in for a rough time, I'd reckon.
  5. ..... a bunch of One Nation voters, sand in evelything, scleaming constant wind, and unberievable heat! To add to that, we already own most of W.A.'s ploperty anyway, own half the mines there, have got the EV car market stitched up in W.A. - so it would just be confusing trying to figure out what we alleady own, and what the Ozzies own! Besides, they got no subs, they still talking about getting some flom Amelica in 30 years time, and they got no fuel, so I not waste time with pushover regions! But if we talking Taiwan, that place is diffellent story! Taiwan is thorny ploblem! That's why it important to keep Orange Hair One occupied in Middle East, so it makes easier our move into..........
  6. The pilots flew low and depressurised the 727 for D.B. Cooper! He even let himself out, via the rear stairs!
  7. Storing fuel gives you a strong base from which to counter cyclical price variations, threats to supply disruption, major disasters, and being held to ransom as we currently are. China has stockpiled vast tonnages of iron ore, 163M tonnes at last report. It's not called a "strategic reserve" for nothing. They also have large strategic reserves of many other minerals. And guess what? They have a massive strategic stockpile of oil, too - the worlds largest, at around 1.4M barrels. Who's laughing now? Watch out for China invading Taiwan, now that the Tangerine Toddler is fully tied up with playing Middle Eastern War Games with all his toys.
  8. It's 1980-81 all over again - with the double whammy of gas supplies being curtailed as well. Most of Asia runs on natural gas, with Qatar being the worlds largest supplier of NG. When oil prices go ballistic, gas prices follow. The next thing you can look forward to, is "there is no fuel - so supplies will be rationed to critical services". This almost happened in 1980-81, we were told we soon wouldn't be able to get any fuel. It's all fear factor, nothing like generating fear to send prices ballistic, and to create long lines at servos. In 1980-81, all heavy users invested in massive levels of fuel storage. Some of my farmer clients purchased 50,000 litre fuel tanks. The biggest concern is that an oil price through the roof generates a substantial increase in inflation. Watch for tyre prices going up 25-30% soon, because oil is a major constituent of tyres. Synthetic clothing, the same. Even Chinese-produced products will soon start becoming much more expensive, simply because of oil and gas prices. I went to buy a packet of my favourite bacon yesterday, the price has gone from $7 to $8 in just the last week. All groceries will soon follow the same trend. What we could do, is start up an AI-controlled load movement system, ensuring no trucks run empty. I see roadtrains by the hundreds, still running the highways, empty. What a waste of fuel that is. There is absolutely nothing any Australian politician can do about keeping a lid on fuel prices, or increasing availability. Their lack of vision and planning over decades, even to the extent of having low levels of fuel reserves, is showing up now.
  9. Moneybox, you'd better invest in some decent tiedowns if you don't get home early, the forecast surface winds from that cyclone are going to be 90-100kmh, throughout the wheatbelt. See the Saturday forecast. https://reg.bom.gov.au/wa/forecasts/northam.shtml
  10. New pilots keep coming along on a constant basis, and they keep making the same old mistakes!
  11. And even more fun - you can jump out the back of one with a stolen $200,000 - and never get caught, either!! 😄
  12. I wonder if this model aircraft automatically swoops on any open bags of chips? 💭
  13. Baz might be looking for a spare for his Colonial Viper?? 😄
  14. They're highly sought after by the 2001 Space Odyssey fans for models of the Orion space clipper controls. 2001 - A Space Odyssey | OK Brains trust! The 2001 chest pack control... WWW.FACEBOOK.COM OK Brains trust! The 2001 chest pack control handle is made from which aircraft part? I sort of think it might be the joystick from a Canberra bomber but I'm sure someone can set me right!
  15. Ian, it's a control handle from a Gloster Meteor F8. Scroll down the page below for more photos. https://www.historicflyingclothing.com/en-GB/raf-aircraft-parts/gloster-meteor-f8-control-grip/prod_21647 Here's the Gloster Meteor cockpit photo.
  16. Take a chill pill, you blow up at the slightest thing, that you see as a personal attack. Most threads get diverted to different aims to the original post.
  17. You'd have to rate him pretty well up the list for a Darwin Award. There's no forgiveness for shortcuts in flying aeroplanes - especially when that shortcut is to leave out a check for water in the fuel.
  18. Manufacturing processes are refined to reduce cost and increase speed of production. Crimped connections do just that. Manufacturers abhor processes such as soldering, that would slow down production and increase costs. Then there's the long-term health effects of full-time soldering with solder containing lead. All radiator repairers now have very strict checks on their employees blood lead levels, when they have been carrying out soldering processes for extended periods. In fact, quite a number of radiator repairers now refuse to repair soldered radiators, and most passenger and light commercial radiators today have crimped plastic end tanks. And of course, there's also the additional problem that less and less people today want soldering jobs as a full time job.
  19. Printed circuit boards are all soldered! Should we now be requesting that all PCB manufacturers revert to crimped connections! 😄
  20. The Tenerife disaster was caused by a simple lack of checking with ATC, that the B747 was actually cleared for takeoff, when they were lined up, and radio traffic was overloaded, and messages were becoming garbled and spoken over. There was cockpit confusion in the B747, and the Capt was a "go-go" merchant who was itching to firewall the throttles, and he didn't wait for clear instructions for takeoff clearance. He just assumed they were cleared for takeoff. Communications clarity, and asking for takeoff verification when unsure of instructions, would have to be the primary aims in ATC-pilot communications.
  21. Well, if they were refuelling a Kenworth pulling a road train, $480 worth of fuel would barely move the fuel gauge.
  22. Lucky you've got a gold mine to finance your fuel requirements, Moneybox! Most of us are sitting here, watching our limited funds get savaged by oil companies, and oil futures traders!
  23. I was under the impression that canard wing setups were abandoned about the same time as wing warping, because a better design was thought up. If canards were such fantastic, award-winning designs, perhaps we'd have see more on regular commercial aircraft? Unsurprisingly, they only turn up on odd occasions, when someone advertises that they've thought of a new brilliant idea in aircraft design, and have produced a prototype or experimental model. A number of decades ago, there was a father-and-son team in W.A. (Deryck and Neil Graham), who were in business as "Composite Technology", who were convinced their Eagle 150 canard aircraft design was the dux nutz, and proceeded to manufacture a number of them. This was in the late 1980's, but by the late 1990's, with very few orders for their exotic machine forthcoming, they sold the design and manufacturing rights to the Eagle 150, to the Malaysians. The Malaysians poured multiple tens of millions more into the design, and they only ever sold a few more of the aircraft to their "captive" customer, the Malaysian Air Force - thus proving that the design is not world-beating, nor is it in demand. Composites Technology Research Malaysia has now become CTRM Holdings and provides a composites manufacturing facility for a few of the global aircraft manufacturers, manufacturing some of the composite components that go into the likes of Airbus and Boeing commercial aircraft. Canard aircraft production hardly rates a mention in Malaysia now. https://ctrm.com.my/our-offerings/ There are three military fighters that do use the canard design to a certain extent - the Saab Gripen, the Eurofighter Typhoon, and the Dassault Rafale. However, I suspect the addition of the canard to these three fighters, has little to do with any anti-stall characteristics of the canard, but more to do with assisting the delta wing with better control and lift, especially at low speeds.
  24. In defence aircraft spending terms, "low cost" to produce, means a figure of around $20M to $40M. But I'm sure Martys got that amount hanging around the house in loose change. 😄
  25. Note to Cappy - OT has a hide like a rhinoceros, but is more affable than one, so no worries there. It is good to see that Cappy has been watching lots of cat videos, these are obviously very soothing to his frazzled nerves, after associating with Turbo for extended periods.
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