Then what would you do to fly both? :crazy:
Can't say here... this is a PG-13 environment.
:drool:
Then what would you do to fly both? :crazy:
Odd choice. Why the Mercure? Most probably do not even know about this machine. 2 prototype and 10 machines that went to Air Inter. A dead end for Dassault on this one.
It's always been one of my favorite planes. When I was younger, I just liked the way it looked. Since then everything I ever heard about it performance wise was amazing, but 90% of the information about it was regarding what a failure it was as a project. Airways recently did a story on it which put its amazing features to light. They interviewed its pilots and what they said about it left me with a press in my pants. It was the first airliner with HUD, and with that HUD it managed to have a 98.6% success rate in CATIII conditions. It was built to keep up airspeed and not bleed off much energy. Before the 250kias below 10,000 feet rule, it would fly at 380kias until it was at 4,000 feet. The pilots would keep the power in and use the speed-brakes to descend. As they did this, it would descend at up to 14,000fpm! Below 4,000 feet, they would retract the speed-brakes and start a clean descent at 210kias, still descending at about 6,000fpm. Then just a few miles from the airport, pretty much at the start of the approach, they'd dump all the flaps and the gear and land the beast. After a few years they stopped doing this as it apparently freaked out the passengers. However, the passengers probably didn't mind that instead of window-shades,the windows had a polarization nob that would let them control how much light the window would let in.Odd choice. Why the Mercure? Most probably do not even know about this machine. 2 prototype and 10 machines that went to Air Inter. A dead end for Dassault on this one.
B-25.. As I understand it there is a place in Dallas that will let you fly theirs for a fair amount of money, I may just do it!
It's always been one of my favorite planes. When I was younger, I just liked the way it looked. Since then everything I ever heard about it performance wise was amazing, but 90% of the information about it was regarding what a failure it was as a project. Airways recently did a story on it which put its amazing features to light. They interviewed its pilots and what they said about it left me with a press in my pants. It was the first airliner with HUD, and with that HUD it managed to have a 98.6% success rate in CATIII conditions. It was built to keep up airspeed and not bleed off much energy. Before the 250kias below 10,000 feet rule, it would fly at 380kias until it was at 4,000 feet. The pilots would keep the power in and use the speed-brakes to descend. As they did this, it would descend at up to 14,000fpm! Below 4,000 feet, they would retract the speed-brakes and start a clean descent at 210kias, still descending at about 6,000fpm. Then just a few miles from the airport, pretty much at the start of the approach, they'd dump all the flaps and the gear and land the beast. After a few years they stopped doing this as it apparently freaked out the passengers. However, the passengers probably didn't mind that instead of window-shades,the windows had a polarization nob that would let them control how much light the window would let in.
The pilots claimed it was the airline equivalent to flying the Dassault Mirage. A total stick and rudder airplane that would do whatever you wanted it to. As a matter of fact, with its very limited range and destinations, it is claimed that almost exclusively ex-Fighter pilots made up Air Inter's Mercure pilots. With its range it could barely leave France. And yes, only 10 were produced and all for one airline. But it hauled ass from point A to point B, and had a break-even operating cost of 33 seats. Not bad for a plane with about 150 seats.
Drop me in from inside the B-29... count me down.. drop me like ordinance. Wait for me to flip the switches.. Key the mike. Say, "Put the spurs to 'er, Chuck."
Hell yes.
Albeit expensive, I would be able to fly a p-51 in my lifetime...This thread needs to be renamed "Planes you're never going to fly in your life."
Speaking of them, I saw one of them pass by SFO flying VFR on the Bay Tour today. That must have been a hell of a lot of fun for whoever was flying it.In the realm of (almost) realism:
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Looks fast sitting still, goes like a rocket, and you get direct everywhere because you declared a fuel emergency on the taxiway.