Karnage
I-am-a-pirate. I do not need credentials!
Are you like 6'10"?
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6'6" when I slouch. If I wear my hat I'm even taller than @Autothrust Blue.
Are you like 6'10"?
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Never say anything bad about a Douglas product! Blasphemy! Woe unto you!
I avoid 737s because, well, they suck.But I do tend to get stuck on them a lot since Fort Widget in its vast wisdom somehow thinks it's a swell idea to fly them across the country. I'll go out of my way to ride a 75/6. Once they're retired, it's really going to suck. I think I'm going to need to buy a jet before then.
The issues with the jackscrews and the rudder hardovers are obviously well in the past, but they could have happened to any airplane. The problem with Airbus is the entire design philosophy, not a specific mechanical malfunction. Airplanes should behave like airplanes, not what software engineers think airplanes should behave like.
They did a nice job on the 717... the 80 series... Well, the saying goes that Boeing and Airbus build airplanes, Douglas builds character.
The 767 sure is super comfy in the back. I find myself having some stank face when I get in a 757 after so long seeing the interior of the bus. That thing is naaaarrrrrow! It sure was fun to fly, though.
And last I checked, fifi flies like an airplane and feels like one. But what do I know, I've only flown it for 7 years.![]()
Dude, you've spent the thread talking about switching the airplane into different "laws." That's not how a regular airplane works.
It's how all FBW ones work... Boeing, Airbus, Canuck....
I do find it cool that we don't obey the laws of physics in the bus.![]()
Yes, and I'm not a fan of any of it. But Boeing's idea of FBW is decidedly different than Airbus's. For example, move a 777 yoke, the other yoke moves also. Turn on the autothrottles, the throttles actually move. Etc. In other words, it still acts like a pilot would expect it to act, instead of how a software engineer would expect it to act.
Bid a Boeing
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I suspect it would be less pleasant if you were plunging towards the ocean and one pilot didn’t know what the other pilot was doing with the controls as their inputs cancelled each other out with no tactile feedback.
I can't count the amount of times I've been on a (you name it) with moving auto throttles, and there they are at basically climb power with the boards still out trying to descend... with zero idea even though they are full forward.
That actually has not been a factor in any of these events.
I love these threads. They remind me to never step foot on an Airbus unless absolutely necessary.
Now I’ll wait for the bizarre Airbus nerdfest to to tell me how much they love their tray table.
The Airbus system has saved a lot more lives.
Yes, and I'm not a fan of any of it. But Boeing's idea of FBW is decidedly different than Airbus's. For example, move a 777 yoke, the other yoke moves also. Turn on the autothrottles, the throttles actually move. Etc. In other words, it still acts like a pilot would expect it to act, instead of how a software engineer would expect it to act.
That’s debatable. But regardless, it’s bad design philosophy.
Come on, I thought you were more of a data driven guy that that. You can’t possibly quantify what you just claimed. It’s supposition at best, and pure BS at worst.
Never say anything bad about a Douglas product! Blasphemy! Woe unto you!
I avoid 737s because, well, they suck.But I do tend to get stuck on them a lot since Fort Widget in its vast wisdom somehow thinks it's a swell idea to fly them across the country. I'll go out of my way to ride a 75/6. Once they're retired, it's really going to suck. I think I'm going to need to buy a jet before then.
The issues with the jackscrews and the rudder hardovers are obviously well in the past, but they could have happened to any airplane. The problem with Airbus is the entire design philosophy, not a specific mechanical malfunction. Airplanes should behave like airplanes, not what software engineers think airplanes should behave like.
Dude, you've spent the thread talking about switching the airplane into different "laws." That's not how a regular airplane works. Regular airplanes obey only one set of laws: the laws of physics.
Show me the accidents caused by lack of envelope protection features on 737s, 757s, 767s, and the entire DC-9 series.