Did they let any of the spectators or amateur pilots fly the planes at any of the shows? I mean anybody can do it right?
You mean like amateur investigators?
Did they let any of the spectators or amateur pilots fly the planes at any of the shows? I mean anybody can do it right?
OH swing, I fly the first aircraft, albeit with old weak engine, and it was so easy to over speed the damn thing even with my old J57 engines; that plane was at the max speed he was allowed to go, and believe me, he could have done the same pass as fast as the terrorist, but when you bring your plane back with skin missing the guys who repair it are upset.Great video! You just proved that fly-by's at air shows are near take off and landing speeds not at 530 mphs.
Certainly low in altitude, but can you make another video with the plane a few feet off the deck traveling at 530 mph? Now that would be some work!
Did they let any of the spectators or amateur pilots fly the planes at any of the shows? I mean anybody can do it right?
Well Zen, I am glad you asked this question. I have let total never flown people fly a real big plane, and they did better than the terrorists. If you notice the terrorist flying 77 did the worst turn around 360 degree turn. His bank varied, his pitch varied, not one thing was under control. Oh, believe me a plane flown like 77 looks fine on the outside, but if Hani was on a check ride, he would be graded low, graded as if he was someone who never flew. He sucks. That being said, it looked okay to you, a rank flying amateur, you thought it was done by a professional or something but you missed it, his flying was crap. Next time ask a pilot, I will tell you.Did they let any of the spectators or amateur pilots fly the planes at any of the shows? I mean anybody can do it right?
Did they let any of the spectators or amateur pilots fly the planes at any of the shows? I mean anybody can do it right?
Outstanding. reheat has been down lower and faster, and if not, his fellow 111 guys have.Here's a brief video rebuttal to the boneheads who claim that airliners can't fly fast and low. The people who say that about flight 77 are missing the point anyway: that plane descended and crashed, which any plane can do, and it was only at an altitude where ground effect would come into play for a second or two. Even if ground effect had paranormal pillowy powers, flight 77 still would have hit the Pentagon. So why did I bother making this? Because I like planes. Beachnut should get a kick out of the first one.
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there goes zen, ignoring the fact that the hijackers had commercial pilots licenses.
Yeah sure that's all they had to do. Crash the plane. They didn't need to change or turnoff transponders, turn the plane around, navigate, change altitude, fly at breakneck speeds, nothing like that. What they did is exactly the same as flying around an airfield a couple of times and crashing into no particular target. Right?
Oh and that guy who crashed into the pentagon?
Wouldn't this be him?
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D00E0DC1E31F937A35756C0A9649C8B63
A Trainee Noted for Incompetence
JIM YARDLEY
Published: May 4, 2002
Staff members characterized Mr. Hanjour as polite, meek and very quiet. But most of all, the former employee said, they considered him a very bad pilot.
Mr. Hanjour, who investigators contend piloted the airliner that crashed into the Pentagon, was reported to the aviation agency in February 2001 after instructors at his flight school in Phoenix had found his piloting skills so shoddy and his grasp of English so inadequate that they questioned whether his pilot's license was genuine.
Records show a Hani Hanjour obtained a license in 1999 in Scottsdale, Ariz. Previous and sometimes contradictory reports said he failed in 1996 and 1997 to obtain a license at other schools.
''I'm still to this day amazed that he could have flown into the Pentagon,'' the former employee said. ''He could not fly at all.''
[slight derail, sorry]Did anyone else notice how hard it was to see the windows on the planes in these flybys on internet quality video until they were right in front of the camera? Did the NWO only manage to fake the windows on these obviously non-planes for a couple of frames? Or is that particular part of the CT out of date?[/slight derail, sorry]
Yeah sure that's all they had to do. Crash the plane. They didn't need to change or turnoff transponders, turn the plane around, navigate, change altitude, fly at breakneck speeds, nothing like that. What they did is exactly the same as flying around an airfield a couple of times and crashing into no particular target. Right?
Oh and that guy who crashed into the pentagon?
Wouldn't this be him?
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D00E0DC1E31F937A35756C0A9649C8B63
A Trainee Noted for Incompetence
JIM YARDLEY
Published: May 4, 2002
Staff members characterized Mr. Hanjour as polite, meek and very quiet. But most of all, the former employee said, they considered him a very bad pilot.
Mr. Hanjour, who investigators contend piloted the airliner that crashed into the Pentagon, was reported to the aviation agency in February 2001 after instructors at his flight school in Phoenix had found his piloting skills so shoddy and his grasp of English so inadequate that they questioned whether his pilot's license was genuine.
Records show a Hani Hanjour obtained a license in 1999 in Scottsdale, Ariz. Previous and sometimes contradictory reports said he failed in 1996 and 1997 to obtain a license at other schools.
''I'm still to this day amazed that he could have flown into the Pentagon,'' the former employee said. ''He could not fly at all.''
Hmmm, I don't know, I don't think Zen has the skills to crash a jet...No they decided to land these planes. Hey you know what, if you were behind the controls I bet you too could crash.
Similar story here. For my 16th birthday (many moons ago) my dad got me time in a honest-to-goodness 737 simulator. Got to do some approaches and landings... and I got it on the ground each time. I even matched the proper glide slope fairly well (I was flying in by eye, no ILS).I probably shouldn't admit this, but I have flown that approach in simulators a number of times! It's not really hard after the first time or two...
My formal flight training was 35 years ago in an Aeronca Champion when I was ten. (My Dad was a flight instructor.)
I flew a kite once. Does that count? But then again I'm not the only one questioning the hijacker skills. Some of the people from the schools where the hijackers received their training apparently found it hard to believe also.Zen, what is your experience with flight-training or the use of flight-simulators? I have had the chance to fly a 727 in a flight-school simulator (not just a PC software program), and I can assure you that everything you listed (turn off transponder, turn, fly at high speed, etc.) is very easy. Heck, I managed to land the damn thing on the first try. Unless you have actual experience with what is or is not required to fly a commercial aircraft, all you have left is one giant argument from incredulity.
Task difficulty rating: Easy.Yeah sure that's all they had to do. Crash the plane.
Task difficulty rating: Easy.They didn't need to change or turnoff transponders...
Task difficulty rating: Easy....turn the plane around...
Task difficulty rating: Medium....navigate...
Task difficulty rating: Easy....change altitude...
Task difficulty rating: Medium.fly at breakneck speeds...