peteweaver
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2007
- Messages
- 1,006
Excellent comparison between landing speeds and low level high speed flight in that video Gravy.
A plane going 463 KIAS, over 700 feet per second. He hit the light post and all in less than 2 seconds. A 250,000 pound airplane would cut those lamppost off and not even feel it. The trailer a few feet from the building would only be felt for 0.05 second before your brain was against the windscreen as you blast into the Pentagon.
As if the plane somehow flew around carefully aiming at, and hitting, those objects.
The striking of light poles, a trailer, and a fence all occurred within a second, Swing.









And that is that on what Swing has posted on flying.Burner, did you say burner?
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/afterburner1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/afterburner1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/mtmitchell1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/mtmitchell.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/air9.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/redflag/video/F-111.mpg
Very little, it would appear. Grandpa should have informed you that in the U.S., civilian pilots don't have licenses. They hold certificates granted to them by the FAA, which allow them certain privileges under the Federal Aviation Regulations. A Commercial certificate holder is allowed different privileges under the FARs than a Private Pilot. One of these privileges is to get compensated monetarily for flying. So it would not be unreasonable to call someone who held a Commercial certificate a professional, rather than an amateur pilot.Where did he hold this certificate? Where was it located? What is your source? Has it been produced and verified by the examiner? Please tell me it wasn't at the flight school in Florida?
My grandfather was a FAA Flight Examiner so I have a little bit of knowledge on this subject.
I don't know. My grandfather was not a Japanese Ninja Examiner.Does that mean if I hold a Japanese Ninja Certificate it makes me a certified Ninja?
See the above quote. So does that mean you let them take the controls without input from yourself and they executed a simple term?
Only the last link worked for me.
Burner, did you say burner?
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/afterburner1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/afterburner1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/mtmitchell1.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/mtmitchell.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/aerospacecentre/videos/air9.mpg
http://www.defence.gov.au/redflag/video/F-111.mpg
Sorry, I made a quick post this morning just prior to leaving for the day and did not realize those links had gone bad. Upon my return I was past the edit time limit and couldn't modify them.
I actually was looking for the "Torch" display over Sydney for the Olympics, but couldn't locate it. Perhaps you know where it's located and can post it....
Originally Posted by Swing Dangler
Second, he couldn't find the White House but at altitude and several hundred miles away he can find the Pentagon?
Beachnut, here you imply the terrorists flew like someone without training. Was Hani an experienced licensed pilot or not?
Considering your a flight instructor with training and the likes on Sims, why can't I determine your stance on Hani?
Now lets examine what you just spouted:
Now clear it up once and for all. Was Hani an experienced licensed pilot that could make simple turns or was he an inexperienced pilot? And can your analysis correspond with the flight school instructor testimony? Or did Hani actually complete the training to get an FAA commercial licenses as someone else posted.
With these multiple contradictions I have a hard time believing you trained anyone and if you did it probably wasn't very good training because it appears you do not know the difference.
Can they hit the Pentagon under the conditions and through the objects that Hani did to hit the first floor without clipping the ground? Go ahead and document the kids who can do this if you would.
Can you source your expertise?
Jay-All he had to do was get the aircraft within 20 miles of the Pentagon and look for the most distinctive shaped building in the entire county, a building surrounded by open spaces , not other buildings or forest, and a building that laid alongside a bend in a major river. Then all he needed to do was perform a 2 1/2 minute desending turn and WHEN HE COMPLETED THE TURN, then aim for the side of a building that presented itself to him and which was several times the width of the aircraft, and then when it was a certainty that he was lined up to push the engines to maximum. By the time he hit the lamposts the plane could have pitched sright down and the bulk of the aircraft would still have carried to the Pentagon.
Source?PhantomWolf Hani had his commercial licience PRIOR to being selected by Al Qaeda. He wasn't a part of the plan when he first trained to fly, he was trying to get a job as an airline pilot. His skills were average for a comercial pilot, his landings shakey, but the biggest issue he had wasn't his flying, it was his English.
building were?Firstly, Hani was a late inclusion anyway, but secondly, how exactly were they supposed to determine where the people inside the
Ok, let me state it more clearly. Which is easier to hit with a 747? The roof of the Pentagon or a first floor segment at ground level?Is your intention to say that the roof represents a larger surface area than the vertical wall?
Which is easier — diving an aircraft at a steep angle or diving it at a very shallow angle? Please explain why you think one of these maneuvers is easier than the other.Which is easier to hit with a 747? The roof of the Pentagon or a first floor segment at ground level?
Quote:
Jay-All he had to do was get the aircraft within 20 miles of the Pentagon and look for the most distinctive shaped building in the entire county, a building surrounded by open spaces , not other buildings or forest, and a building that laid alongside a bend in a major river. Then all he needed to do was perform a 2 1/2 minute desending turn and WHEN HE COMPLETED THE TURN, then aim for the side of a building that presented itself to him and which was several times the width of the aircraft, and then when it was a certainty that he was lined up to push the engines to maximum. By the time he hit the lamposts the plane could have pitched sright down and the bulk of the aircraft would still have carried to the Pentagon.
SD writes:
Now I'm confused. Now he intentionally made the turn? Someone else stated it was a correction for a mistake! Which is it??
Ok, let me state it more clearly. Which is easier to hit with a 747? The roof of the Pentagon or a first floor segment at ground level?
'nuff said.
Clear what up. You are not able to read and understand. With some work you can be cured.Beachnut, are you going to clear this up or not??
BOTH, you must understand things better. He intentionally made a turn to correct his being too high. WOW! EASYNow I'm confused. Now he intentionally made the turn? Someone else stated it was a correction for a mistake! Which is it??
So these idiots took a tour? Source?Source? building were? Public tour.
http://www.dtic.mil/ref/html/Welcome/tours.html
Easier to hit the first floor, but I have over 4,000 hours flying big jets. Tell you what, you can draw a small target and I can hit it, and so can most pilots. Gee, we hit the exact center of 50 to 150 foot targets all the time! Runways. Dumb question.Ok, let me state it more clearly. Which is easier to hit with a 747? The roof of the Pentagon or a first floor segment at ground level?
'nuff said.
Source?
What a dolt. Unless he is trying to funny, if he is serious he is super stupid. I flew KC-135, and that video is real tanker with new engines.Zombie thread alert!
In the interests of showing that sceptics are interested in what's accurate, not what suits an agenda, and at the risk of doing truther homework for them, it seems that there is some doubt over the authenticity of the first video in Gravy's original video in the OP of this thread. The youtuber is the redoubtable and entertaining 'Captain Disillusion', as somewhat endorsed by Randi in the latest Swift.
Of course, this doesn't mean that that large multi-engined aircraft can't fly low and fast. You only have to look at all the other videos to see that they certainly can.
Yeah, uh, thanks for pointing this out, but I don't know . . . I'm certainly not saying it's impossible to fake a video like that, but Occam's Razor says . . . why?Zombie thread alert!
In the interests of showing that sceptics are interested in what's accurate, not what suits an agenda, and at the risk of doing truther homework for them, it seems that there is some doubt over the authenticity of the first video in Gravy's original video in the OP of this thread. The youtuber is the redoubtable and entertaining 'Captain Disillusion', as somewhat endorsed by Randi in the latest Swift.
Of course, this doesn't mean that that large multi-engined aircraft can't fly low and fast. You only have to look at all the other videos to see that they certainly can.
Not to mention that the gear-down shots were from nearly under the damn thing, while the airplane is trying to climb. He has no airspeed to trade for altitude.What a dolt. Unless he is trying to funny, if he is serious he is super stupid. I flew KC-135, and that video is real tanker with new engines.
It is real, so he covered all the bases kind of; and made many mistakes, he said it was an Air Force, if he meant USAF he missed it was a French Air Force tanker low pass in the desert. In addition the slow pass by a plane going slow with the gear down needs a lot of throttle (engine noise) to fly. Bad work.
I can give you 300 KIAS with the engines out at a 3 degree glide slope clean. No engines needed. Light weight at 500 feet I had my engines up to make noise for a flyby, I had to pull the throttles back to idle on the old engine KC-135A so I would not exceed well past the max speed. Not that real bad stuff happens past 355KCAS, but the lower wind skin starts to peel off, the crew chiefs would kill me! At altitude you can do .9 MACH in the old tanker, think it was flight tested to .95 MACH.
If you used a high power setting, in less than 15 seconds you would be well past your max speed just like on 9/11. Pilots do dumb things, and big jets have sadly (or whatever) been lower over the Ocean and inciting international problems when flying across the bow of Russian Ships.
The max speed in the KC-135 was 355KCAS, the new engines at idle are almost enough to fly the plane when it is clean and going 300 KIAS. If he had used the throttles earlier to get speed up, he had to have them back at some point to keep his speed down.
Any KC-135 could do the same thing at 355 KIAS.