GON
$175 Site Donor 2026
Weather reports its likely a ice cold Saturday morning for many on this forum. This video might warm you up of a 747 taking off and the challenges from 43 degrees Celsius outside, aircraft at max capacity, one engine with known mechanical issues, water injection into the engines to gain thrust, better lift than can occur when an aircraft is flying just feet from the ground, on and on. Just a mountain of information in this video.
Disclosure- absolutely fascinating animated video of a 1978 flight from ATH to JFK on a 747 that has number three engine fail during take, and number two engine had allowed mechanical issues prior to takeoff. There is no official report on this flight, so some of the information is connecting the dots, with assumptions or fiction, instead of facts.
1978, 747 taking of from Athens to New York. Fully loaded aircraft, 398 passengers and 20 crew members. Engine failure during takeoff, reported the captain didn’t follow Boeing directives during the failure of the engine in hopes of avoiding crashing into a dense urban populated area.
One directive the captain ignored from Boeing, when the aircraft could lift, captain order retraction of wheels. Boeing directs against this action on this situation, as more drag is temporarily injected by the landing gear doors during retraction.
I am going to give up the ghost. Two of many incredible things identified in this video are (1) there was no investigation as the aircraft didn’t crash, (2) after the captain landed the aircraft with zero casualties, later that same day he boarded another 747 with the same passengers and piloted that aircraft to New York City.
Have time this Saturday morning, a fascinating (video), although some of it maybe be memoirs instead of fact
Disclosure- absolutely fascinating animated video of a 1978 flight from ATH to JFK on a 747 that has number three engine fail during take, and number two engine had allowed mechanical issues prior to takeoff. There is no official report on this flight, so some of the information is connecting the dots, with assumptions or fiction, instead of facts.
1978, 747 taking of from Athens to New York. Fully loaded aircraft, 398 passengers and 20 crew members. Engine failure during takeoff, reported the captain didn’t follow Boeing directives during the failure of the engine in hopes of avoiding crashing into a dense urban populated area.
One directive the captain ignored from Boeing, when the aircraft could lift, captain order retraction of wheels. Boeing directs against this action on this situation, as more drag is temporarily injected by the landing gear doors during retraction.
I am going to give up the ghost. Two of many incredible things identified in this video are (1) there was no investigation as the aircraft didn’t crash, (2) after the captain landed the aircraft with zero casualties, later that same day he boarded another 747 with the same passengers and piloted that aircraft to New York City.
Have time this Saturday morning, a fascinating (video), although some of it maybe be memoirs instead of fact
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