Planespotting II
#871
Re: Planespotting II
8 track tapes? Minidiscs?
Abacus?
With respect to the A380, it was never going to work long term. It was a generation in design too late. i never thought it especially good to look at either, and that's the cardinal sin in aviation
Abacus?
With respect to the A380, it was never going to work long term. It was a generation in design too late. i never thought it especially good to look at either, and that's the cardinal sin in aviation
#872
Re: Planespotting II
I'd forgotten about them entirely .... I think I have maybe three or four of those.
I think the project wasn't well thought through - that if there were a significant number of them in use they would have necessitated large and massively crowded hub airports, at a time when it was already increasingly obvious that it was going to be challenging to increase the size of many airports to handle the number of passengers.
..... With respect to the A380, it was never going to work long term. It was a generation in design too late. i never thought it especially good to look at either, and that's the cardinal sin in aviation
Last edited by Pulaski; Jun 19th 2020 at 2:08 pm.
#873
Forum Regular
Joined: Sep 2015
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 262
Re: Planespotting II
I’m guessing I could upgrade to business class for the rest of my life, on the proceeds of the soda, cold “tea,” bottled water, fruit juice, new age beverages, etc etc. that I HAVEN’T bought over my lifetime.
Tap water in New York is superb - from our well - here in Norfolk, courtesy of Anglia Water, is unpleasant - but it’s what I drink. Here I keep it in a jug for several hours, and it tastes a bit better than straight from the tap.
Yeah, maybe it’s just Air Canada, but I tried their hot tea a couple of times back in the nineties, and never again. As for the coffee, served at about 5am over Ireland (I.e. midnight EST) it smells so nauseating that there’s no way. Especially when I can look forward to a large black americano at Caffe Nero in T2 in a couple of hours.
Tap water in New York is superb - from our well - here in Norfolk, courtesy of Anglia Water, is unpleasant - but it’s what I drink. Here I keep it in a jug for several hours, and it tastes a bit better than straight from the tap.
Yeah, maybe it’s just Air Canada, but I tried their hot tea a couple of times back in the nineties, and never again. As for the coffee, served at about 5am over Ireland (I.e. midnight EST) it smells so nauseating that there’s no way. Especially when I can look forward to a large black americano at Caffe Nero in T2 in a couple of hours.
#874
Re: Planespotting II
I'd forgotten about them entirely .... I think I have maybe three or four of those.
I think the project wasn't well thought through - that if there were a significant number of them in use they would have necessitated large and massively crowded hub airports, at a time when it was already increasingly obvious that it was going to be challenging to increase the size of many airports to handle the number of passengers.
I think the project wasn't well thought through - that if there were a significant number of them in use they would have necessitated large and massively crowded hub airports, at a time when it was already increasingly obvious that it was going to be challenging to increase the size of many airports to handle the number of passengers.
...
I am increasingly thinking that it's not new technology that makes me feel old, or the obsolete things that have gone away, it's the things that I remember being new and novel, that have now largely completed their life cycle during my lifetime and have declined significantly or even disappeared.
I am increasingly thinking that it's not new technology that makes me feel old, or the obsolete things that have gone away, it's the things that I remember being new and novel, that have now largely completed their life cycle during my lifetime and have declined significantly or even disappeared.
#875
Re: Planespotting II
..... DVDs, CDs, even BluRay disks ...
#876
Re: Planespotting II
I haven't bought physical media in years, probably has to be close to 2010 maybe.
Music has been iTunes only since I bought the original iPhone when it was released in 2007.
Music has been iTunes only since I bought the original iPhone when it was released in 2007.
#877
Re: Planespotting II
I’d go a step further and say it looked shite. Ugly as hell. But in my time at the airport, I never saw a reaction to any aircraft like I did when that 380 came in. What’s bad, is every airport that thing flew into had to widen and strengthen their taxiways. Heathrow spent millions widening, probably 90% of the taxiways to accommodate that aircraft.
#880
#881
Re: Planespotting II
You jest, but with the wildfires that are likely to happen as the climate crisis accelerates, that might not be a bad idea at all, they are all young airframes that would last for a long time.
#883
Forum Regular
Joined: Sep 2015
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 262
Re: Planespotting II
With Bruntingthorpe having its wings clipped, using Tristar as a fire-fighting tanker seems to have died with it.
#885
Re: Planespotting II
Thank you but I actually more meant being there, on the ground seeing/ experiencing it.
There are some things that you just can't capture the full experience of in a video or TV coverage - such as RR Olympus engines in a delta wing aircraft (either of them), 1990's era F1 engines, a pack of NASCAR cars at race speed, a full out-door festival sound system at a couple of hundred feet, a B-2 in a low-level pass, fully loaded Panavia Tornadoes over the Adriatic running afterburners, a convoy of three KC-135 Stratotankers so high in the sky (presumably 25,000ft+) that they were barely visible but would make your home's windows vibrate for about 15 minutes! , and I would think that a 747 at 400ft over a forest, would be another.
There are some things that you just can't capture the full experience of in a video or TV coverage - such as RR Olympus engines in a delta wing aircraft (either of them), 1990's era F1 engines, a pack of NASCAR cars at race speed, a full out-door festival sound system at a couple of hundred feet, a B-2 in a low-level pass, fully loaded Panavia Tornadoes over the Adriatic running afterburners, a convoy of three KC-135 Stratotankers so high in the sky (presumably 25,000ft+) that they were barely visible but would make your home's windows vibrate for about 15 minutes! , and I would think that a 747 at 400ft over a forest, would be another.
Last edited by Pulaski; Jun 23rd 2020 at 3:18 pm.