AIRBUS A380
#31
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Originally Posted by D70
See my post further down, it must have been one of those but totally unlivieried for some reason.
A gold star ajm and as you know I'm not one for handing those out.
A gold star ajm and as you know I'm not one for handing those out.
#32
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Size!
Originally Posted by Dave T-S
It can't be. It has to fit the maximum "box" dimensions (length/wingspan/height) to be able to be handled by airports - stand spacing, taxiways etc, and the wingspan at 262 ft is just inside this by about 18". The outer pair of engines are just wider than 150' runway width which will require upgrade at some airports.
Still cant wait to see it!
#33
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The official designation of the Beluga is an A300-600ST, and as per the clue is a derivative of the A300 airliner. ATI, a subsidiary of AI, operates five Belugas commercially - they not only carry A320/A340 wingsets/fuselages from AI plants in Europe, but offer oversize load services to third parties.
At present, A380 parts are NOT carried by the Belugas - the wings come in by sea/road.
There is a further derivative of the Beluga in planning based on the 4 engined A340 - that will dwarf the -600ST!
At present, A380 parts are NOT carried by the Belugas - the wings come in by sea/road.
There is a further derivative of the Beluga in planning based on the 4 engined A340 - that will dwarf the -600ST!
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#36
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It will never happen.
Originally Posted by Dave T-S
Flightman
Yep, and can't wait for the first time someone runs off the edge of a taxiway and bogs one down!
Yep, and can't wait for the first time someone runs off the edge of a taxiway and bogs one down!
#38
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747-400
Originally Posted by SirFozzalot
I think that is just a standard 747 though and not the 747-400.
Same thing. Pretty much the only differnce between the orginal 747, now known as "the classic" and the 744 is that the latter has a stretched upper deck and wingtips. The sizes are very similar, if not identical. Bu$$er, Im gonna have to look it up now!
Yep, above is correct.
Anyone know why Airforce One is an old 747-200, not the latter 747-400?
Last edited by FlightMan; 27 April 2005 at 07:39 PM.
#40
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its the lotus carlton of the jumbo jet world, you need sum hairy chested men complete with gold medalions to hand the thing, you just KNOW that bloke on the news had a chest wig in effect
looked impressive on the news, i did not think it looked "normal" in the air for sum reason
looked impressive on the news, i did not think it looked "normal" in the air for sum reason
#41
Originally Posted by StickyMicky
i did not think it looked "normal" in the air for sum reason
#42
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Originally Posted by KiwiGTI
Could the mystery plane be an Antonov?
Those pics you posted don't do it justice, try this one:
#43
Weirdest plane I think I ever saw was the Boeing Model 377 "Super Guppy", got to look at one parked up at the Pima Air Museum in Tucson. Now that would certainly freak me out if it flew past my office window
#45
This is an interesting story (some pics) of a 747 being landed at a small airfield in Africa - plane was being decommissioned and heading for a museum nearby so it has no need to take off again.
http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthr...nd+airport+747
http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthr...nd+airport+747
#46
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Lum
I think (but will stand corrected if I am wrong) that that pic is of an AN222, not 225. There used to be one regularly flew over my house operating out of Stansted.
Re large aircraft looking ungainly, depending on the a/c, they nearly have to be flown with a different attitude to smaller a/c. FedEx operate MD11 freighters out of Stansted and they have a HORRIBLE attitude in flight - nose high and very slow.
Re the SAA 742 landing, that was very impressive!
I saw the Vulcan bomber flown into Duxford on its last flight many years ago, and shortly afterwards they extended the M11 and chopped the end of the runway off so even if it was airworthy would never get out again!
If we are getting all nostalgic, my favourite plane of all time is probably the English Electric Lightning interceptor from the 60's - I saw one doing a demo at the Mildenhall (IIRC) Air Show back in the late 60's, and the pilot took off, engaged reheat, stood it on its tail and it just climbed vertically. Rather impressive.....
Mind you, I saw a crew do the same with a Vulcan, and it blew the whole runway up behind it - sheets of tarmac flying into the air for hundreds of yards.....oops, and the end of ops for the day!
I think (but will stand corrected if I am wrong) that that pic is of an AN222, not 225. There used to be one regularly flew over my house operating out of Stansted.
Re large aircraft looking ungainly, depending on the a/c, they nearly have to be flown with a different attitude to smaller a/c. FedEx operate MD11 freighters out of Stansted and they have a HORRIBLE attitude in flight - nose high and very slow.
Re the SAA 742 landing, that was very impressive!
I saw the Vulcan bomber flown into Duxford on its last flight many years ago, and shortly afterwards they extended the M11 and chopped the end of the runway off so even if it was airworthy would never get out again!
If we are getting all nostalgic, my favourite plane of all time is probably the English Electric Lightning interceptor from the 60's - I saw one doing a demo at the Mildenhall (IIRC) Air Show back in the late 60's, and the pilot took off, engaged reheat, stood it on its tail and it just climbed vertically. Rather impressive.....
Mind you, I saw a crew do the same with a Vulcan, and it blew the whole runway up behind it - sheets of tarmac flying into the air for hundreds of yards.....oops, and the end of ops for the day!
#47
Originally Posted by Kevin Groat
This is an interesting story (some pics) of a 747 being landed at a small airfield in Africa - plane was being decommissioned and heading for a museum nearby so it has no need to take off again.
http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthr...nd+airport+747
http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthr...nd+airport+747
Nice bit of flying! The runway is sooo narrow!
pic courtesy of www.saamuseum.co.za
Last edited by SirFozzalot; 28 April 2005 at 10:39 AM.
#48
Originally Posted by SirFozzalot
#49
Good to see it had a successful maiden flight.
A good many years ago when I was doing a display at an airfield in Omaha they had a flypast by the prototype 747. No one had seen anything that size before and there was just total amazement as it flew past.
The bigger an aircraft, the slower it appears to be flying and this one looked as though it was going too slowly to stay in the air.
I see the new Airbus is just about double the overall size of the Vulcan Bet they won't be doing wingovers in that one though.
Les
A good many years ago when I was doing a display at an airfield in Omaha they had a flypast by the prototype 747. No one had seen anything that size before and there was just total amazement as it flew past.
The bigger an aircraft, the slower it appears to be flying and this one looked as though it was going too slowly to stay in the air.
I see the new Airbus is just about double the overall size of the Vulcan Bet they won't be doing wingovers in that one though.
Les
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Originally Posted by Kevin Groat
This is an interesting story (some pics) of a 747 being landed at a small airfield in Africa - plane was being decommissioned and heading for a museum nearby so it has no need to take off again.
#51
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Originally Posted by Leslie
The bigger an aircraft, the slower it appears to be flying and this one looked as though it was going too slowly to stay in the air.
i was thinking it was coming down to crash lol
#53
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Originally Posted by Brendan Hughes
As a non-pilot, landing on the narrow runway looks vaguely impressive. Until you read the details: runway width 15m, normal runway width 60m - and the fact that the engines overhanging the grass means you're not allowed to use reverse thrust to slow down in case of matter ingestion!
#57
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Originally Posted by TheBigMan
Wanna see video!!
http://www.airbus.com/A380/Seeing/indexminisite.aspx
Very impressive
#58
Originally Posted by Funkii Munkii
Fill ya boots BigMan, vids and photos here
http://www.airbus.com/A380/Seeing/indexminisite.aspx
Very impressive
http://www.airbus.com/A380/Seeing/indexminisite.aspx
Very impressive
#59
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Originally Posted by Sprint Chief
Weirdest plane I think I ever saw was the Boeing Model 377 "Super Guppy", got to look at one parked up at the Pima Air Museum in Tucson. Now that would certainly freak me out if it flew past my office window
Simon
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This is the one; the looks like it was carrying airbus parts too. Id spent the last twenty years thinking it had Space Shuttle sections in...
Simon
Simon