Originally posted by Durbs
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I've never heard of a union asking its members to take a pay cut....
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Agreed. It was the same to get into the RAF as a pilot, and done at the same place when I did it for BA (RAF Biggin Hill (now closed)). I'd have been a tulip pilot anyway, so glad I didn't get it. -
I think there was another requirement to do with having good eyesight.Originally posted by sasguru View PostWere you not capable of getting a pass in A-level Maths and Physics which is (was?) the only requirement for the BA cadet scheme?
Thicko.This default font is sooooooooooooo boring and so are short usernamesComment
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flying by the computer -Originally posted by Durbs View PostNo, i'd rather it was flown by a computer that isn't prone to slamming it into the side of a mountain because its been woofing coke off a stewardesses charlies all night.
Dont care how much the pilot is paid but i do have requirements about the size and fullness of moustache they should be sporting.
remember the airbus that crashed at the paris airshow?
remember the airbus that turned one way when the pilot commanded it to turn the other way?
also the last airfrance flight - apparently dropped out of auto-pilot 'cos it could not cope!This default font is sooooooooooooo boring and so are short usernamesComment
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The bottom line is that BA is the result of decades of union action and unless some of those extreme excesses are rolled back the company will no longer exist. The fact that many long-haul cabin staff get around 1000 pounds a trip in allowances and expenses says it all.
Unions are good to protect staff against unfair company practices but unfortunately whenever they are given an inch they take a mile. However, they may well come to the fore in the future as Labour and the EU seek to put us all out of work by allowing unfair competition as in the instance of Italian workers and Total in Hull etc.
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I used to diddle a BA stewardess so I met a few pilots. Complete tossers who admitted to boozing on the job, if i remember correctly one was a VB programmer for an aviation software company before he changed jobs.Comment
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Originally posted by minestrone View PostI used to diddle a BA stewardess so I met a few pilots. Complete tossers who admitted to boozing on the job, if i remember correctly one was a VB programmer for an aviation software company before he changed jobs.
I once flew at Xmas with BA and it was blindingly obvious that most of the cabin crew were pissed. No surprise there !!
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I've never heard of a union asking its members to take a pay cut
BolshieB is right, unions end up doing that fairly often.
But a union that launched the political career of Norman Tebbit maybe does it more than most!Comment
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You need to do a bit more research on these I think. Pretty much all autopilots shut down if heavy tulip is happening - over to you, Mr Pilot and time to earn that money - and they do, too on those rare occasions (mostly)Originally posted by MPwannadecentincome View Postflying by the computer -
remember the airbus that crashed at the paris airshow?
remember the airbus that turned one way when the pilot commanded it to turn the other way?
also the last airfrance flight - apparently dropped out of auto-pilot 'cos it could not cope!Comment
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My point is the computers on board did not help the situation....Originally posted by Peoplesoft bloke View PostYou need to do a bit more research on these I think. Pretty much all autopilots shut down if heavy tulip is happening - over to you, Mr Pilot and time to earn that money - and they do, too on those rare occasions (mostly)
Paris airshow crash - the computer stopped the pilot from its flypast over the runway - it thought "I'm landing, so I will land!"
Airbus not turning in the direction expected - well its fly by wire innit!
Air France crash - ok no conclusive evidence - but the airbus was designed to fly at that height better on autopilot than manually (according to yesterday's Sunday Times), the fuel trim etc is optimised for the plane to fly more efficiently at a different center of gravity, however here it is in a storm and out pops the auto pilot because the pitot (yes that is the correct spelling) is giving misleading readings, leaving the plane in the hands of surprised pilots who now have no chance as they have to retrim the fuel to get the center of gravity back.
My point is - a poster said they would prefer to be in the hands of the computer - I think its better to be in the hands of a good experienced pilot, unfortunately there are less of these around as the computur does most of the flying these days. The hero of the Hudson river had years of manual flying experience behind him, today's youngster's do not.
I had heard a story recently that some small airline in Europe (I can't remember which) the captain asked the co-pilot to land the plane. The answer that came back was "What? No, that is not in my job description, the computer will do it"
This default font is sooooooooooooo boring and so are short usernamesComment
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Remember the mid-air collision in a virtually empty sky over Germany a few years ago killing a plane load of Russian kids. Had the Russian pilots done what the computer told them - the kids would be grown up by now.Originally posted by MPwannadecentincome View Postflying by the computer -
remember the airbus that crashed at the paris airshow?
remember the airbus that turned one way when the pilot commanded it to turn the other way?
also the last airfrance flight - apparently dropped out of auto-pilot 'cos it could not cope!
Modern Airbus's will override the manual controls (i.e. the pilot) when the computer thinks it's about to be splattered and take corrective action.Comment
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