Swing Dangler
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2007
- Messages
- 1,050
the tap airbus was doing 700 kph/434 mph.
Source for speed please?
the tap airbus was doing 700 kph/434 mph.
That is one of the most comical statements I've ever heard.
Perhaps you should do the research. Not only that, fly the beast through several light poles, a trailer, and a fence and then hit the target without clipping the ground.
The pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns but perform one beautifully over the Pentagon area.
Why do you think this amateur pilot decided to take the most difficult route (low altitude through light poles, fences, and trailers) to his target against a newly renovated part of the building instead of slamming it into the roof area?
I would have thought the fear of death in the real thing might be a little more difficult to deal with along with the mechanical unknowns, atmospheric conditions, and the other planes in the air.
No precision? How can you reconcile this with the flight path of 77 and the debris left behind by this lack of precision? Considering birds can punch holes through wings, this guy had great precision to run through light poles and keep the plane level enough and off the deck to hit the bottom floor after clipping a fence and trailer as well.
So simulators are now harder to fly than the real thing? ROFLMAO. That is one of the most comical statements I've ever heard. I would have thought the fear of death in the real thing might be a little more difficult to deal with along with the mechanical unknowns, atmospheric conditions, and the other planes in the air.
The white house (55,000 square feet over 6 above ground floors) is about 1000 times smaller than the Pentagon (approximately 6,636,360 square feet covering 583 acres). The White House is quite hard to spot from the air, given its central location in DC and its small size. The Pentagon, however, sits outside the city limits, and is the largest landmark in that area, sitting next to the other largest landmark, that big river called the Potomac.[...]
Second, he couldn't find the White House but at altitude and several hundred miles away he can find the Pentagon?
Have you ever personally piloted an aircraft? What, other than personal incredulity, is the basis for your disagreement?Anyone could flown like he did without training? ********. You are complete ball of contradictions. The pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns but perform one beautifully over the Pentagon area. Facts? You just make **** up don't you and state them as fact?
I used this exact same argument in a game of darts once. I said, "Who could possibly have thrown this dart, knocked it off the wall and caused it to splash into the drink of that person over there?" I had an incredibly well timed, well placed and well executed shot, but for some reason I didn't get any points.No precision? How can you reconcile this with the flight path of 77 and the debris left behind by this lack of precision? Considering birds can punch holes through wings, this guy had great precision to run through light poles and keep the plane level enough and off the deck to hit the bottom floor after clipping a fence and trailer as well.
Because he was an amateur pilot. He wouldn't know the difference between the easy or the hard path.Why do you think this amateur pilot decided to take the most difficult route (low altitude through light poles, fences, and trailers) to his target against a newly renovated part of the building instead of slamming it into the roof area?
Other planes in the air? You're kidding, right? That's what the terrorists should have been worrying about?So simulators are now harder to fly than the real thing? ROFLMAO. That is one of the most comical statements I've ever heard. I would have thought the fear of death in the real thing might be a little more difficult to deal with along with the mechanical unknowns, atmospheric conditions, and the other planes in the air.
Anyone could flown like he did without training? ********. You are complete ball of contradictions. The pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns but perform one beautifully over the Pentagon area. Facts? You just make **** up don't you and state them as fact?
Why do you think this amateur pilot decided to take the most difficult route (low altitude through light poles, fences, and trailers) to his target against a newly renovated part of the building instead of slamming it into the roof area?
Anyone could flown like he did without training? ********. You are complete ball of contradictions. The pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns but perform one beautifully over the Pentagon area. Facts? You just make **** up don't you and state them as fact?
Source for speed please?
Anyone could flown like he did without training? ********. You are complete ball of contradictions. The pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns but perform one beautifully over the Pentagon area. Facts? You just make **** up don't you and state them as fact?

Second, he couldn't find the White House but at altitude and several hundred miles away he can find the Pentagon?
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Just a couple of comments:
Hani Hanjour had been training as a pilot since 1997, was FAA licensed as a commercial pilot and had IIRC 200+ hours of cockpit and simulator time. I think you're the one making things up and stating them as fact. By the way, as I'm sure you know, your implication that Hanjour aimed at the newly renovated area of the building is a good example of the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy.
Dave
Beachnut-The flying you saw on 9/11 was not the best, it was inexperience pilot at best. You do not understand a bad flight, bad flying looks okay from the ground, but sucks if you are in the plane. These pilots lacked the experience to do even simple turns like you are use to.
In my 34 years of flying I know anyone could fly the way the terrorist did, and without prior flight training. I have trained new pilots in 300,000 pound aircraft. You are not correct, there was no precision at all you have failed to do research; you have failed to get the minimum knowledge on flying. Total failure.
Tjw-
Hani Hanjour held a Commercial pilot certificate. To earn that, he had to perform to this standard for an FAA designee examiner.
TjW-Speaking as a pilot who has taken people for their first flights ever, and allowing them to use the controls at altitude, I have never met a person who was "incapable of doing simple turns".
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.
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?
Would Hani, as a proto-typical terrorist choose to hit the most difficult or the easiest part of the target? I would say easiest.
Would Hani want to hit a part of the Pentagon that is greatly populated or one with very few people in it to cause the greatest loss of life? I would say the greatly populated area.
Would Hani want to do everything possible to complete a successful mission or aim his plane at an area that has a great measure of potential failure associated with it? And yet for some reason he took the greatest route for failure.
But instead Hani hits perhaps the most difficult part of the building along a difficulut flight path to hit a portion of the builiding with very few people. Not only that, he adjusts the flight pattern to do so.
This leads the reasonable person to believe the was aiming for that particular target. Texas Sharpshooter has now left the building.
What other explanation is there? Coincidence?
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.
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?
The Jaguar, eh? Nice.
Not a huge fan of the jets, though. Give me a P-51D, P-38L, Bf-109, Spitfire Mk. IV, Fw 190, or an F4U, and I'd be happy.
Jets, while magnificent machines, just don't seem to capture the same beauty.
(Ps Grandfathers. One of mine managed the dredging of certain Canadian harbors during World War I. Therefore "I have a little bit of knowledge on this subject." Yeah, right. Knowledge is learned, young S.Dangler, not inherited.)
Would Hani, as a proto-typical terrorist choose to hit the most difficult or the easiest part of the target? I would say easiest.
Would Hani want to hit a part of the Pentagon that is greatly populated or one with very few people in it to cause the greatest loss of life? I would say the greatly populated area.
Would Hani want to do everything possible to complete a successful mission or aim his plane at an area that has a great measure of potential failure associated with it? And yet for some reason he took the greatest route for failure.
But instead Hani hits perhaps the most difficult part of the building along a difficulut flight path to hit a portion of the builiding with very few people. Not only that, he adjusts the flight pattern to do so.
This leads the reasonable person to believe the was aiming for that particular target. Texas Sharpshooter has now left the building.
What other explanation is there? Coincidence?
Did you mean Spit XIV?
Swing Dangler, starting watching at the :26 mark.
Now, are you seriously still contending that the A310 is going "near takeoff and landing speed"? Also, how is it flying so close to the runway? Ya know.....ground effect and all.
My irony meter runneth over.![]()
Why yes I have, thank you.Have you ever personally piloted an aircraft? What, other than personal incredulity, is the basis for your disagreement?