portlandatheist
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 3,725
It's better to be on the ground wishing you were in the air than being in the air wishing you were on the ground
It's better to be on the ground wishing you were in the air than being in the air wishing you were on the ground
Well, not always.
If you're on the ground you may be wishing all your life.
If you're in the air, you'll soon be on the ground. One way or another.
WOW! That goes on my desktop for a while!
Hans
I wonder how much enhancement has been done to the photo? For example is the lightening added?
The camera used is a model that is 6 years old.
I wonder how much enhancement has been done to the photo? For example is the lightening added?
The camera used is a model that is 6 years old.
No major surprise.
Do they have a big sign up.
"We are still flying" or such![]()
Actually, Travis, the transcript of the cockpit communication of KLM 867 says differently.
Finnish fighter jets damaged by volcanic cloudStrikes me there is a big difference between the incidents that happened previously and now. The current "cloud" is nothing of the sort. It's more a barely discernable haze. Massive over-reaction in my view.
Where did you find the camera info?I wonder how much enhancement has been done to the photo? For example is the lightening added?
The camera used is a model that is 6 years old.
Where did you find the camera info?
Just from looking, it is a large-format film camera, probably Ektachrome,or Fujichrome, which always gives fantastic resolution. I've seen many such images from 6x7, 4x5, and even 70mm cameras in the past...
Ok--but where did you get the info? I can't seem to find it...It was a digital camera (Finepix S3 pro), not a film-cam.
Hawaii fully booked?
Ok--but where did you get the info? I can't seem to find it...
I think he's talking about BA Flight 9, which was another 747 that suffered failure of all four engines after flying through volcanic ash. The crew were oblivious of the ash cloud, and even as they descended they had no idea why the engines had stopped.
Worth noting that the aircraft didn't fall 10,000ft as someone previously mentioned. They put the aircraft into a glide and started to calculate a good ditching spot, but when the oxygen masks deployed one of the aircrew's masks was broken so the pilots increased their rate of descent to get them down to a safe breathing altitude more rapidly.
Given the chaos this is causing I feel slightly guilty about enjoying the shut-down - I live not too far from Heathrow and usually you see dozens and dozens of planes everyday but on Saturday the weather was fantastic and there was not a cloud in the sky and no planes and contrails! I cannot remember ever seeing the sky so clear since my childhood when we lived on the edge of the Sahara.
And although we don't consider the noise from planes a problem around here, this weekend when I was walking in the country I really could tell a difference, the only sounds were those from the birds and other sounds of nature. Fantastic.