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When I used to come home from Hamburg in the eighties the computer used to bring the plane to about 10M above the long LHR runway then what seemed to be an intermingle time later the pilot would wake up "oh yes we are supposed to be stopping here" and switch it off and we would come down with a bump.
Quote from: syhprum on 14/11/2009 17:16:16When I used to come home from Hamburg in the eighties the computer used to bring the plane to about 10M above the long LHR runway then what seemed to be an intermingle time later the pilot would wake up "oh yes we are supposed to be stopping here" and switch it off and we would come down with a bump. Yes. I've noticed something like that quite often. I think it might be something to do with "ground effect". A plane tends to float on a cushion of air the closer it gets to the ground. Sometimes it seems as if they really have to force them on to the runway. Other times they seem to be able to land so gently you don't even notice they have landed. Any pilots out there?
One day the Americans will lose a city due to their Imperial/SI units confusion while testing nuclear warheads then maybe they will adopt the metric system.
Lee, there is flying into the ground and flying into the ground. Good grief, in the video the pilot made no attempt to reduce is descent slope at all. Perhaps he was an ex-navy pilot thinking he was hitting the deck of a carrier. There is a compromise that can be reached without such disasterous results. It can be done quite safely. Carrier pilots do it because they have to hit the deck in a particular region to catch the arrester system and, also, the deck is likely to be going up and down just to make it harder. In fact this site suggests that (gently) flying the aircraft into the ground is commonly used. You level out close to the ground and cut the engine, but the implication is there is no need to wait for a stall to drop you down. http://www.auf.asn.au/groundschool/umodule12.html
When I used to come home from Hamburg in the eighties the computer used to bring the plane to about 10(metres?) above the long LHR runway then what seemed to be an interminable time later the pilot would wake up "oh yes we are supposed to be stopping here" and switch it off and we would come down with a bump.