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I bet there was a few drivers shifting themselves too....He was shifting!
im no pilot, nor do i know if that footage was sped up... i thought the pilot could of scrubbed off more of that speed since its control panels would probably be mechanical rather than assisted. granted we dont know how high the failure occurred or how long into the flight either. when i have been in small planes before i dont recall going that fast at landing. then again perspective may be off between being in the aircraft and watching cctv? hell he may of used the speed to try and get in that gap.. who knows!?
Whoah, careful! You've used two of the "economic crisis" trigger words already. Thank goodness you didn't mention the crew having to "bailout" or we'd be overrun with anarchists telling us to grow our own shoes or something.I to the bank to make the rescue easier.
Are you joking? His lane discipline is all over the shop and I didn't see him check his mirrors once.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-33533821
Pilot appeared to make a good job of that one.
Are you joking? His lane discipline is all over the shop and I didn't see him check his mirrors once.
im no pilot, nor do i know if that footage was sped up... i thought the pilot could of scrubbed off more of that speed since its control panels would probably be mechanical rather than assisted. granted we dont know how high the failure occurred or how long into the flight either. when i have been in small planes before i dont recall going that fast at landing. then again perspective may be off between being in the aircraft and watching cctv? hell he may of used the speed to try and get in that gap.. who knows!?
I mostly fly from a small local airstrip so I see small aircraft going in and out all the time. Those guys take off and land into the wind (unlike me) and therefore their ground speed is reduced. I guess this pilot had no choice on wind direction with it being an emergency and air speed must be maintained to avoid a stall. Good on him for getting everyone safely back on the ground. It does look a little sped up though doesn't it?
I guess this pilot had no choice on wind direction.....

I remember sitting in a meeting in SA a few years ago, and we were talking about the US Airways flight that came down in the Hudson river. The client's Director of Operations was from the US and commented, slightly tongue in cheek, that he'd have tried to bring it in a bit closer to the bank to make the rescue easier. That was the cue for someone to jump in with a remark about 'armchair pilots'. Thing is, the guy was a former Colonel in the US Air Force with Vietnam combat experience, and a lot of civilian flight hours in executive jets behind him...he just smiled.
Pilot or not, it's still easy to say what you'd have done when you weren't the one at the controls.
Captain Sullenberger undoubtedly saved a lot of lives that day.