LangleyBlue1970
Well-Known Member
Flying? No control.Why ? What reason ?
To Cornwall? Complete fear my family will get wiped out in a crash.
The lakes I know we can get there ok.
Im
Fully aware we could get wiped out seconds into any journey
Flying? No control.Why ? What reason ?
No. Never.Are you ever worried about your pilot’s intentions? The China Eastern airlines flight being a suicide is scary.
A certain Uruguayan rugby team says sit in the middle!It's not flying you need to worry about; It's crashing!!!!
I remember my first long haul flight and I was a little nervous.
This lad says, 'sit at the back'.
I said, 'why?'
His reply: "Planes don't tend to back into mountains!!!"
Did your arse go !?Flown a lot and never bothered me until I sat in the cockpit of a big plane landing on a little Greek island.
The pilots couldn't find the airport and when they did they turned hard and headed down. Every fucking alarm seemed to go off at once.
Everything went.Did your arse go !?
:)
There is a shortage of ATC worldwide. The UK is probably 10-20% short and has been ever since I joined in 1979. As a union, we were forever bailing management out to make the system work with minimal impact on the customer. Voluntary overtime became the norm over the years and we fought and succeeded in making sure it remained voluntary.The U.S. has the safest airspace in the world, and the supposed ATC shortage is only brought up when someone makes a mistake…do they blame staffing.
I have NEVER given it a second thought and while the system can get strained during periods of bad weather, it ALL boils down to individuals doing what they have been trained to do…just like engineers, doctors, nurses, teachers, dentists, etc… These are all professionals who have zero desire to not to a great job!
It’s also concerning how many crashes the US have had historically compared to UK, even adjusting for total number of flights. UK must be doing something right in terms of safety.There is a shortage of ATC worldwide. The UK is probably 10-20% short and has been ever since I joined in 1979. As a union, we were forever bailing management out to make the system work with minimal impact on the customer. Voluntary overtime became the norm over the years and we fought and succeeded in making sure it remained voluntary.
I wouldn't agree that the US system is the safest, in fact far from it. It relies heavily on the weather being good to make their biggest airports operate to capacity but when the weather is poor capacity falls significantly, as it does here but not to the same degree.
The 2 recent crashes at Washington and La Guardia highlighted major deficiencies in some of the US procedures. Neither of these crashes would have happened in the UK without the controller being negligent as the UK would never have allowed what were the root causes.
No system is 100% safe, but the UK is well towards the top. Some of Europe, not so much, and the US in that same lesser category.
Will the emergence of Generative AI help with that gap HB?There is a shortage of ATC worldwide. The UK is probably 10-20% short and has been ever since I joined in 1979.
I appreciate you fighting your corner. ;-)There is a shortage of ATC worldwide. The UK is probably 10-20% short and has been ever since I joined in 1979. As a union, we were forever bailing management out to make the system work with minimal impact on the customer. Voluntary overtime became the norm over the years and we fought and succeeded in making sure it remained voluntary.
I wouldn't agree that the US system is the safest, in fact far from it. It relies heavily on the weather being good to make their biggest airports operate to capacity but when the weather is poor capacity falls significantly, as it does here but not to the same degree.
The 2 recent crashes at Washington and La Guardia highlighted major deficiencies in some of the US procedures. Neither of these crashes would have happened in the UK without the controller being negligent as the UK would never have allowed what were the root causes.
No system is 100% safe, but the UK is well towards the top. Some of Europe, not so much, and the US in that same lesser category.
Good post and nothing against Hampshire but the weather conditions across the US are vastly different to what the UK experiences. I personally feel very safe flying with any British carrier or any US. One thing you don’t have to deal with on US flights is chavs and duty free:)I appreciate you fighting your corner. ;-)
I’ll put Chicago controllers up against all comers.
I do like UK controllers. They’re VERY professional.
Lastly, we run upto 120/hr arrivals in visual conditions, on multiple runways (3 at a time!) but that obviously has to drop during IFR arrivals. Throw in that your “severe weather,” while often very windy, rarely has the massive continental thunderstorms fueled by warm Gulf waters that blow up across the Plains and the deep lows that create Nor’Easters.
I travel through EGTT regularly and it’s better than LFFF, LECM, LECB COMBINED, but I think the airspace density also plays a big part. Eurocontrol is very dense, esp with the military airspace we seem to be avoiding all the time.
Chapeau to all who keep us safe from their green screen. It is GREATLY appreciated, and ANY job that highlights the very few mistakes made only serves to show just how good they do their job!
Tailwinds.
Can you explain whatever you wrote here in simple terms for thick cunts like me ;)?I appreciate you fighting your corner. ;-)
I’ll put Chicago controllers up against all comers.
I do like UK controllers. They’re VERY professional.
Lastly, we run upto 120/hr arrivals in visual conditions, on multiple runways (3 at a time!) but that obviously has to drop during IFR arrivals. Throw in that your “severe weather,” while often very windy, rarely has the massive continental thunderstorms fueled by warm Gulf waters that blow up across the Plains and the deep lows that create Nor’Easters.
I travel through EGTT regularly and it’s better than LFFF, LECM, LECB COMBINED, but I think the airspace density also plays a big part. Eurocontrol is very dense, esp with the military airspace we seem to be avoiding all the time.
Chapeau to all who keep us safe from their green screen. It is GREATLY appreciated, and ANY job that highlights the very few mistakes made only serves to show just how good they do their job!
Tailwinds.
Not for one second do I think you’re thick, but there was some “inside info” talk there, so my apologies!Can you explain whatever you wrote here in simple terms for thick cunts like me ;)?
Hiya. Good that two ex pupils 2 years apart from the same school in Ashton who don't each other apart form on here can have an input on such a niche subject.I appreciate you fighting your corner. ;-)
I’ll put Chicago controllers up against all comers.
I do like UK controllers. They’re VERY professional.
Lastly, we run upto 120/hr arrivals in visual conditions, on multiple runways (3 at a time!) but that obviously has to drop during IFR arrivals. Throw in that your “severe weather,” while often very windy, rarely has the massive continental thunderstorms fueled by warm Gulf waters that blow up across the Plains and the deep lows that create Nor’Easters.
I travel through EGTT regularly and it’s better than LFFF, LECM, LECB COMBINED, but I think the airspace density also plays a big part. Eurocontrol is very dense, esp with the military airspace we seem to be avoiding all the time.
Chapeau to all who keep us safe from their green screen. It is GREATLY appreciated, and ANY job that highlights the very few mistakes made only serves to show just how good they do their job!
Tailwinds.