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Boeing 757

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What's the pay? How many days off do I get? Those are the two questions that are relevant. Everything else is airliners.net territory.
 
I love the 75...awesome jet. But, the way it was explained to me is that the 757 production line was old school in that it required a lot of manual "craftsmanship" that the 737 doesn't require, so it was relatively expensive to produce. Also, due to it's gear length, it requires more ground support equipment than the 73.

All that being said, I'd love to see a 75NG. I dread being bumped down to the 73, but I think it's inevitable.
 
I'll take a rudder hard over vs. the tail coming off over Jamaica Bay.

The tail came off for a reason. Have you ever slammed any control surface in FULL deflection, right left right left right? I have never. You have 1 FO who severely overreacted to wake turbulence ALWAYS by using the rudder. Introducing severe side load does no good to help a roll rate caused by wake turbulence at 250 kts. He did full opposite deflections 5 times before it snapped. Lets not blame the Airbus for that one. I agree with the NTSB's final conclusion, no matter how much it "hurts."
 
You notice those aircraft were FLOWN to a safe landing? You're airbus pops a few CB's and you're just a passenger.

You're obviously not familiar with the mechanical backup mode. What sort of kills an Airbus is the same that kills e.g. a DC-10, total loss of hydraulic systems. Not sure if the same applies to Boeings.

P.S. btw it's your airbus not you're airbus. :smash:
 
You're obviously not familiar with the mechanical backup mode. What sort of kills an Airbus is the same that kills e.g. a DC-10, total loss of hydraulic systems. Not sure if the same applies to Boeings.

P.S. btw it's your airbus not you're airbus. :smash:
Oh good burn on the grammar.....pretty interesting how defensive you airbi boys are getting. Maybe it's because deep down you know I'm right.
 

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