Ty Webb said:
I see now. The profile is required reading so that implications made by posters are not taken the wrong way. Sorry dude but you said what you said and it implied that you'd had the RJ up there and that's that. And if you aren't flying the RJ then what exactly do you have to say about cruising at FL410 that's of
ANY relevance whatsoever to the subject? What's being discussed (in part) here is whether this crew had any business taking a
Canadair Regional Jet to that altitude that night, not a 737!
So that it's clear, here's a reminder of what you wrote:
Ty Webb said:
Let's see, on my last four-day pairing, I am sure I was at FL410 several times.
Perhaps a better way to have said it (if you want to be perfectly clear about it) would have been to add "...in my 737 - (or whatever)."
Ty Webb said:
I didn't say I flew a CRJ, I said that someone could couple up an off-hand statement and a cruise flight at MAX FL and make anyone look like a risk-taker.
I don't quite get that either from what you wrote. Again, here is what you really wrote:
Ty Webb said:
I am sure that, after shutting down the engines at the gate and the Parking Check was run, I probably said something like "Well, we cheated death again" or something similar. Thank god nothing happened on the next leg where one of you douchebags could sit here and say that I had no business at 410 (I did) or that my comment indicated a disregard for safety (it doesn't).
I just don't see the same theme in your original post as you are trying claim is there in your response to me. But, to be fair, I can honestly say that if you jsut barely got yourself up there, stalled the airplane reapeatedly, and then failed to make proper command decisions on the way down with your double flameout and crashed as a result, I'd be an equal opportunity critic of your actions!
Ty Webb said:
And, after re-reading this string, apparently, you don't seem to even know the difference between "airport analysis" and "High-altitude cruise" data, so I can see spending any more time in a discussion with you is like wrestling with a pig.
Too bad you had to be the pig though huh?
Here's the deal with the Airport analysis comment. Here's what I wote in regard to
aircraft perfromance in general, using airport analysis in particular as an example.
Dumbledore said:
Sorry dude but that won't fly. It won't fly for the same reason that, as EVERYONE here who has ever ACTUALLY flown an airliner knows, there are times when you just can't have the faith in the airport analysis that it's supposed to inspire - your airplane is just too whooped and the engines are just too tired. Sometimes the airplane you have in your possession just won't do what it would have done the day it rolled out green from the factory.
That's what I wrote. Now let me translate it for you because although you claim to have read it you are clearly unable to undestand it.
Sometimes when you fly airliners of a common type they have a book in the cockpit called an airport analysis binder. In it you can find takeoff and landing data for each airport the crew might need to use boiled down to just one thing - weight. This is a nice thing to have on hand because it makes quick work of calculating takeoff performance in a way that is quite usable to the crew as far as their bottom line goes.
There are times though, when you've been handed the keys to SN 5 or 6 of that type and she's and old lady now. Her engines run a little warm and she needs a few units of trim that weren't needed when she was part of the manufacturer's certification test flight program. When you've got old Bessie, it is often wise to not quite believe what the airport analysis tells you about what she'll do.
Similarly, there are times when you can look at the cruise performance charts all day long and it won't improve old Bessie's chances of making it where you (foolishly) wanna try taking her.
What was that about a yapper? You might consider taking your own advice!