RotorAndWing
Final Approach
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Rotor&Wing
Here's something interesting: Boeing 727
I love the three-holer. The first airliner I ever got to fly in as a kid (PHX-IAD non-stop in 1981). Still my favorite jet.
Cool sight, thanks. Did you fly any props, ie Connie, DC4,6 etc?
None of the transport stuff.
72 is transport, or did you mean passenger airlines 727?
Too bad most of the picture links are broke.
Too bad most of the picture links are broke.
Works for me. Good read, thanks.
Did you prefer the short or long body?
I love the three-holer. The first airliner I ever got to fly in as a kid (PHX-IAD non-stop in 1981). Still my favorite jet.
Every 727 I worked on, the DB Cooper lock was spring loaded and actuated by aerodynamic load. Never had to touch it on the ground.
Every 727 I worked on, the DB Cooper lock was spring loaded and actuated by aerodynamic load. Never had to touch it on the ground.
Me too...Every 727 I worked on, the DB Cooper lock was spring loaded and actuated by aerodynamic load. Never had to touch it on the ground.
And you guys would never think to tell anybody about that? Like a pilot or maintenance? I'm surprised that this made it past the preflight. I know it was a long time ago, and it's all water under the bridge, and it really doesn't matter at this point, but if I was doing a walkaround and the DB Cooper lock was stuck (it was required to check that it swung freely and snapped back into place), I'd call maintenance and the plane would be grounded until it was fixed. The aft airstairs were an emergency exit, and it would suck to have people trying to evacuate using the aft airstairs, but they couldn't lower the ramp because no one ever told maintenance that the DB Cooper lock was stuck.They'd get stuck as I recall. They were a little bent and beat up by the time I was working 72s on the ramp. We'd pull a belt loader back there and stand on it to reach up to flip it.
I'm wondering if the airplane Nate is talking about happened to be N220NE operated by Emery and Charter America...
For those not familiar, that airplane was the infamous TWA 727 that rolled inverted in Michigan. It was still flying long after the incident, but let's just say the airframe was never the same. Kind of tweaked....I could see the DB Cooper latch being stuck on that one.
Me too...
And you guys would never think to tell anybody about that? Like a pilot or maintenance? I'm surprised that this made it past the preflight. I know it was a long time ago, and it's all water under the bridge, and it really doesn't matter at this point, but if I was doing a walkaround and the DB Cooper lock was stuck (it was required to check that it swung freely and snapped back into place), I'd call maintenance and the plane would be grounded until it was fixed. The aft airstairs were an emergency exit, and it would suck to have people trying to evacuate using the aft airstairs, but they couldn't lower the ramp because no one ever told maintenance that the DB Cooper lock was stuck.
I'm wondering if the airplane Nate is talking about happened to be N220NE operated by Emery and Charter America...
For those not familiar, that airplane was the infamous TWA 727 that rolled inverted in Michigan. It was still flying long after the incident, but let's just say the airframe was never the same. Kind of tweaked....I could see the DB Cooper latch being stuck on that one.
The laches had a good spring on them and I never saw one that hung. As others said, that's an emergency exit and if anyone ever saw one not working it would be fixed before the next flight.
Remember these planes would get a maintenance preflight, the engineer would do a preflight and after landing maintenance would do a walk around.
Something like that would get noticed.