And ABS brakes.PIN number. ATM machine.
And ABS brakes.PIN number. ATM machine.
On the ATIS at our local airport - "Please do not park aircraft in red box on north end of ramp". THE red box. THE ramp.
I always want to make a t shirt with a stick figure of someone holding a roll of toilet paper in one hand and a bottle of mouth wash in the other with the caption "ATM Machine" just to see what percentage of the population gets it.
"Flight 209 now arriving, Gate 8... Gate 9... Gate 10... Pull on a lever. Push a button! Gate 13... Gate 14... Gate 15... Auntie Em, Uncle Henry, Toto! It's a twister! It's a twister! Gate 23... 24... 25..."
Well I could give a rats ass, but I won't. Do you know their value in a Somali prison?"I could care less" implies that the writer cares to some degree, so in that sense, you're right, but the statement does not rule out the possibility that they might actually care a lot. I don't think that's what people are trying to convey when they say it.
When I was young, no one ever said "I could care less." It was always "I couldn't care less," which conveys the idea that they care so little that it would not be possible to care less.
The thread title DOES start with the words "extremely minor."Well I could give a rats ass, but I won't. Do you know their value in a Somali prison?
Referring to paved aircraft ramps as “tarmac”; “tarmac” is a material, not a place.
pilot license
Auntie Em, Uncle Henry, Toto! It's a twister! It's a twister!
That is a drawing of a rare-- and outrageously valuble--1968 1/2 Cessna 150I, the "eye" waa built as the ultimate patrol craft and had a special cantilevered left wing to give the pilot a better view..says the user with an avatar that has the copilot's side wing strut but is missing the pilot's side (that might make my list of minor pet peeves)
Any aircraft announcing a long final to a busy airport with planes in the pattern.
Loose belts in a Cessna tend to get between the seat rollers and the rail, and they get torn up. That gets expensive. We taught the students to clip the lap belts together to prevent that.
We also taught them to never put the headset on the glareshield. They scratch the windshield, and the magnets in the earcup speakers can trash the compass after a while.
I learned to fly at a Navy flying club, and my instructor taught me to always leave the plane w/ the seatbelt buckled and pulled tight. I still do that today, unless I know I no else has the plane next, like when I take it on a trip. But when I get back home, that is the way I leave it. It rankles me that one of my partners leaves the seatbelts in disarray every single time. I'll never saying anything to him, but you'd think he would find it convenient to always find the seatbelts in an orderly manner, and pick up on it.
Using the term airplane or aircraft for helicopters is very much US Army vernacular…with four subgroups…Gun/Attack…Scouts…Lift or Medivac rare to even use the term helicopter in operational order or in daily speaking unless your talking outside of aviation. Then again things change in the CAV when you start tasking Red…White…Pink and Heavy Pink…but when your flying with spurs on your different already.
Another pet peeve is “aircrafts”. Yeah, we get it. British English uses that.
See, I have the same, but the other way.pilot license
And concrete is not tarmac. Even asphalt is not tarmac.
guaaarrrddd!!!*meow*
Fuel caps with no chain.