AggieMike88
Touchdown! Greaser!
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- Jan 13, 2010
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The original "I don't know it all" of aviation.
At least you can't blame the guy for an attempt to be innovative...
Why would the flight crew be on their own?
From the pictures it doesn't appear as though they are invited. Activate this system a whole lot of people are going to be saved and you ain't one of them
Solution in search of a problem.
Hardly innovative; kids in the 1950s were drawing similar ideas on their textbook covers.
So, of all airline events in the past 20 years which involved fatalities, in how many of them do we think this might have possibly helped?
Based on my interpretation of the TNG tech manual you can. From what it says, forward propulsion is achieved by firing the warp coils sequentially with each coil's field building on the one before it. Reverse the order of the firing, and you've got reverse thrust. Though backing off the throttle slightly and/or using the saucer's impulse engines to accelerate would probably be more accurate given the recent warp speed discoveries in real-life!
You guys have it all wrong! This is not intended to save passengers. It's intended to get rid of them!
It's especially handy if the airplane is going to be invaded by a swarm of twelve foot piranha bees or attacked by an enormous mutant star goat.
I was worried about that just the other day.
That would be a handy tool for a terrorist who wanted to drop everyone in the ocean.I was wondering if the flight crew would be able to be saved in the detachable cabin. The cabin would be able to be detached but not the cockpit.
That would be a handy tool for a terrorist who wanted to drop everyone in the ocean.
Just another fee:I can see it now..... Oops that was the wrong lever, we just dropped all the passengers in the ocean.
Solution in search of a problem.
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Silly for safety purposes, but something similar proposed a few months ago to make turnarounds quicker / more efficient / save tons of money? Idea being that you board your "pod" while the inbound flight is landing and taxiing, the arriving pod is removed and your pod put on the plane, and then you're ready for push-back (pending fuel). The arriving pod deplanes ("depods?") separated from any propulsion mechanism, so you never have an airplane sitting around wasting money on the turnaround.
Still seems way too expensive / contrived for what it's worth, but at least a more plausible explanation.
So, of all airline events in the past 20 years which involved fatalities, in how many of them do we think this might have possibly helped?