
June 14th 18, 10:22 AM
posted to uk.transport.london
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2014
Posts: 2,990
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Plan to pedestrianise London's Oxford Street scrapped
wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jun 2018 15:52:20 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote:
wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jun 2018 14:30:38 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote:
wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jun 2018 13:52:47 +0100
John Williamson wrote:
On 13/06/2018 12:02, wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jun 2018 11:31:18 +0100
John Williamson wrote:
Where the 25 mile approach path is not available, pilots have a low
opinion of the safety of using the airport, and the old Hong Kong
Someone better tell London City where final approach starts over
southwark
all of 6 miles away when landing from the west. Admittedly its smaller
planes
but they're still airliners, not cessnas.
Puddle jumpers. Now try the same trick with a 747 or Airbus 380, which
According to wonkypedia the largest aircraft that can use london city is
the bombardier C100. 108 pax and 60 tons MTOW. Hardly a puddle jumper.
normal 3 degrees for Heathrow and other major airports. A big jet can't
approach at 6 degrees safely anywhere near full load, as they tend to
stall and fall out of the sky.
That sounds iffy to me, got a citation?
Your extraordinary ignorance is on display, yet again.
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/ar...london-steep-a
proach-with-lega-425613
Sorry, that article is supposed to tell me what? Nowhere does it state that
big jets would stall at a 6 deg approach angle.
It says they can't land at more than a 3° angle. If you knew even a little
It says nothing of the sort. Are you such a complete ****ing moron that you
don't even read the articles you post links to??
"The approach glidepath angle to land at most airports is a steady 3°"
Feel free to point out where exactly that means airliners are incapable of
landing at more than 3 degs and will stall at 6. I notice the other guy never
posted a link to back up this assertion. Funny that.
You've had your free education for this month. Go and do your own research.
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