Schadenfroh
Elite Member
- Mar 8, 2003
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i have relatives that work as engineers at boeing designing the crap (not that its crap, sorta a pronoun for a general term), so boeing
Originally posted by: FlyingShawn
As a pilot (private for now, but studying to be a professional pilot when I graduate college), I've gotta say Boeing all the way. Both Boeing's newest planes and Airbus's are fly-by-wire, but they have a completely different philosophy on how they do it. They need the fly-by-wire because the new planes are not very stable (being unstable can increase speed and efficiency if done properly), so computers have to do the actual flying. When a pilot moves a control, he is making a request for the computer to move the airplane in that manner. The difference between the companies is this: When a Boeing pilot makes a control input and the computer disagrees about the safety of following that command; the pilot has the final authority. In Airbus, it's the opposite. I know of at least one Airbus crash because the plane's computer was confused about what was going on and refused to obey the pilot's orders.
Of the aviation community that I have encountered (between my fellow students and my professors), I have yet to meet someone who doesn't prefer Boeing's philosophy of trusting the pilot. Some analysts would counter that overall, there are less crashes of Airbus planes, but I don't know if the statistics they are looking at include Boeing's older (non fly-by-wire) aircraft (I think they do); which should be left out of the discussion for that reason.
FlyingShawn
Originally posted by: Aquaman
Originally posted by: pyonir
Originally posted by: Aquaman
Originally posted by: pyonir
Which ever one gets me to my destination safely. I couldn't care less.
Fly air china........... pilots are ex-military mig pilots :Q
Cheers,
Aquaman
I would have absolutely no reason to fly Air China.
Ok........ how about Aeroflot
Cheers,
Aquaman
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: FlyingShawn
As a pilot (private for now, but studying to be a professional pilot when I graduate college), I've gotta say Boeing all the way. Both Boeing's newest planes and Airbus's are fly-by-wire, but they have a completely different philosophy on how they do it. They need the fly-by-wire because the new planes are not very stable (being unstable can increase speed and efficiency if done properly), so computers have to do the actual flying. When a pilot moves a control, he is making a request for the computer to move the airplane in that manner. The difference between the companies is this: When a Boeing pilot makes a control input and the computer disagrees about the safety of following that command; the pilot has the final authority. In Airbus, it's the opposite. I know of at least one Airbus crash because the plane's computer was confused about what was going on and refused to obey the pilot's orders.
Of the aviation community that I have encountered (between my fellow students and my professors), I have yet to meet someone who doesn't prefer Boeing's philosophy of trusting the pilot. Some analysts would counter that overall, there are less crashes of Airbus planes, but I don't know if the statistics they are looking at include Boeing's older (non fly-by-wire) aircraft (I think they do); which should be left out of the discussion for that reason.
FlyingShawn
Didn't that Airbus crash over Queens because the pilot was giving rudder inputs to it that resulted in the tail breaking off due to stress. Shouldn't their fly by wire system have prevented that? Seems to me like the computer should know how much stress the plane can take and prevent the pilot from doing anything that would break the plane in mid air.
Originally posted by: Passions
Boeing because Airbus gets unfair subsidizes. And they are just snotty europeans, who have no love or appreciation for hard-working Americans who play by the rules.
Boeing takes great risk and spurns imagination, a culture of flying and love for the skies, every plane carrying a rich history of Bill Boeing with it. While Airbus gets pampered by lousy countries, and mass produces soul-less flying heaps of metal.
GO BOEING!
Originally posted by: Falloutboy
gotts support boeing since thier a US company