Ever try to get the cops to tow an abandoned car?

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
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Article with pics

The Boeing 737 stuck in city road
By Monica Chadha
BBC News, Mumbai

Residents of the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay) are wondering how long it will take to remove a disused Boeing 737 that has been abandoned in a busy road.

The decommissioned aircraft was being driven through the city at the weekend when the driver got lost and then abandoned the plane.

The Boeing used to belong to the private company Air Sahara.

Some locals are angry that no action is being taken to move the plane. Others say it is a tourist attraction.

It appears that after taking a wrong turn, the driver found himself facing a flyover that was too low for him to take the plane under.

The driver has not been seen since and no-one is assuming responsibility for the 737.

Sunday surprise

Restaurant owner Ramji Thapar is one of the puzzled residents of the Chembur area of the city.

Plane stuck in Mumbai
The plane is causing problems for local businesses

He woke up Sunday morning to find the aircraft on a giant trailer abandoned on the road.

"Saturday night I shut shop and go home and everything is fine," he told the BBC news website.

"Sunday morning when I get here, this aircraft is here near my restaurant!"

The fuselage of the decommissioned aircraft, with the engine, wings and tail removed, was being taken by road to the capital Delhi late on Saturday night.

Reports say it was supposed to be used at a flight training academy.

The plane has become the centre of attraction with people coming from all over the city to take a look.

"I've been fascinated with planes and never seen one so closely," engineering student Vamsi Shastri said. "It's huge!"

His friend Ankur Rane said, "It's fascinating to see an airplane on the roads when one is only used to seeing cars and auto rickshaws."

No joke

However, for Pradeep Malhotra, who runs a catering service in the area, the plane has become a huge problem because it is parked right in front of his shop.

Boeing in Mumbai
Residents had assumed the problem would be quickly sorted

"My work is suffering because the food cannot be loaded in the big vehicles," he said.

"I have to load it in the smaller vans and then carry them to the bigger ones parked at the back.

"I don't know how they are going to take it out because you can't reverse it, its too big, and you can't go further down the road."

Some residents said they had not complained simply because they assumed that the authorities would be making it a priority to get the plane out of the city.

Five days on, it is still not clear who is responsible for the aircraft and its transfer to Delhi.
 

theknight571

Platinum Member
Mar 23, 2001
2,896
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LOL... if it had been abandoned in Detroit it would have been stripped and sold for scrap within minutes of being discovered.
 

sao123

Lifer
May 27, 2002
12,653
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Somewhere there is a blond terrorist sitting there thinking... I wonder if I can Hi-Jack that plane!!!
 

manlymatt83

Lifer
Oct 14, 2005
10,051
44
91
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?
 

sao123

Lifer
May 27, 2002
12,653
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Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Thin wings provide better lift. They stay together because they have a full internal support structure.
 

manlymatt83

Lifer
Oct 14, 2005
10,051
44
91
Originally posted by: sao123
Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Thin wings provide better lift. They stay together because they have a full internal support structure.

Still .... wow. I always assumed wings were solid metal.
 

Lonyo

Lifer
Aug 10, 2002
21,938
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Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Originally posted by: sao123
Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Thin wings provide better lift. They stay together because they have a full internal support structure.

Still .... wow. I always assumed wings were solid metal.
Often the wings contain fuel tanks..
 

sao123

Lifer
May 27, 2002
12,653
205
106
Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Originally posted by: sao123
Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Thin wings provide better lift. They stay together because they have a full internal support structure.

Still .... wow. I always assumed wings were solid metal.


If I recall from my engineering classes...
Hollow wings have 90% of the strength as solid ones and only 10% of the weight.


Similarly this is why bridges are build with I beams and not Solid beams.
 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
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Originally posted by: sao123
If I recall from my engineering classes...
Hollow wings have 90% of the strength as solid ones and only 10% of the weight.


Similarly this is why bridges are build with I beams and not Solid beams.

Of course, if something was solid, then it has to support it's own weight as well. If a bridge used solid beams it wouldn't hold it's own weight, much less the traffic.
 

ForumMaster

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2005
7,792
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Originally posted by: sao123
Somewhere there is a blond terrorist sitting there thinking... I wonder if I can Hi-Jack that plane!!!

:laugh: oh god you nailed it bad! nice one!
 

eLiu

Diamond Member
Jun 4, 2001
6,407
1
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Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Originally posted by: sao123
Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Thin wings provide better lift. They stay together because they have a full internal support structure.

Still .... wow. I always assumed wings were solid metal.

Nope... wings are typically a fairly thin "skin" of metal wrapped around spars that run along the chord (shaped like airfoils) and spars that run along the span (for rigidity). Most of the space inside the wing is hollow and typically fuel tanks are installed there.
 

intogamer

Lifer
Dec 5, 2004
19,219
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Originally posted by: mjuszczak
Is that really how thin those wings are? it looks like most of the wing is yellow insulator. How do wings stay together that thin?

Don't the wings have to flex?
 

giantpinkbunnyhead

Diamond Member
Dec 7, 2005
3,251
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HAHA that's rich! When we use up our jets, we just chop them up and sell the scrap to a recycler. Our last 727 we chopped up, was good for about $10,000. They should just chop that thing down too.
 

Parasitic

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2002
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Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth

"I've been fascinated with planes and never seen one so closely," engineering student Vamsi Shastri said. "It's huge!"

?

Has he not been inside of a plane?
 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
2
81
Originally posted by: Parasitic
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth

"I've been fascinated with planes and never seen one so closely," engineering student Vamsi Shastri said. "It's huge!"

?

Has he not been inside of a plane?

Mumbai is a city on the coast of India (formerly Bombay). Chances are that he hasn't.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
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You'd think for something like driving a plane through city streets, they'd have a police escort that would know the way.

Perhaps there is some merit to the overly-cautious ways we do things here. ;)
 

BMdoobieW

Diamond Member
Oct 26, 2000
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haha, that's great. yes, the detailed permitting process employed in major U.S. cities likely prevents this sort of thing, though I'm sure wrong turns still happen.