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Bandit12

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Posts posted by Bandit12

  1. .....very wide ride when viewed from the rear."

     

    At this Tubby woke from his cat nap/microsleep/avgas sniffing induced coma, stretched luxuriously and pondered the benefit of a wide rear.

     

    "I'll give it a whirl" cried Tubby, reaching for his......

     

     

  2. My understanding is that the courses don't generally allow you the choice of flying school, as most have an affiliate school or their own school. The flying component is usually far more expensive than what you would pay if you were going privately - calculated to nicely cover the total amount of available FEE-HELP that you might have.

     

    If you have found one that allows you to do it at your choice of schools, then that sounds much better. Like going to uni though, the pain of paying the bills 10 or 20 years after you finish is sometimes a little hard to take. And if the proposed changes come through, you will have to pay it back even if you die or leave the country!

     

     

  3. Did you notice the "expert" in counter terrorism from RMIT who said that it was undoubtedly done by the pilot? Apparently the pilot decompressed the aircraft, pulled up to 42000' while everyone else died in 9-15 seconds, then he flew merrily along on his way to the deepest part of the ocean so that no one could find the wreckage.

     

    All that analysis from an hourly satellite ping and a few radar returns - this guy is good........

     

    I wonder if he can tell what colour I am thinking of......

     

     

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  4. The video may have already been viewed when I spoke to them, and they may have already discovered the reasons.

    If that is true, they are running the risk of confirmation bias. You have to rule out the factors that didn't cause the accident just as much as rule in the ones that did.

     

     

  5. I remember when we did Project Beacon after the Walsh Street assassinations we were all taught to do the double tap with our .38 revolvers (mainly mod. 19 S&W's but mine was a stainless steel Ruger because I spent a lot of time at sea).Our firearms instructor had just been issued with a Glock 17 for evaluation and his comment then was that it was a lovely piece to use but someone would end up shooting themselves in the leg if they were issued to guys who weren't really well trained. The first to do so was a PSO!

     

    Kaz

    Still happens regularly Kaz - I believe that unintentional discharges in the stations are happening almost weekly.....

     

    Then there was the case of the PSO who drew on another PSO after a dispute. Some people shouldn't be trusted with slingshots, let alone handguns!

     

     

  6. Very sad to hear, condolences to the families.

     

    I'm not a big believer in professional help but don't feel shy to express yourselves to family, friends or here if you're feeling like crap, it will help.

    Most of us blokes aren't big on professional help, and anyone who has been through critical incident debriefing would probably question just how much worth there is in it. For now family and friends are probably the best support, and anything that is causing problems into the future probably warrants professional intervention.

     

     

    • Agree 1
  7. All the bits went back? ALL the bits? C'mon now, NOBODY gets all the bits back....

    I used to keep a jar for all the bits that I couldn't work out where they went. And then other bikes had their spare bits added. Eventually it was remarkable just how often I could find bits I needed for yet another unrelated bike in that jar years later. Possibly not best practice in aviation though, although the weight reduction can't be denied!

     

     

  8. CT110 postie bike - not too expensive, parts are dirt cheap, and nice and simple mechanics to get you started. Haynes workshop manual gives you everything in pictures, and by the time you have finished it (presuming it actually runs and all the bits that came out went back in somewhere.....) you can possibly even make a profit. Or just use it as a cheap hack to get to work and back!

     

     

    • Agree 1
  9. Then there's this thing he wants me to do next day, basically sitting in a room all day and trying to stay alert for 40 minute stretches... can't remember what that's called, just sounds like boredom haha.

    When you remember/go through with it and if you feel like it, would love some more information about what that test is, and to see what justifications there are for it.

     

     

  10. How could you go past the Boomerang?

     

     

    Overweight, underpowered and not maneoverable compared to its opposition. But it was Australian designed and made, which is a poignant reminder of times past when we actually could.

     

    I had the pleasure of watching Aerotec's Boomerang fly out of Toowoomba for a few years, and see it joined by the second one flying.

     

    As for the original question, Spitfire for its grace gets me over the Mustang. Neil William's write up about flying the Spit for the first time is fantastic.

     

     

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