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Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?

Old 11-26-2013 | 07:06 AM
  #143481  
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Originally Posted by orvil
I agree with TS. I think these guys just found something better.

I came from the military and had very little interaction with people who had what we would call regular jobs. Once I was at DL I saw there were a lot of ways to make money.

We have a good job but not a great job. I have been lucky in when I was hired so I haven't been furloughed, but I always said that flying is not the only thing I could do. Perhaps that is what these guys have done.
Of the three guys I remember from my New Hire class that haven't returned - one quit after 9/11, his wife was freaked when he flew and she came from BIG $$$, the two others have done Mil Leave to finish their 20 and are returning. I don;t know any they gave up DAL for other flying jobs. I'm sure some are making better $$ in Law or Wall St. There was one chick that left Corp flying to be an RN. Not sure I'd do that....There hours are worse than ours.

Baja.
Old 11-26-2013 | 07:55 AM
  #143482  
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Originally Posted by NuGuy
I wouldn't read too much into guys or gals electing to not return. Sometimes there are equities in life that go beyond the mere W-2.

A common theme I've seen is going to work at the family business. Mom n Pop sends you to school, and you get the flying bug. You give it a whirl and make it to the big show. Money's good and responsibility is pretty light....until the BK hits.

While on furlough you go back to work with the family, and you come to realize that owning your own business is really the only way to become truly in charge of your destiny, and one of the few ways to generate true wealth.

Or someone may have married into, or had their SOs work develop into a good situation.

Or perhaps parenting became a priority.

Or they found something they just like better.

Look, I don't deny it's a good gig that pays a fair number of quatloos, but it's hardly the center of the universe.

Nu
How many just can't get a new medical?

Old 11-26-2013 | 08:07 AM
  #143483  
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From: DAL 330
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Originally Posted by Boomer
How many just can't get a new medical?


Future Mayor of Toronto???

Scoop
Old 11-26-2013 | 08:09 AM
  #143484  
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One good thing about being an airline pilot, is you can run the family business and fly*.

*As long as you don't commute.
Old 11-26-2013 | 08:19 AM
  #143485  
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I gave Capt OE to a guy who was also a dentist. He said he was the black sheep in is family because both his sister and brother were doctors and lawyers. After the second day I asked him to stop asking me questions about the 330 because he was making me feel really stupid.
Old 11-26-2013 | 08:29 AM
  #143486  
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Originally Posted by tomgoodman
I believe that a rocket launched from the Kourou (French Guiana) site can handle a geostationary payload about 15% greater than if launched from Canaveral. Perhaps this satellite isn't heavy enough to require the extra performance, and they already have infrastructure in place at the Cape. If they moved the same rocket to Kourou it would still have to be fully fueled, for structural reasons, so they'd just schedule a shorter burn.
I guess that's right. If they didn't need the extra payload capacity.

I didn't know that those rockets need to launch fully loaded with fuel for structural reasons. They're most vulnerable structurally at MaxQ, and fuel at that velocity is well below full.

Carl
Old 11-26-2013 | 08:34 AM
  #143487  
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Originally Posted by Boomer
How many just can't get a new medical?

Reminds me of Jay Leno's joke. He recounted a study that said by the year 2020, half of all Americans will have diabetes. Then Leno says: "Which means that the other half of America will have diabetes by tomorrow."

Carl
Old 11-26-2013 | 08:55 AM
  #143488  
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Originally Posted by Carl Spackler
I didn't know that those rockets need to launch fully loaded with fuel for structural reasons. They're most vulnerable structurally at MaxQ, and fuel at that velocity is well below full.

Carl
You're right. I was thinking of the Atlas, which had to have the tanks pressurized if not full of fuel to prevent collapse from its own weight.
Old 11-26-2013 | 09:03 AM
  #143489  
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Originally Posted by scambo1
Can it do a vnav descent with a tailwind?
Maybe a little better than some of -800 I've flown. 85 kt tailwind and had to pop the boards out for a moment to cross polar.
Old 11-26-2013 | 09:08 AM
  #143490  
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From: Boeing Hearing and Ergonomics Lab Rat, Night Shift
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Originally Posted by tomgoodman
I believe that a rocket launched from the Kourou (French Guiana) site can handle a geostationary payload about 15% greater than if launched from Canaveral. Perhaps this satellite isn't heavy enough to require the extra performance, and they already have infrastructure in place at the Cape. If they moved the same rocket to Kourou it would still have to be fully fueled, for structural reasons, so they'd just schedule a shorter burn.
Lots of extra fuel on the Falcon 9, enough -in fact- to do this after launching a payload to orbit:



(Grasshopper is the Falcon 9 first stage, this is obviously a landing test. The last Falcon 9 first stage did perform the powered return test over water...)

Cheers
George
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