I believe the answer is 42%.What's Vref in a blimp? Asking for a friend.
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I believe the answer is 42%.What's Vref in a blimp? Asking for a friend.
You have a 42% chance of getting on.?Maybe the wrong place, but does not seem as if the topic rates it's own thread,....
I have been invited by a friend to play in a member guest at St. Andrews in September, which despite being totally unqualified to do, I have agreed to.
I will be flying from AGS to EDI, and have been offered buddy passes on Delta. I realize that this makes you first on the list to get bumped, but given your expert knowledge, as long as I left 2 days early do you think I would safely be able to make it? He said he can't check on the load factors until closer to the flight time, and I want to get something locked in within the next few days. I want to save the cash if I can, but I don't want to wait too long.
Like I said, I realize there are thousands of variables, but does this scream out " bad idea " to those of you in the know?
I will be flying from AGS to EDI
You need to get from Augusta to Edinburgh?
Worst case scenario, you can always drive.
You have a 42% chance of getting on.?
Interesting. It is obvious that people come to the service (as aviators) with an education in hand so “finding” that they leave the service to bank, build, frack, or litigate is a given. On the other side it looks like careers in the show are on the rise as well. Why someone decides to leave is going to be tough to determine but when you read deeper into the story it seems clear...too many pilots, not enough aircraft or enough flight hours. Or is it? Is it because the higher you rise in the ranks the less you fly? Or is it the lure of “THE SHOW?”
Interesting. It is obvious that people come to the service (as aviators) with an education in hand so “finding” that they leave the service to bank, build, frack, or litigate is a given. On the other side it looks like careers in the show are on the rise as well. Why someone decides to leave is going to be tough to determine but when you read deeper into the story it seems clear...too many pilots, not enough aircraft or enough flight hours. Or is it? Is it because the higher you rise in the ranks the less you fly? Or is it the lure of “THE SHOW?”