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monster500

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Viewing 15 posts - 346 through 360 (of 726 total)
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  • in reply to: General Discussion #401224
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Buran

    it’s actually on display in Sydney Australia at a museum.

    in reply to: Buran #1976053
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Buran

    it’s actually on display in Sydney Australia at a museum.

    in reply to: GREEK SPOTTERS #712996
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Greek spotters

    The Greek’s are very cautios about Airport security, in the 70s Greece was often a target of terrorism, it also has a known terrorist organization, November17 is the name, All of Athens airport is marked not to take photographs.

    in reply to: Airline food #713896
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Airline food

    best i have had is JAL or ANA or QANTAS
    worst was Lufthansa and KLM

    in reply to: General Discussion #402098
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Malaysia Petronas-the motorsport giant of Asia.

    hey Tomel
    can you give some bus company names from Singapore to KL please
    and some links if you have them
    thanx

    in reply to: Malaysia Petronas-the motorsport giant of Asia. #1976517
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Malaysia Petronas-the motorsport giant of Asia.

    hey Tomel
    can you give some bus company names from Singapore to KL please
    and some links if you have them
    thanx

    in reply to: Lockerbe #714389
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Lockerbe

    The wreckage of a Japan Airlines Boeing 747 that crashed on Mt. Osutaka, Japan. Five-hundred twenty people out of 524 aboard were killed. Improper repairs by Boeing after a tail strike 7 years earlier, led to a rupture of the pressure bulkhead and loss of all controls. (August 12, 1985)

    Attachments:
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dc47dc087117438.jpg

    in reply to: Lockerbe #714391
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Lockerbe

    [updated:LAST EDITED ON 03-11-02 AT 01:21 AM (GMT)]the worst crash was a JAL 747 in Japan in the mid 80s
    over 500 souls were lost
    It is still the worst single aircraft crash in the world.

    Japan Airlines Crash

    A Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 jetliner carrying 524 people slammed into a mountain and burst into flames Monday and rescue teams reaching the wreckage the next morning found at least four survivors of what may be the world’s worst disaster involving one plane. The jet, JAL Flight 123 from Tokyo’s Haneda airport to the western city of Osaka, crashed in remote, thickly wooded mountains some 60 miles northwest of Tokyo.
    Wednesday, August 14, 1985
    (UPI) — Tail sections of JAL Flight 123 ripped away from the plane before it pitched and rolled “all over the sky” in a terrifying 30-minute death plunge that killed 520 people, Japan Air Lines said Wednesday. Police said they found the flight recorders from the plane that crashed two days ago in the worst single airplane disaster in aviation history.

    Thursday, August 29, 1985
    (UPI) — The U.S. team investigating the Japan Air Lines jumbo jet crash is almost certain a rear cabin bulkhead failed before the accident, allowing pressurized air to burst the plane’s tail, investigative sources said Thursday. The sources, who are familiar with the investigation but spoke on condition they not be further identified, said American officials are “80 percent” sure the bulkhead split open before the crash.

    http://www.mahk.com/sc1785.htm

    in reply to: Who is launch customer for the A380 #714398
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Who is launch customer for the A380

    Emirates is the launch customer of the A380

    AIRBUS A380

    Airbus Industrie is proceeding with the launch of the A380 aircraft.

    The A380 (capable in its various configurations of carrying between 550 and nearly 1,000 passengers) will provide a totally new flying experience.

    Airbus describes its new creation as a “cruise ship of the skies”, conjuring up images of the days when the great passenger liners plied the Atlantic.

    Business travellers might have the use of beds and possibly showers.

    There will be a thickly carpeted salon, a wide staircase, an upper dining area, a gym, duty free shopping areas and maybe a casino.

    Passengers, particularly those travelling in first and business classes, will have more space to walk about than offered in the present generation of wide bodied aircraft.

    In the initial version, the A380-100 will be able to carry 555 passengers in a 3 class cabin configuration, over distances up to 7,650 nautical miles.

    The A380 is scheduled to make its first flight in 2004 and enter service in late 2005.

    Emirates is to be a launch customer for the A380, and other airlines including Singapore Airlines, Qantas Airways and Virgin Atlantic have placed orders.

    The A380-100 will offer 17 per cent lower seat operating costs compared with the Boeing 747-400 according to Airbus, while providing up to 35 per cent more seats and 350 nm more range.

    Take a peek inside ……….

    A380 Cabin Seating

    A380 Interior Design Concepts

    http://www.airlinequality.com/main/airbus_a3xx.htm

    in reply to: United Airlines Experiences? #714411
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: United Airlines Experiences?

    I have had the misfortune of travelling UAL maybe 7 or 8 times. The service was pretty slack, The 777 from Frankfurt to Washington Dulles was an ok trip, But the attitude and service was shocking, T5 this flight is considerd Medium Haul, You will need to fly a little farther, nonstop for it to be Longhaul, For mine a better choice would have been Delta, I am just looking at there website now, For a near bankrupt company, they must have some capital somewhere if they can afford to give away BMW X5s, You will be at Heathrow T3, and the lounge is available to Star Alliance and Business and First class Customers only, it’s called the REd Carpet Club, Have fun in NYC, it’s a great place.

    in reply to: PH-BUF #714456
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: PH-BUF

    here it is, in happier times, and the aftermath of the crash.
    Attachments:
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dc4141626bd6ae4.jpg
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dc4144e27056a10.jpg

    in reply to: Why do I always have to check in idiot customers at check in #715373
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Why do I always have to check in idiot customers at check in

    If he is flying to DXB they issue the visa on arrival, i am headed there today.

    in reply to: General Discussion #403356
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Images of your police force.

    here is a picture of the West Australian Police, PolAir 1 it is known as. The car is a V8 Holden Commodorre, known as one of the fastest Police cars in the world.
    Attachments:
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dbc8722430c11a8.jpg
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dbc87f944df6edb.jpg

    in reply to: Images of your police force. #1977185
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Images of your police force.

    here is a picture of the West Australian Police, PolAir 1 it is known as. The car is a V8 Holden Commodorre, known as one of the fastest Police cars in the world.
    Attachments:
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dbc8722430c11a8.jpg
    http://www.keypublishing.com/forum/importedfiles/3dbc87f944df6edb.jpg

    in reply to: General Discussion #403361
    monster500
    Participant

    RE: Hostages die in Moscow operation

    Yes it seems most of the hostages were killed by the Russian Gas that was used to put the terrorists to sleep, I t has been revealed the gas was a general aneasthetic of some sort.

    By Elizabeth Piper

    MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russian officials refused to give any details on Sunday of a mysterious gas used to end a Moscow theatre siege in which at least 118 hostages died, raising questions about whether the gas had killed them.

    The Kremlin and medical experts were silent about a television report that Russian special forces who stormed the theatre in the early hours of Saturday had killed hostages when they used the sleep-inducing gas.

    NTV television reported two hostages — a Dutch national and a Kazakh national — had died from gas poisoning.

    The unidentified chemical was so powerful that the Chechen suicide fighters who had been filmed during the siege toying with detonators attached to explosives strapped to their waists had no time to set them off.

    There have been suggestions that the troops used nerve gas.

    Sergei, 36, who declined to give his family name, told Reuters after he was released from hospital that the gas had smelled slightly bitter. Chemical warfare experts say nerve gas often smells of bitter almonds.

    London-based security expert, Michael Yardley, said he believed the gas used was BZ, a colourless, odourless incapacitant with hallucinogenic properties, first used by the United States in Vietnam.

    He said the symptoms displayed by the hostages in Moscow — inability to walk, memory loss, fainting, heartbeat irregularities, sickness — all pointed to BZ. According to the U.S. army the side effects last 60 hours, Yardley said.

    “The Russians wouldn’t want a big shout about it because it (BZ) is just the sort of stuff they are not supposed to have,” he said. “It’s not specifically banned, but…it is in a sort of grey area.”

    MOUTHS WIDE OPEN

    Film taken after the special forces stormed the theatre to free more than 750 hostages showed a woman slumped back on a chair with her mouth wide open, and a bag of explosives tied to her front.

    “A panic went up among us and people were screaming, ‘Gas! gas!’ and, yes, there was shooting,” theatre director Georgi Vasilev, one of the hostages, told Reuters.

    “But then everyone fell quickly down. And then, I was told by one woman while we were in hospital together, but who didn’t fall asleep immediately because she covered her mouth and nose, that it was very strange to look at everyone.

    “You see, when the shooting began, they (the rebels) told us to lean forward in the theatre seats and cover our heads behind the seats. But then everyone fell asleep. And they (the rebels) were sitting there with their heads thrown back and their mouths wide open.”

    Though the government says it freed over 750 hostages it has not given any information on how many were hospitalised nor how many were affected by the gas.

    One hostage told Interfax news agency that he saw the guerrillas convulse and slump because of gas.

    “After the first shots at the hostages gas came in, I saw how a terrorist sitting at the scene jumped up and tried to get a respirator. I saw how he convulsed and tried to put the mask to his face and then fell,” the unidentified witness said.

    REPORTS OF GAS DEATHS

    A Health Ministry official quoted by Interfax confirmed that 118 hostages had died, with 50, or nearly all, of their captors.

    Earlier, Russian officials said the gas was the “special means” to stop the guerrillas from blowing up the theatre. The guerrillas had threatened to start killing hostages if Moscow did not withdraw its troops from their homeland.

    In Moscow, distraught relatives begged for information on loved ones, and police checked cars, passengers and luggage to prevent a feared repeat attack.

    Police said they could not immediately confirm a report on Sunday that police in Moscow had charged three Chechens with being involved in preparations for the hostage-taking.

    Local television said police detained a Chechen woman who had been in hospital on suspicion of involvement in the attack.

    The heightened security meant that many Russians could not get in to see relatives being treated in hospitals.

    “They carried out the operation to the end, but they haven’t worked out what to do for the relatives. Many cannot find their family members,” said Anatoly Belayusov, whose 28-year-old daughter Lyuybov was missing after the siege.

    FORGIVENESS

    President Vladimir Putin asked for forgiveness from the relatives of the dead.

    He declared Monday a national day of mourning as dozens of sympathisers left flowers and cards on a low wall near the theatre. Officers in camouflage and with sniffer dogs entered the building to check for booby traps.

    “I would like to address primarily the relatives and friends of those killed. We could not save everyone,” Putin said in a television broadcast late on Saturday. “Please forgive us.”

    Looking exhausted, Putin called on Russians to rebuild their confidence in a country which had dealt with “armed scum”.

    On Wednesday night, the guerrillas burst into a Moscow musical theatre and vowed to kill audience members and staff if Russia failed to pull out troops that returned to Chechnya three years ago on Putin’s orders.

    Chechnya’s fugitive rebel president, Aslan Maskhadov, condemned the siege, saying he rejected “terror as a method of reaching any goals”.

    A senior aide to Maskhadov said the drama meant Moscow had to choose between talking to gunmen or the man elected president of the breakaway North Caucasus republic in 1997. He warned there could be more such attacks.

Viewing 15 posts - 346 through 360 (of 726 total)