Steve, 

 

Back in the old days, when I could tolerate Scientific American, there was a 
fascinating article on Pendulum-pneumatic trains.  You know, if you just dug 
deep enough you could get from Boston to NYC in an hour, with a push from the 
air behind you.  Who needs windows!  As a person who first discovered his 
capacity for claustrophobia in the BART tunnel under the Bay, shortly after it 
was constructed,  I am not sure I would be able spend an hour in a pneumatic 
capsule no matter how fast it got me there.  What would you do if the guy in 
the seat behind you started decompensating when you were several thousand feet 
under Middlebury CT?  

HOOOO, boy! 

 

Nick 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2020 12:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] Flight Training and Deprecated Skills/Languages, etc.

 

I actually knew someone who lived near the Embry-Riddle location in 2000/2001 
where several of the 9/11 pilots learned to fly well enough to do what they 
did.   She had friends (go figure) who worked at a strip-club who claimed these 
"boys" were regulars there.  It was pretty creepy 2nd order connection.   

My uncles were both pilots in WWII but the older was trained up on the 
newfangled idea of a helicopter and proceeded to become a test pilot for 
Sykorski.  He was forced into retirement (chief test pilot) to a desk at 65.   
Nobody wanted to ground him, but "rules is rules" and in fact his health 
degraded acutely and abruptly and he died just a few years later.  His family 
insists it was from "heartbreak" from being grounded.   

I have a "young" friend (now 40s) who was just finishing up his commercial 
certification at Embry-Riddle Prescott on 9/11 and claims that the bottom not 
only dropped out for commercial pilots for the next couple of years, but has 
"never recovered" and he has been making a living as a bartender ever since.   
Perhaps it is time for him to revisit.  

My ex brother-in-law left his career in the Air Force to become "a bus driver" 
and recently was retired (for age) from Delta.   Even 30 years ago things were 
incredibly automated.   I see no reason that airliners won't be entirely 
automated and teleoperated in the next 20 years.   The risk-profile of such 
things is evolving as self-driving cars (and more aptly? Semi-tractors?) 
emerge.   

The hyperloop game is going to change long distance rapid-transit eventually.   
I don't believe anyone is planning for underground 
"ballistic-trajectory-velocities" quite yet, but mag-lev-centered, evacuated 
tube, zero-grade velocities could still be pretty impressive, and energy 
consumption as well with magnetic (regenerative) braking.     The earliest days 
of railroading involved gravity-trains often with empty return cars being towed 
by animal power.   Yet others used water from the high-side source as "ballast" 
and if the up/down routes were mechanically coupled, the extra weight of water 
plus load would allow the empties to be returned "for free".   

Regarding Dave's friend's drug conviction, Denzel Washington's (one of a series 
of flawed) character in the movie Flight is a drug-addled pilot who, by 
implication in the story, actually achieves a heroic manouver *because* he's 
still jacked on the cocaine he snorted to lift himself out of his alcohol 
hangover.    The setup is that a jackscrew controlling horizontal stablizer 
breaks, forcing the nose of the plane down with no recourse...  Denzel's 
character quickly recognizes the futility of the situation and the 
*opportunity* of rolling the dive into an inverted orientation such that the 
forced "nose down" is now "nose up".

Popular Mechanics (of all places) had an article on the plausibility of the 
Cocaine effects supporting the story (rather than the mechanics of inverted 
flying).

I suspect I could get work myself using my 40 year-stale FortranIV experience 
on "mission critical" systems already old at that time, but still in some sort 
of service.  I did a huge senior project on a FortranIV system for simulating 
exo-Terran atmospheres (e.g. Mars) which might well be still be in service?   
Fortunately my COBOL/RPG experience is so slim I'd never be tempted to try that 
domain.

I'd like to believe that the myriad "stale skill" job opportunities (demands) 
we see today are going to be yet-more-fully deprecated.   I still have a 
coal-fired forge and an anvil, both probably manufactured 100 years ago, that I 
can shape and even temper iron and steel with (and aluminum if I'm incredibly 
careful), but I do not and never will have the skills required to do it well, 
and certainly not to replace what modern industrial processes can achieve... 
barring a full apocalypse, it is merely a quaint "hobby" that might afford me 
the opportunity to turn out some rustic items others would mistake for "art",  
or more often, repair the various related tools I might *use*in my forge...   
though in most cases a strap and some bolts or rivets makes more sense than 
trying to re-weld a broken connecting rod, or lever.

Meanwhile, the discussion of how our "first programming language" defines us, I 
believe that my earliest "programming" experience was more "analysis" of the 
circuitry of pinball (and vending) machines in my friend's father's workshop 
where he repaired them, and there were always an array of pinball machines in 
various states of repair, with all the guts open for inspection while 
operating.   Very much an analog/digital hybrid system while the older vending 
machines were essentially all "rod logic" (albeit simple).   Later, at my first 
employer (radio station) I learned the ins and outs of automated infinite loop 
carousel "programming" which was a hybrid of relay and mechanical 
(rod/gear/lever) logics.    The "programming" was really simplistic, involving 
inserting "shorting pins" in matrices to define priorities and timing to get 
the "right" mix of commercials, PSAs, and a diversity of music played during 
any given period (usually a 4 hour shift).   I can't say how much it influenced 
my later understanding of "computer programming" which I was being introduced 
to simultaneously by our Driver's Ed teacher who had somehow wrangled a PDP-x 
rack into a small room with a teletype/paper-tape-punch.  He didn't really have 
a clue, he was learning BASIC along with us, following a simple set of "sample 
programs" listed in what I think was the "owners manual" for the machine.

Ramble,

 - Steve

Does it include lessons on how to land the plane?

—Barry

On 12 Aug 2020, at 21:53, Frank Wimberly wrote:

I just got an email from a flight training program offering me a nine month
course to get a multi engine commercial license. They don't read the Friam
listsrv, I hope. I'm too old in any case.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM
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