May. 11th, 2005

747

May. 11th, 2005 11:27 am
c9: (Default)
Again, thanks to Wikipedia.

The Boeing 747, which is also known as the jumbo jet, is the second largest passenger airliner after the Airbus A380. Until the first commercial flight of the A380 in 2006, however, it remains the largest passenger aircraft in commercial service.

The four-engine 747, produced by Boeing Commercial Airplanes, uses a two-deck configuration, where the small upper deck is usually used for business-class passengers. A typical three-class layout accommodates about 400 passengers while a one-class layout accommodates a maximum of 600 passengers. The hump created by the upper deck has made the 747 a highly recognizable icon of air travel.

The 747 flies at high-subsonic speeds (typically 0.85 Mach or 565 mph or 909 km/h) and features intercontinental range (8,430 statute miles, or 13,570 km, for the 747-400 version), in some configurations sufficient to fly from New York to Hong Kong (roughly a third of the globe) non-stop. In 1989 a Qantas 747-400 flew non-stop from London to Sydney, a distance of 11,185 miles (18,000 km), in 20 h 9 min, although this was a delivery flight with no passengers or freight aboard.

...

The development of the 747 was a huge undertaking. Boeing did not have a factory large enough to assemble the giant aircraft, so the company built an all-new assembly building near Everett, Washington. This factory is the largest building ever built.

...

A 747-400 has six million parts (half of which are fasteners) made in 33 different countries.

Due to its immense length, there is a very small flexure of the fuselage in flight. This effect was not anticipated in the design of the autopilot on early models, and so there is a very slow oscillation in yaw when flying on autopilot. This was first discovered on an overseas flight to the Paris Airshow, when some of the people in the rear got air sick. Upon return, the plane went through a shake test for two weeks to sort out the problem and adjust the yaw damper system. This solved the problem and the effect is now too small to be noticeable by passengers.
c9: (Default)
Silly things:

1. Mononucleosis, the class was told, is a disease that "whores" get. I guess that explains where I got it then.

2. In advertising and spam email, hyperlinks are usually uniquely generated, so that a company can tell when YOU click a spam link, as opposed to just somebody. This is also used oin legitimate email, for example to ensure that an unsubscribe link connects with you, and can't be guessed by someone with ill intent.

Today I received some advertising from Destina.ca, Air Canada's attempt to fight the various travel websites. Keeping in mind that these are supposed to be automatically computer-generated, take a look and see if you see any trouble:

http: //links.email.destina.ca/a/l.x?T=jlcbbehnekpmfemfagkibgmgpdheffebdcnaphihkpfehpdofcnkob&M=2&R=29471&N=3

Mememememe

May. 11th, 2005 06:19 pm
c9: (Default)
You can ask me any 5 questions:

1:
2:
3:
4:
5:

No matter how personal or crazy, I promise to answer the questions 100% truthfully.
Repost this and see what people want to ask you.

Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] senhor's great answers in his journal for convincing me to join the stampede!
c9: (Default)
Hooray! After about two years of sitting in a plastic bag, the Nintendo 64 I purchased from a pawn shop is back in service, with no ugly wires visible except for the controller! My amp is sufficiently old/crappy that I have to do serious gymnastics to get the DVD player, VCR, CD player, N64, and TV all speaking to each other. As it turns out, I left the TV out of the audio loop, so that my beloved husband doesn't go bonkers trying to watch TV with four remotes.

Someday this whole "wiring" thing will go away. Just not soon enough.

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