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359 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4387
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Title: HPR4387: Did she say she flew light aircraft?!
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4387/hpr4387.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:05:46
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4387 for Tuesday the 27th of May 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, Did she say she flew light aircraft?
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It is hosted by Ellsbyth and is about 29 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, wherein Ellsbyth expelms on her experience with light aircraft and how
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it relates to her geekiness.
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Hi, my name is Ellsbyth.
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The very first time that I ever flew was before I was adopted.
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I was adopted at four and a half and for like six months or somewhere during that time period
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my parents, my adopted parents were getting to know me and my little brother when they adopted
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us and they were given permission to take us for a plane flight.
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I have memories of that.
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I don't remember like specifics, but I do remember it.
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And then after they adopted us, just became kind of routine.
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And I don't mean to say that I didn't appreciate that it cost my parents really big on talking
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about the cost of things and having a plane and storing a plane and flying a plane cost
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money.
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And at a young age, they communicated that, but it was always fun to go flying with my
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dad because, well, my parents were both pilots, but my dad mostly flew.
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And I don't remember which one he had when I was growing up first of Bonanza and Assessina
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at one point in time.
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Mostly joy rides.
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I grew up in Oregon, so the little local airport that my dad had his plane through and
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parked at, stored, I don't know the lingo to be perfectly honest.
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It was something where I always wanted to fly like because of that, I wanted to be a bird
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and I thought that was the coolest thing to be in the air.
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Dad would always file a flight plan.
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I think that's like mandatory kind of like having a driver's license, you know, you have
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to, if you're going to go on a trip, you have to make a plan and since you're going to
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be sharing airspace with potentially other planes, other aircraft, you write a flight plan
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and say where you're going to take off from, if you're going to have any stops and where
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your end goal is going to be or if you're going to return and so on and so forth.
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You also have to verify that you have like your safety checks down and make certain that
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the plane is flightworthy.
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Like we would go, my siblings and I would periodically go and I think I was a little more
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fascinated, maybe I think I was maybe the most fascinated by how planes were the whole
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process of it.
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So I enjoyed doing the whole walk around checking the landing gear and the flaps and making
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certain everything was working properly.
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Again, I was young so I probably couldn't, you know, tell you all the little terminologies
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and whatnot.
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The biggest thing about flight to me was when you are in the air, the only thing that
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matters is that the plane is moving properly and beyond that you're looking around it,
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things that you wouldn't see on a day-to-day normal basis.
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I suppose that made my little creative dreamer heart very happy.
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We were just going on a quick, you know, flying around and dad tended to be a little bit
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of a not-ful-on flight performance artist, but I don't know if you've seen the...
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I wouldn't say they were super fancy stunts, but more like, you know, he'd dip but not
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a full-on roll, not anything really scary or dangerous.
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But definitely stuff that made my cautious little heart beat a little bit faster.
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So there was nothing quite like experiencing that panicked rush went into your throat.
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And since I'm a very, very cautious person by nature and very analytical and very logical,
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and yet at the very same time a complete creative dreamer, it was basically like a shock to the
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system to get my mind to just live in the moment instead of being caught up.
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I'm sure that has a lot to do with my neurodivergence.
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That time it was very, very much undiagnosed.
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So I was just told to get my head out of the clouds all the time.
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So I suppose it made sense that I liked flying.
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Usually in planes like that, like we would fly over just above the cloud.
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We wouldn't always, but like, there were times and we would fly over low enough where
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you could see the power lines and you're just, I'm sure it wasn't that close, but it felt
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very close to it.
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I don't think that the small aircraft actually gets to the altitude where you need press-ride
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air, though I do believe that you, it's something that they keep on board as a safety measure,
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but I never had to use it so I don't know that for certain.
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At 8,000 feet supplemental oxygen is not usually required and it's a comfortable level for
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most people.
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So I guess it's probably the highest they would be able to go, but I don't know that I would
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have to look up and to verify whether small aircraft could comfortably get to that height.
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It depended on what the cloud cover was because I do remember times when we would like fly
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above the clouds.
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You couldn't necessarily, especially on a very cloudy day, you wouldn't necessarily be
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able to see the ground.
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You weren't so high up that it would be, you couldn't see the ground if the cloud cover
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worked there.
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I remember flying over Mount St. Helens and flying into the crater and Mount St. Helens
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erupted in May of 1980 and I remember flying over the crater after it had recovered a bit
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and stuff and seeing the damage, but I seemed to recall, this may not be accurate, but I
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seemed to recall flying it once before it erupted, so you could actually fly into the crater
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and see all of the trees and just how pretty it was and then after it erupted, it was
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all lava, the effects of the lava flow.
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So we got to see a lot of things.
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Maybe we covered some of the areas just on the coast, maybe.
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I've been on passenger aircraft like, nationally, I've been all over the place as far as aircraft
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is concerned.
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Oftentimes I feel more comfortable in an airplane than I do in a car.
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I've been in a lot of different types of planes.
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I've been in the big 747s, I've been in the prop planes, in fact, there were a lot of
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prop planes to take us from boarding school to home when I was in Africa.
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So we fly from Abisjonal, Cote d'Avois to Connacrygini and it would be a passenger plane
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but it had propellers.
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I'm not kidding.
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Sometimes when the plane was kept together by duct tape, I guess that's why I don't have
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as much fear about airplanes.
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I've been through some interesting flights.
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So light aircraft is much, much louder and you typically have headphones on, like some
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sort of ear protection.
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I don't think I realized it at the time because I was undiagnosed.
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It would not have been something that I would have communicated very well, that I had sensory
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issues because of it.
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I would get so wrapped up in looking outside and what was going on to try and tune out
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the discomfort that the sound was making for me.
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I know that my parents had assessment and they had a bananza.
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I know that very little about the geekiness other than remembering being obsessed with looking
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at the panels and the instruments and trying to figure out what they did.
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And with my father being more logical and maybe neurotypical, I never really understood
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the text so much because I'm seeing these really cool instruments that they have these
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little arms that move and they obviously have something to do with how this plane is flying.
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And I never really did understand the text behind it other than more artistically and
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seriably in the sense that Dad would point to a panel and say this one here, it shows
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the altitude and this one will, you know, it was never something that I as a girl was
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really encouraged to really understand.
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And I don't think that was necessarily intentional.
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It was just, there was a lot of gender roles when I was growing up.
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My parents were both pilots.
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Mom was always the co-pilot.
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I thought it was pretty cool.
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I knew it was a big deal that she could fly, but at the same time I never really considered
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that other than the fact that she was Dad's co-pilot, if anything happened to Dad, she
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could take care of the plane, if that makes sense.
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It was more of a, it was a hobby she shared with my Dad and I think that's really, really
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cool.
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I think it was something that is kind of a sign of maybe the privilege of my Dad's hard
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work for his career.
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It's definitely not something that if they didn't have the freedom with finances that was
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the product of my Dad working hard that anyone really would have experienced in our family
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because their families came from farm and orchard-type natural growing up.
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So I thought it was pretty cool.
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I knew it was special, but I think I took it for granted.
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When you're living Africa and you're going to, and you're the business manager, sometimes
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it's nice, it's convenient to have someone that knows how to fly a plane, be able to fly
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emergency supplies or whatnot to missionaries and whatnot.
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I would say it was beneficial that he was able to do that.
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His primary duty was being the business manager, so he made certain that all the political
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stuff was taken care of.
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He was the one that knew the details on that.
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He could do a flight check, he could do the post flight and all that as well as fly the
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plane.
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So if he was needed, he could have.
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And I think he did.
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I didn't spend a whole lot of time with my parents when we were missionaries because
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I was importing school most of the time, but I do recall certain things like that being
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coming up, but it wasn't necessarily his primary focus.
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I don't remember which one he had first, a Bonanza and a Cessna.
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It's different between a Cessna and a Bonanza, body model.
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I think one was a little bit smaller.
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I think one was maybe a, I think they called it a two-seater, but you could fit four people
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in it in the back, so it was far more cramped.
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And I think the other one was a four-seater that had a little like the storage room.
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Okay, so the primary difference, I looked it up because I wanted to refresh my memory.
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The primary difference is the Cessna and the Bonanza, it's their design and their intended
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use.
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So the Cessna is smaller and the Bonanza is larger.
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The Cessna has high wings, fixed gear, single engine plane.
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They're easy to handle and they're affordable and Bonanza's are low wings with single engine
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and they have retractable landing gear, so they have greater speed and range.
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So the Bonanza is more for longer distance and the Cessna is more for shorter distances.
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I even remember learning to pack based on weight, and that goes for passenger airlines.
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And a lot of people don't realize that, but part of the reason that passenger airlines
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are so strict about the weight of baggage is because of that.
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But in a smaller plane, you have far more limited amount and you have to factor in the
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weight of the individuals as well, which probably wouldn't fly so well in today's political
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climate as far as all that.
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But if somebody's weighs too much, you have to factor that in because it may be able
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to seat for people, but if somebody weighs too much, you might only be able to seat two
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or three because the plane can't carry as much.
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So if you're going on a short john, you're going to like spend the night somewhere and
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then fly back, you have factor in how much does your luggage weigh.
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I don't remember what the cost of fuel was then, but I remember it being discussed.
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If you wanted to fly somewhere, there was always the discussion of how much fuel do we
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need to get to the destination?
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How many times would you have to refuel and how much would it cost for the entire trip?
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And that was me being young, being impacted by that, like being aware that this wasn't
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something that was like every day.
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I didn't understand the maps themselves because it wasn't something that this kind of goes
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back to that.
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I was a girl.
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It wasn't really like I would look and watch in, but I wouldn't necessarily learn the details
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of it.
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But he would definitely plot out the courses using probably a compass and for cracker.
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I always found, I think I mentioned this in my first podcast, I always found tech fascinating
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even when it wasn't necessarily considered tech, but it was like, you know, not something
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that girls were supposed to do in the culture I grew up in.
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So I didn't get a whole lot of encouragement to learn more.
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But it's interesting that I do remember even if it's not even remotely expert level.
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It's not even intermediate or even beginner, you know, but it impacted my life, definitely.
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That was for sure.
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I wish that I could be more detailed about stuff like that and it's kind of making me wonder.
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I don't know.
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I'd have to see if that's a priority in my life anymore.
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It definitely was a huge part of my life growing up though.
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I don't know about the current ones today, but back then, if it was a warm day, you did
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not want to be wearing shorts because your skin would get burned on the, it get really
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warm on the seats.
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So on a warm day, a light pair of pants and a t-shirt or whatever you're comfortable
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in.
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I remember the ears or what I call the ears, the ear covers because it gets really loud.
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You have the engines right there, you know, and you have the propellers gone and, you know,
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thinking back on it, I'm kind of like, oh, what were the smells?
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And I think it is something that is really unique, smell because you smell the burning,
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you know, engine fuel to some degree because it's coming off the propellers, but you don't
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really notice it too much because of the wind, especially when you're up in there.
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But when you're doing pre-fight and post-fight, you definitely notice it.
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I think it's something that the first time, because I was so young, the first time I flew,
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I think it's something that just became normal for me.
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In a way, I think it represented comfort because flights meant happy times, a flight meant
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either going home or going to school or, and that, that's including passenger planes
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as well, I suppose, but back then, those short flights were just brilliant.
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They were time when the whole world just stopped for a second.
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It would be the difference between sitting in a car, driving somewhere with someone, and
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taking the TJV across France.
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It's accelerated and the get time kind of stops for a moment.
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There's not as much conversation and interaction in flight, not that there isn't any, but it's
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a little different than trying to keep someone entertained for long distances in a car,
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hurting that which is not normal.
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I suppose anybody would stop and take a breath the first time that they saw the world
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from a bird's eye view.
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To this day when I'm in a plane and we're in the clouds or taking off, I'd like to have
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a window seat to be able to see.
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It's just a huge change in perspective on the world.
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Suddenly, the day-to-day junk that's going on in the world doesn't mean so much.
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We should all just get along because this earth is just very...
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The world is so much bigger than what our little narrow view is, if that makes sense,
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and I think flying enhances that perspective.
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My dad is a Vietnam vet, and I think this partially contributes to it, but he has a tone
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that everybody needs to sit down, might be, any situation where he needs to focus and
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concentrate.
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There's a tone that he got, and there are times that I do remember times when we just
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have to let him fly because a storm was coming up that wasn't predicted or did because
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usually wouldn't fly if it was stormy, at least not intentionally.
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But there wasn't, you know, it was more just a tone.
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That's how I knew.
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I always felt safe when my dad piloted.
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Even when things were tense, he had control, and he let everybody know he had control.
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That was one of the best characteristics my dad has is he makes people feel secure and
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safe if he's leading something, and when he was flying a plane, he was in charge.
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I don't recall off the top of my head specifically that there was stuff when he was piloting
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light aircraft, but I have had concerning situations with lights that I've taken that we either
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had to prematurely land and, you know, regroup and stuff like that, but it was never anything
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that I was too concerned about.
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I used to love model aircrafts, building them.
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There's the creative aspect of that, it's just amazing, but I think that anyone that
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is interested in light aircraft or anything plane related is, it's a great endeavor.
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You know, if you can't ever go fly yourself, learning about aircraft can be just as valuable
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because, like, I'm talking back in the 80s with my parents, and the technology that has
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changed in aircraft stuff.
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So cars aren't built the same way, air, built the same way, the tech that's in the point
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where you practically have to have a degree or some sort of serious education to pair
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them.
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So there's a lot to be learned and explored with technology in vehicles, whether it be
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aircraft or, you know, car strokes.
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I think the unmanned aircraft can be invaluable for the world as far as helping out if done
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morally and ethically.
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Unfortunately, I feel like most people that get to mess with unmanned aircraft primarily
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are those that might take it for granted, because they have the income to be able to
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play with such things and might not appreciate it for what it could benefit to the whole
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of society.
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So I think just like with any tech, it requires an element of ethics, respect, and not
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using it for nefarious purposes, not using it just to earn money.
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I think it could be really wonderful.
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I don't think it's going to be used that way, though.
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I think it's actually going to be used to advance Jeff Bezos' pocketbook for more nefarious
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purposes and control.
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So I would hope that ultimately it could be more beneficial.
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I think that open source should be the norm when it's not, but that would require people
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open source to be whizzywig for people that don't have the capacity to or bandwidth to
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be able to process the more technical aspects of utilizing it.
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I think that there is the extreme potential of it removing an entire pilots and stewards
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of the planes flight attendants, it's going to get so advanced to the point where people
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are going to lose their jobs because they're just not necessary anymore, because unmanned
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aircraft can also implement AI robotics and whatnot for passenger flights.
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I see that as being a possibility in the future once you get past the whole elitism of it.
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Once it becomes more open source, I could see it provided, this comes down to ethics
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and morals again, you'd have to have somebody that was knowledgeable enough to work with
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that sort of code and keep it secure, and that could either be really beneficial for making
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unmanned aircraft more secure and more available to the general populace, or it could be a complete
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shit show. It just depends on how people handle it, like anything else in tech. My fondest
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memory, the first time that my kids got to fly in, where I wasn't actually a passenger,
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it was my dad's plane, it was the only time that they got to fly in one of my dad's planes,
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knowing that experience, knowing what it was like and having an experience flying
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often myself. There was something really impactful about seeing my kids be able to experience that,
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and then hear the responses when they landed, and we're done with that. It's pretty amazing,
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but I'm a mama. Of course, my fondest memory isn't going to be necessarily directed
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just to myself. I actually have a game on steam that is a flight simulator. I hate it.
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I don't know why, but I don't like it. I think if somebody sat there and walked me through it,
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I think I'd probably enjoy it more, but it's kind of like playing an MMRPG with a mouse where
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everything goes too fast, and the DPI's too messed up. I have, back in the, when I was growing up,
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they had the little video game flight simulator type things that I played a couple times,
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and I thought that was pretty cool. I'm trying to remember whether this is an actual memory,
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or if I just dreamed about it, because there was a point in time I really wanted to be an astronaut,
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and I read and studied about all that stuff, and I'm trying to remember whether I actually went into
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a, I'm pretty certain I did went into some sort of simulator that would simulate being in space,
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and that was pretty fascinating. I think that even if you never get to fly directly yourself,
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I think it's worth learning about. I'm not an expert on lighter craft, but my experiences
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in being a passenger and my quote-unquote dad's co-pilot, and even if you're just able to do
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like a gaming simulator or learning about what the benefits are, and the challenges.
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I think honestly the communication aspect was probably my most fascinating part because you
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have to call the tower and let them know that you're taking off and get approval. There's a whole
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communications aspect to be able to fly a plane. If you can't communicate well,
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that's when potential crashes happen. It's similar to like hammer radios. There's an identifier
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specifically for the aircraft that's called like a registration something, but I think it's
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call sign for the radio stuff. I think maybe if I did like a deep meditation and just like
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wasn't focusing or concentrating specifically on that, but with the hopes that it would come in,
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I might be able to remember it because I remember like I remember what it was and that he had when
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I just don't remember the actual digits. I have like this thing where my short-term and long-term
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memory don't directly connect if I'm trying to think about it. I think it's similar to hammer radios
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if I remember correctly. My dad, he used to have a hammer radio in our van when we were growing up
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because he likes to talk to the truckers and that's how they would communicate back in the 80s
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to be able to pilot a plane. You have to have it logic and a sense of a self-awareness of your
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own limitations versus what the plane can do and what the impact of how weather can impact the plane.
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You have to really be aware of a large number of things and be able to process all that information
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concurrently. A sense of calm, you have to have a strong sense of self-control because you can't
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let yourself panic if things go wrong. You panic the planes down. I love historical documentaries
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in general. I was like watching World War II stuff about the planes and how the different
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planes because that was a really huge flying period for advancements and tech and I'm using tech
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a little bit liberally there but as far as aircraft is concerned. I'm trying to think of one
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movie in general and honestly the Joker and me keeps wanting to say the movie airplane.
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Even though it wasn't necessarily the primary focus but the audacity files but that's overall like
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just mostly the transportation and they're trying to find something and planes factor in as far
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as being able to travel to the locations that they're searching for the information from. I
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don't want to give away the plot of the movie in case somebody wants to watch it but there's
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definitely some risks involved as far as flights are concerned. Again planes are not necessarily
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the primary focus of that movie. When I was a kid I looked at the possibility well because we lived
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near Boeing we're kind of familiar with the Boeing plant because of where I was located at and there
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was some fascination with how planes are built some degree. I think I'm less technical as far as
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the building is concerned as far as my interests and planes were concerned so there was a minor
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fascination with it and yet I think a lot of that stemmed from how is flight possible and more
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the philosophical aspect of it. I'm going to sound like a total newbie to all this because basically
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for me it's just the I know you have to acceleration and the you have to use the wing flaps to kind
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of catch the air currents to bring up so there's a bit of what is the what is the term that I'm
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looking for like plane with gravity if you will. Everything about the shape of a plane is inspired by
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the shape of how birds are created you know how they are designed. You have to have the acceleration
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you have to have the shape for the wind to properly move around the the vehicle to be able to catch
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the wings in the way that and have the wing movements help you accelerate and lift up or down
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as the case may be if you're landing. I am a total noob when it comes to that but I do find it
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absolutely fascinating to observe and it's definitely something that I loved being on the wing
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of the plane when I was flying in passenger planes because I loved the the wings move and and
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fluctuate or hearing the landing gear that in the place. Intuitive knowledge is pretty much how I
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sum up most of my special interests. I don't necessarily always have the best way of describing
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or explaining it but it's there in my head I can visualize it everything about it from taking off
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to landing. It's interesting that that's still a bit of a special interest in my head. I don't think
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I ever really considered that just because I haven't been able to fly for so long. I hope you all
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have enjoyed listening to me ramble on about what little I do know about my aircraft. It's
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reignited my interest in that so that's a really cool thing and I'm glad I had the opportunity
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to talk about it. I hope you found something you didn't know and you're interested and
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enjoy listening to the show. Thank you. Bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
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