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The good old days....We used to be able buy by these from the harware store http://www.nfatoys.com/tsmg/ but should we allow it once again?
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Originally Posted by MapleLeaf
(Post 8486433)
cockpit door left open
Where the co-pilot would normally sit was used as just another pax seat. What a difference a few years makes. :) |
Originally Posted by Spiff
(Post 8485247)
What about 9/11 makes you so scared? What an over-used, pathetic excuse 9/11 has become.
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Even seeing the thread title alone I wondered if it was about NZ domestic prop flights. Yup only jet flights (or rather a/c with 100+ seats) and all international flights require security here.
Originally Posted by Cholula
(Post 8485601)
While not openly inviting pax to visit the cockpit, my last few flights on Aeromexico and a recent flight on Aerolineas Argentina operated the entire flight with the cockpit doors wide open.
Granted these are both "third-world" airlines but it was somewhat strange nevertheless. |
Originally Posted by Kiwi Flyer
(Post 8486888)
Flying puddlejumpers (eg Beech 1900D) there is no door to shut. Jetstream32, while uncomfortable a/c to fly in, is even better. If you can get the middle bulkhead seat you are right behind the pilots where a door would be on a bigger aircraft.
Or, in Canada, fly a Twin Otter between Victoria and Vancouver Harbor. |
PenAir, Anchorage to Dutch Harbor, has no security and even involves a decent-sized airport. The plane, though, is a Saab 340 - maybe there is a jet/prop distinction.
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Used to be that planes with less than a certain number of pax didn't need screening. At one time (mid 90's), there was a group of 2-3 gates at one end of a DFW concourse that was unsecured and used by a small set of commuter flights using small aircraft. I forget what the number was, but it was on the order of 15, 16 people.
I, too, recall when airlines left the flight deck open. I was on an Austrian transatlantic flight where the flight deck was open from push-back to gate arrival. Yet we (and all other flights) had armed escort from landing to the gate.... |
Mesa Air (until April 2007) with flights Watertown NY to Pittsburgh used the Beech 1900D. Big Sky Airlines took over and offers flights to Boston and Albany and they also use the Beech 1900D. In fact, I believe they bought their planes from Mesa!
Probably not many terrorists flying through Watertown NY these days! |
Used to be that planes with less than a certain number of pax didn't need screening. At one time (mid 90's), there was a group of 2-3 gates at one end of a DFW concourse that was unsecured and used by a small set of commuter flights using small aircraft. I forget what the number was, but it was on the order of 15, 16 people.
I, too, recall when airlines left the flight deck open. I was on an Austrian transatlantic flight where the flight deck was open from push-back to gate arrival. Yet we (and all other flights) had armed escort from landing to the gate.... |
IIRC, If the plane carries less than 19 pax, so like anything smaller than a Beech 19000D, and it arrives and departs from non-secure sections of airports then it doesn't need security screening.
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Originally Posted by Spent_All_My_Miles
(Post 8486979)
PenAir, Anchorage to Dutch Harbor, has no security and even involves a decent-sized airport. The plane, though, is a Saab 340 - maybe there is a jet/prop distinction.
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New Zealand has less guns and less morons than the US. We should at least have metal detectors.
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The biggest a/c currently not requiring screening in NZ is ATR 72-500, seats 66 (or 70 I think an extra row has been added).
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Originally Posted by gliere
(Post 8487341)
IIRC, If the plane carries less than 19 pax, so like anything smaller than a Beech 19000D, and it arrives and departs from non-secure sections of airports then it doesn't need security screening.
In stark contrast to the Kabuki Security Theater in North Platte, Great Lakes Airlines flies Saab 1900 19 seat turboprop aircraft on this route. These aircraft do not have cockpit doors but rather curtains similar to those that used to separate first class from coach. It is amazing to see the altimeter register drops of hundreds of feet when caught in Rocky Mountain wind shear. Funny, none of these planes have been commandeered due to lack of cockpit doors. Must be the stringent security measures. I am sure the passenger demographics in both North Platte and New Zealand have nothing to do with security measures taken in the respective airports. :rolleyes: |
Originally Posted by tsadude1
(Post 8486657)
The good old days....We used to be able buy by these from the harware store http://www.nfatoys.com/tsmg/ but should we allow it once again?
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