Sternjaeger II |
04-20-2012 01:15 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by WTE_Galway
(Post 411734)
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yep, it's a fair assumption, that's why it's never good to fly solo on these machines. Mind you, a pressurisation failure would have knocked out all occupants, but it's not always the case.
Years ago a good friend of mine who's an airline pilot was bringing back home a football team once they won the championship, the atmosphere was quite cheerful and it was the days when there wasn't much security. The plane was quite crowded (it was a Caravelle if memory serves), so in the excitement and to hurry things up because they waited for the team to board last, the stewardesses put a bag in the roomy pilot's cabin. Everything went fine, the captain of the team got in the cockpit and waved at people from the windscreen and put out a flag from the window while they were taxiing in front of the apron, then got back to his place.
They take off as normal and everything seems fine, but my friend, who was the captain, starts feeling a bit dizzy and sleepy, he thinks he's just a bit tired and will pass the controls to his co-pilot after take off. A few moments after that someone puts his emergency oxygen mask on his face and it's like he wakes up again! What happened is that the captain of the team accidentally walked over the bag, which contain a huge bottle of ether (which was used to massage the legs of the players back then), and once broken the vapours were slowly knocking the two pilots and the engineer out. Fortunately the engineer noticed the wet stain on the bag and had the promptness to get his oxygen mask on, putting it on the pilots as well.
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