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fly_tornado

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Everything posted by fly_tornado

  1. at the end of the day, the council are providing your airport with a nice new shiny clubhouse (eventually).
  2. if you go onto thingiverse.com you will find dozens of upgrades for the ender3
  3. there are a million people doing 3D printer reviews on youtube.
  4. boeing pilots are not co-operating https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/max-top-pilot-takes-the-fifth-over-document-subpoena/
  5. pricing the magazine to reflect the true costs of production and distribution isn't a bad thing. I think its obvious that most pilots would prefer a cheaper online solution.
  6. only 1500 subscribers? they had 2500 5 years ago
  7. Quadcopter type UAVs are going to be a huge problem for CASA in the next few years as they get more sophisticated
  8. Free clubhouse for the taking
  9. Private companies are like that though, that 11lakhs is all you can sue the directors for. I'm predicting it won't be a boon for Warwick but @mnewbery will have a contrary take
  10. how will you fix anything without a plan?
  11. what do you want to change and how are you going to change it?
  12. this is different https://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/general-aviation/2019-07-23/inventor-promotes-estol
  13. that plane has been sold in the US for a few years https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeromarine_Merlin
  14. go back to windows 7, 4 years and millions of installs and its still buggy
  15. good news! Tyabb Airport's biennial air show has been reinstated on the calendar after Mornington Peninsula Shire Council last night backed down on its permit demands. The show was canceled last week after the council issued Peninsula Aero Club (PAC) with a new permit process that was completely unworkable in the time left before the show in March next year. "The shire agreed to go back to the old process of approval, which is easier for us," PAC president Jack Vevers told Australian Flying. "The PAC committee gave us the go-ahead last light, so now we've got 14 months of work to do in six months." After being presented with the new permit process, Vevers and his team went back to the council to try to get the situation sorted out, but reached a dead-end that resulted in the popular air show being canceled. "We took what we needed to the council, but they weren't listening," Vevers said. "There were safety issues with what they wanted. It seemed they thought we were bluffing and wouldn't walk away from the show." After the cancelation, social media, Tyabb locals and the aviation community created a lot of noise that is believed to have made it all the way to the Victorian parliament. The resulting pressure triggered the shire to reverse their decision and allow PAC to work under the old permit process that has been used for prior air shows. "We can fix it," Vevers said. "even if we have to go like hell!" All things running smoothly, the Tyabb Air Show is scheduled for 8 March 2020. http://www.australianflying.com.au/latest/council-backs-down-as-tyabb-air-show-reinstated
  16. on paper that's how it works but why would a foreign company donate so much to our political parties?
  17. councils job is to return a profit for the people that pay for the councillor's elections.
  18. australians want local councils that avoid risk, closing airports is a part of that risk management strategy
  19. where is the fun in that?
  20. the external regulator should have a TAC post
  21. probably because they are used to dealing with car accidents
  22. Aeromomentum uses a Microsquirt ECU which is user programmable, which is a bonus.
  23. Paid post from USQ! BUDDING pilots now have more opportunity to spread their wings and learn to fly thanks to an aviation degree being offered in Toowoomba at the University of Southern Queensland (USQ). For the first time, students in the Garden City will don the black and white pilot uniform with a Bachelor of Aviation on offer from February 2020. The university currently teaches aviation at its Springfield campus, near Ipswich, but with a worldwide pilot shortage looming, USQ was propelled to expand its program to its biggest campus. With Toowoomba located just 120km west of Brisbane's CBD, head of USQ aviation Professor Paul Bates said the degree would attract students from across the southeast. "A career as a pilot can take you around the world," Prof Bates said. "Whether you fly as a commercial pilot for an airline, training organisation, operate charter flights or as an instructor, the sky really is the limit. "And where better to study aviation than Queensland's biggest inland city - home to the country's newest airport." According to the latest statistics from Boeing's Pilot & Technician Outlook 2019-2038, 770,000 new pilots will be needed to fly and maintain the world's fleet over the next two decades - with nearly 40 per cent of those required in the Asia Pacific region. "Aviation is one of the world's fastest growing industries," Prof Bates said. "At USQ, we're doing everything we can to meet these future demands." New USQ aviation degree to attract students from across the southeast.JULIAN PANETTA First-year students studying aviation at USQ will train in a $1 million state-of-the-art flight simulator. Based on the Boeing 737-800 airliner, it is the only one of its type at a Queensland university. "Featuring the most up-to-date equipment and technology in the world, the simulator provides our aviation students with the most realistic multi-crew simulated training in an aircraft cockpit, putting us at the cutting edge of aviation," Prof Bates said. "Our students also operate the simulator in the first year of their degree which is not available anywhere else in the country." Toowoomba's Bachelor of Aviation is one of several new course offerings at USQ, such as the recently-unveiled specialist Masters degree in cyber security. Like aviation, cyber security is an in-demand industry. Cyber-crime is one of the fastest-growing and most prolific types of crime in the country, but the sector faces a critical skills shortage - it is estimated that 18,000 more cyber security professionals are needed by 2026, according to the Australian Cyber Security Growth Network. USQ's new Master of Cyber Security provides students practical training in cyber protection and security, as well as transferable skills that can be applied to multiple professions. "To learn more about USQ's new course offerings, including Aviation and Cyber Security, come along to an Open Day: USQ Springfield on July 27, USQ Toowoomba on August 18 or USQ Ipswich on August 24," Prof Bates said. Become more at Australia's number one university for graduate starting salary, according to the Good Universities Guide 2019, at a 2019 USQ Open Day. Visit usq.edu.au/openday to register.
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