Quizzes & Puzzles78 mins ago
Aircraft
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What can fly at 52,000 ft? And still does? I know that Concorde did.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.14 Oct 2015 edition of http:// spacewe ather.c om has a chart explaining why high altitude travellers wouldn't want to spend too much time at 51K.
I was surfing Flight Radar.con approx 10days ago . Both my sons travel all over the world and I like to keep up with them. (One of them is now in Reunion) I picked up this track over the Med off the coast of Libya and it travelled in a direct line over England, as it flew over Camebridge it track appeared to zig zag north then south a couple of times, it carried on north, I lost it over north West Yorkshire. it had an identification which I think was both letters and numerals. In brackets it stated that several aircraft used this I.D, I didn't clock the speed but the Alt was 52,000ft.
I was going to correct you about Concorde operating height but a couple of others got there first. It could have flown higher but then it would not have been able to descend quickly enough to levels with enough oxygen to breathe in event of a decompression. As to risks from Cosmic radiation - it was operating at faster speeds so shorter exposure. No flight was longer than 3 hours 40 minutes which was its maximum endurance. The flight planning of this very special plane was my job for a few years. Very sad when it was grounded.
@fuggy
Flightradar24 sometimes does display improbable-looking zig-zag flightpaths which could be due to several causes
i) glitches in the datastream (all users affected)
ii) user settings short of continuous update (self-selected users)
iii) Aircraft is performing loops - a 2D display can only show a sharp double-back
iv) Helicopters
At some stage last year, bizjet operators twigged how popular the app had become and anonymised their registrations. Half the fun of the app gone, there although, I guess, the global security situation means the ability to know or guess where particular oligarchs are is not a good thing.
"Several a/c use this ID"
Airliners change this from one flight to the next; GA generally set it to match their tail registration. Re-use by several might be a fleet rental company or it could be government or military.
Flightradar24 sometimes does display improbable-looking zig-zag flightpaths which could be due to several causes
i) glitches in the datastream (all users affected)
ii) user settings short of continuous update (self-selected users)
iii) Aircraft is performing loops - a 2D display can only show a sharp double-back
iv) Helicopters
At some stage last year, bizjet operators twigged how popular the app had become and anonymised their registrations. Half the fun of the app gone, there although, I guess, the global security situation means the ability to know or guess where particular oligarchs are is not a good thing.
"Several a/c use this ID"
Airliners change this from one flight to the next; GA generally set it to match their tail registration. Re-use by several might be a fleet rental company or it could be government or military.