![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:30 • Filed to: Planelopnik | ![]() | ![]() |
Pro Tip: When running up the engines of your 734, make sure you aren't parked on a tarmac made of loose bricks. This is what happened to a Shaheen Air International Boeing 737-4Q8 (AP-BJR), causing significant damage to the fuselage and elevators.
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![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:32 |
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god damn
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:33 |
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Mein Gott!
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:33 |
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My engines move all the bricks in the yard. Damn straight they're bigger than yours.
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:34 |
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I'm frankly impressed the substrate is strong enough to hold up the plane - I guess it's just a seating layer of sand over something a lot harder. Even so, that would indicate the surface loading under the tires is a lot lower than I would have thought - or they've just been lucky so far.
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:38 |
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Hahaha brilliant!
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:39 |
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what the?
![]() 06/25/2014 at 09:46 |
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Someone has been incompotent for this to happen.
![]() 06/25/2014 at 10:28 |
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Seen that with crappy asphalt in Dakar with a 767. No fun.
![]() 06/25/2014 at 10:31 |
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Took me a moment to realise these weren't buildings on the horizon.
![]() 06/25/2014 at 10:45 |
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Hans Bricks!
![]() 06/25/2014 at 10:52 |
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It's because they are lucky. Also that Southwest hasn't bought that plane yet.
06/25/2014 at 11:37 |
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Good God! I can't imagine what the noise was like in the cabin of that plane.