[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference back40::soapbox

Title:Soapbox. Just Soapbox.
Notice:No more new notes
Moderator:WAHOO::LEVESQUEONS
Created:Thu Nov 17 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:862
Total number of notes:339684

626.0. "Airports, planes, snow, ice" by SHRCTR::PJOHNSON (aut disce, aut discede) Fri Jan 05 1996 14:02

While watching the news, I saw a video of an airline groundcrewmember
spraying liquid on a jet's wings to deice or desnow the plane. A large
quantity (couldn't spell 'copious') of the liquid was used.

What is that liquid? Is it toxic? Is it expensive? I'd like some for
my car!

Pete
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
626.1TROOA::COLLINSDialed in for dharma.Fri Jan 05 1996 14:133
    
    Glycol.
    
626.2BULEAN::BANKSFri Jan 05 1996 14:171
And your dog will love it!
626.3ACISS1::BATTIStwo cans short of a 6 packFri Jan 05 1996 14:222
    
    and its only sold at the finest of taverns.
626.4ROWLET::AINSLEYLess than 150 kts. is TOO slow!Fri Jan 05 1996 15:005
    It glycol, probably heated, can't be disposed of in your wastewater or
    storm sewer, has an attractive smell/taste that most animals can't
    resist, and kills them.
    
    Bob
626.5ACISS1::BATTIStwo cans short of a 6 packFri Jan 05 1996 15:225
    
    << has an attractive smell/taste that most animals can't resist,
    and kills them.
    
    hhmmmmm, maybe we should send some to congress.
626.6TROOA::COLLINSDialed in for dharma.Fri Jan 05 1996 15:243
    
    Wow.  We have a "glycol" topic.  What next?   :^)
    
626.7POLAR::RICHARDSONBig Bag O' PassionFri Jan 05 1996 15:291
    Ethylene Glycol, one of my favourite country music artists.
626.8SMURF::WALTERSFri Jan 05 1996 16:036
    Didn't she do the "Mr Plow" song?
    
    	Mr Plow is a loser
    	And I think he is a boozer...
    
    
626.9DeiceSMURF::LIUFear is the thief of DreamsFri Jan 05 1996 16:207
    
    The larger airports have specially engineered ramp areas where
    they dispense the deice stuff onto the airplanes and the
    pavement has catch basins and drains that funnel the over
    spray and drips into holding tanks for recycling.  The stuff
    ain't cheap and the EPA doesn't like putting it into the
    normal storm drains.  But it beats having ice on the wings.
626.10SMURF::BINDEREis qui nos doment vescimur.Fri Jan 05 1996 16:324
    .9
    
    What beats having ice on the wings is avoiding the use of airplanes as
    a mode of transportation.
626.11TROOA::COLLINSDialed in for dharma.Fri Jan 05 1996 16:413
    
    Those infernal flying machines!!
    
626.12Just Say NoSMURF::LIUFear is the thief of DreamsFri Jan 05 1996 16:569
    
    > What beats having ice on the wings is avoiding the use of airplanes
    > as a mode of transportation.
    
    Well if folks would stop lining up to use the things to go places
    the industry would fail and your problems would go away.  Ya just
    gotta convince all your friends and acquaintances to drive, no, go
    back to using horses.  That's it.  Ride a horse to Florida for
    vacation.  Yup.
626.13SMURF::BINDEREis qui nos doment vescimur.Fri Jan 05 1996 16:587
    .11
    
    From the Curmudgeon's Dictionary:
    
        airplane  n.  A cigar-shaped counterfeit bird with an alarming
        propensity for falling out of the sky at inconvenient times and in
        equally inconvenient places.
626.14BUSY::SLABOUNTYHemorrhoid from HellFri Jan 05 1996 16:585
    
    	But horses bite people sometimes.
    
    	Ban horses!!
    
626.15TROOA::COLLINSDialed in for dharma.Fri Jan 05 1996 17:003
    
    Hey, I ain't takin' no boat 'cross the Atlantic...boats sink!!
    
626.16flight hasslesCOOKIE::MUNNSdaveFri Jan 05 1996 17:2318
    Thanks to an 1 hour delay (sprayer ran out of juice) de-icing our plane in 
    Colorado Springs, I got to run through crowded DIA with stroller, car seat, 
    3 carry-on bags, wife, baby, and 5 year old to the connecting flight where 
    the ramp was already retracted.  We finally boarded and made it to our
    destination.  Our luggage arrived 12 hours later.
    
    Returning from Florida (snow-free), the airline went into 15 minute
    update mode - hydraulic fluid problem.  Two hours later we boarded,
    the tow bar was attached to the front landing gear and we pushed 
    back only to suddenly stop.  The 3 stooges towing service had caused
    the tow bar to deattach and it rammed to landing gear.  Now we sat
    in a hot plane for 30 minutes while the pros decided what to do.
    After waiting in lines to find another flight, we left 4 hours late.
    On a different airline.
    
    Next time I air travel, it won't be during holidays !
    

626.17Flying Cattle CarsSMURF::LIUFear is the thief of DreamsFri Jan 05 1996 17:5017
    
    The airlines have certainly turned commercial air travel
    into an annoying, onoxious, event.  But then, airlines are
    really run by accountants, not by folks who like traveling.
    The pilots fly the equipment they are given and the cabin
    crew hands out whatever is loaded aboard labelled "food".
    
    Kill Devil Hill these days  doesn't look much like it did in
    1903 when the Wright brothers were there.  But every year
    on a day early in December, two things happen there.  Somehow,
    a flight of U.S. Navy fighters comes smoking in from out to sea
    and blasts overhead at the exact time that the Wright's very
    first flight lifted off.  And the members of the "Man Will Never
    Fly" society are doing their thing.  Their motto is:
    
                    "Birds Fly, Men Drink"
                  
626.18ACISS1::BATTIStwo cans short of a 6 packFri Jan 05 1996 17:573
    
    <--- get yee to topic 19 and identify yourself. who are all these
    blue smurfs lately?????
626.20COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertMon Jan 08 1996 19:491
Get thee to topic 548!
626.21AIMHI::RAUHI survived the Cruel SpaThu Jan 11 1996 13:543
    Watching the local news. To de-ice a plane, its about $1000 per bath.
    Champaine anyone?:)
    
626.22IROCZ::MORRISONBob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570Sat Jan 27 1996 19:006
>    Watching the local news. To de-ice a plane, its about $1000 per bath.

  Does that include fluid recycling costs?
  If there are 100 passengers on board, that's $10 per passenger. I guess it's
worth it.    

626.23Alternative transport?IROCZ::MORRISONBob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570Sat Jan 27 1996 19:026
>       <<< Note 626.10 by SMURF::BINDER "Eis qui nos doment vescimur." >>>
    
>    What beats having ice on the wings is avoiding the use of airplanes as
>    a mode of transportation.

  What do you suggest as an alternative? 
626.24SMURF::BINDERManus Celer DeiMon Jan 29 1996 14:2314
    .23
    
    Cars, trains, ships, bicycles, feet.  Use as appropriate.
    
    Airplanes, if one ignores their tendency to kill large numbers of
    people at once, are noisy, uncomfortable, and inconvenient; they also
    serve the lousiest imitation of food I've had outside a moribund
    greasy spoon diner.
    
    I use airplanes only in situations when I cannot work out some other
    mode of transportation that satisfies time constraints.  During the
    summer of '83, I spent several thousand dollars more on transportation
    in order to travel by train.  FIrst class.  With food that, if not
    four-star quality, was at least not execrable.
626.25SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIToo many politicians, not enough warriors.Mon Jan 29 1996 18:099
    
    
    Ahhh.... you're just a chicken aero-phobe!!!!
    
    >Airplanes, if one ignores their tendency to kill large numbers of 
    >people at once,
    
    What's the stats vs. your other modes of transport???
    
626.26POLAR::RICHARDSONCaptain DunselMon Jan 29 1996 18:101
    I'll betcha he has no qualms about taking a ferry ride.
626.27SMURF::BINDERManus Celer DeiMon Jan 29 1996 18:3733
    .25
    
    > What's the stats vs. your other modes of transport???
    
    From the Curmudgeon's Dictionary:
    
        statistics  n.  Mathematical figures purporting to describe reality,
        sufficiently arcane that they can be explained in whatever way makes
        the prospects most attractive to the customer.
    
    The simple facts are that stats for other modes of transport, such as
    cars, include all the people who:
    
    o   drive s***boxes (I don't.)
    
    o   drive drunk (I don't.)
    
    o   forget the basic laws of physics and drive up the next guy's
        tailpipe (I don't.)
    
    o   allow the people in the preceding item to pursue their idiocy (I
        don't.)
    
    o   neglect to wear a seatbelt (I don't.)
    
    o   ignore traffic signs and signals (I don't.)
    
    ...and so on.  Sure, I'm statistically more likely to die in a car than
    you are in an airplane.  I'll take the chance that I might be able to
    avoid an accident - having done so several times and in most of those
    cases watched the accidents happen from a position of safety.  If your
    airplane decides to crash, you have such a statistically small chance
    of surviving that I think, all in all, I come out ahead.
626.28SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIToo many politicians, not enough warriors.Mon Jan 29 1996 19:025
    
    
    Ahhh.... you're just PO'd cause you can't have your hand on the control
    stick...  :) :) :)
    
626.29nix to jetsGAAS::BRAUCHERWelcome to ParadiseMon Jan 29 1996 19:178
    
      Agree with Binder.  Flying, although sometimes necessary, is
     awful.  I don't trust their statistics, or their calming voices
     from the cockpit.  They are hurtling you through the vois in a
     deathtrap of twisted metal and explosive chemicals.  And serving
     you dogfood while they do it.
    
      bb
626.30SMURF::BINDERManus Celer DeiMon Jan 29 1996 19:216
    .28
    
    > hand on the control stick
    
    I do freely admit that the few times a friend handed over the stick of
    his Citabria to me, I had a helluva good time.
626.31BUSY::SLABOUNTYDon't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448Mon Jan 29 1996 19:226
    
    	How can you not trust the statistics??  A smaller amount of people
    	have died on commercial airplane flights than have died in auto-
    	mobiles.  But then again, I'm sure an even smaller number of people
    	have died on commercial trains.
    
626.32POLAR::RICHARDSONCaptain DunselMon Jan 29 1996 19:221
    It's not safe to play with wild cats like that.
626.33SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIToo many politicians, not enough warriors.Mon Jan 29 1996 19:296
    
    re: .30
    
    Ain't it fun though!!!!!!!
    
    :) :)
626.34HIGHD::FLATMANGive2TheMegan&amp;KennethCollegeFundMon Jan 29 1996 19:3513
    RE: .31
    
>    	How can you not trust the statistics??  A smaller amount of people
>    	have died on commercial airplane flights than have died in auto-
>    	mobiles.  But then again, I'm sure an even smaller number of people
>    	have died on commercial trains.

    Given how long passenger trains have been in business, I don't know if
    that would be an accurate statement.  Of course the municple water that
    was served in New York in the early 1800's was absolutely deadly ...
    everyone who drank it is now dead.

    -- Dave   
626.35CSLALL::HENDERSONWe shall behold Him!Tue Jan 30 1996 00:5610


 If I  have the time, and my destination is on the route map, I'll take
 Amtrak.  Fun way to travel (and catch up on reading to boot!).




Jim
626.36TRLIAN::MIRAB1::REITHIf it's worth doing, it's worth overdoingTue Jan 30 1996 16:2715
    
    My feeling on flying:
    
    	0-150 miles I drive.
    	150-300 miles toss up - I'll usually drive.
    	300+ miles - Usually will fly, but it depends on circumstances.
    
    Buses - I generally refuse them.  They have the downside of flying 
    (having to hit the schedules and wait for the bus to show), are slower
    then driving (always stopping), I hate their smell, and you can't crank
    the radio.
    
    Trains can be okay - but I can usually do better driving.
    
    	Skip
626.37NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Wed Feb 28 1996 18:396
From a mailing list on adopting from the former USSR:

                          Although we were very nervous about flying
Aeroflot from Moscow to Rostov and back (especially after seeing the plane
being de-iced by a man standing on the wing with a snow-shovel and a
broom), the flight was uneventful...
626.38BUSY::SLABOUNTYDon't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448Wed Feb 28 1996 19:064
    
    	Better than seeing him carrying a couple cases of "Sno-Be-Gone"
    	spray cans.
    
626.39Sno Be Gone Can o beerHBAHBA::HAASExtra low prices and hepatitis too!~Wed Feb 28 1996 19:070
626.40BIGHOG::PERCIVALI'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-ROWed Feb 28 1996 19:2011

	Gee, thanks guys. 

	I have to get on a plane tommorrow AM and it's snowing like crazy
	here at the moment.

	It doesn't help to know that this aircraft will be sitting out
	all night, either.

Jim
626.41NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Wed Feb 28 1996 19:242
You're flying Aeroflot?  BTW, their flights to/from the U.S. are supposed to
be reasonably safe, since they have to meet U.S. standards.
626.42Don't worry Ocean will put out the fireTINCUP::AGUEhttp://www.usa.net/~agueWed Feb 28 1996 20:048
    I talked to a guy who had just flown Cancun to Havana and back on
    Aeroflot built plane (AirHavana was the airlines I think).  Soon after
    takeoff from Cancun, condensation started rising from under the
    flooring.  The passengers thought the plane was on fire.
    
    Apparently Mexico to Cuba is an easy way for US citizens to visit Cuba.
    
    -- Jim
626.43BIGHOG::PERCIVALI'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-ROWed Feb 28 1996 23:4413
   <<< Note 626.41 by NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085" >>>

>You're flying Aeroflot? 

	Nah, UAL (logo: "The DEC, err, Digital Corporate Airline).
	Springs to Denver, Denver to San Fransico, Denver to Tokyo,
	Tokyko to Singapore.

	Elapsed time, on the order of 30 hours.

	Maybe this belongs in the TTHT.

Jim
626.44Denver to SF, Denver to Tokyo, Tokyo to ...MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Wed Feb 28 1996 23:523
Which part are you leaving in Frisco, Jim?

I hope it's polite, as it will need to visit Jim Henderson's Mom
626.45BIGHOG::PERCIVALI'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-ROWed Feb 28 1996 23:5910
         <<< Note 626.44 by MOLAR::DELBALSO "I (spade) my (dogface)" >>>

>Which part are you leaving in Frisco, Jim?

	That'll teach me to note and partake of fruit of the Highlands
	and the same time.

	;-)

Jim
626.46CSLALL::HENDERSONWe shall behold Him!Thu Feb 29 1996 01:148

 Yes, while changing planes in SFO, face south and say "Hi" to my mom!




 Jim
626.47USAT05::HALLRGod loves even you!Thu Feb 29 1996 01:153
    Jim,
    
    How is your mom in SF anyway?
626.48CSLALL::HENDERSONWe shall behold Him!Thu Feb 29 1996 01:209


 I don't have one in SF, but I have one in San Carlos, about 10-15 miles
 south of SF.  She's fine, at least she was last time I spoke to her.



 Jim
626.49POLAR::RICHARDSONHindskits VelvetThu Feb 29 1996 01:211
    As soon as you hung up, she prolly went insane.
626.50CSLALL::HENDERSONWe shall behold Him!Thu Feb 29 1996 01:244


 Heck, I drove her there along time ago ;-)
626.51NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Thu Feb 29 1996 12:046
re .42:

I think the phrase "Aeroflot built plane" is more or less equivalent to
"TWA built plane."  Airlines don't build planes.  Cubana Airlines flies
Fokker F27's and Tupolev Tu-154's between Cancun and Havana.  Mexicana de
Aviacion flies DC-9's and Fokker F27's on the same route.
626.52Russian plane down in NorwayGAAS::BRAUCHERWelcome to ParadiseThu Aug 29 1996 18:187
626.53I'll stay at low potential energy point when possibleDECWIN::RALTOJail to the ChiefThu Aug 29 1996 18:437
626.54PENUTS::DDESMAISONSperson BThu Aug 29 1996 18:594
626.55SafteyKERNEL::FREKESExcuse me while I scratch my buttFri Aug 30 1996 12:533
626.56CSLALL::HENDERSONEvery knee shall bowFri Aug 30 1996 13:0211
626.57SMURF::BINDERErrabit quicquid errare potest.Fri Aug 30 1996 13:185