Cuenta como aterrizaje?
---------- Post added at 08:26 ---------- Previous post was at 08:23 ----------
Hacia tiempo que las buscaba en buena resolucion como para postearlo.
La empresa de bajo costo sorprendio con un usual esquema llamado Flying 101 en uno de sus Boeing 737-86N (ZS-ZWP / OK-PIK)
Las fotos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/shanair/4288246965/sizes/o/in/set-72157622648454054/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/shanair/4288986922/sizes/o/in/set-72157622648454054/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/shanair/4288247537/sizes/o/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/shanair/4288246205/sizes/o/in/set-72157622648454054/
the big cheese (”captain, my captain!”)
co-captain (the other pilot on the PA system)
the jump seat is for wannabe pilots.
galley (cuppa anyone?)
avionics (fancy navigation stuff)
windows (best view in the world)
wing #1 and #2
engine #1 and #2 (26 000 pounds of thrust)
emergency exit = throne zone (more leg room baby!)
seats (better than taxi seats)
some windows = kulula fans (the coolest peeps in the world)
black box (which is actually orange)
landing gear (comes standard with supa-fly mags)
back door (no bribery/corruption here)
tail (featuring an awesome logo)
loo (or mile-high club initiation chamber)
rudder (the steering thingy)
stabiliser (the other steering thingy)
a.p.u. (extra power when you need it most)
galley (food, food, food, food…)
boot space
ZS-ZWP (OK-PIK) = secret agent code (aka plane’s registration)
overhead cabins (VIP seating for your hand luggage)
fuel tanks (the go-go juice)
cargo door
aircon ducts (not that kulula needs it… they’re already cool)
front door (our door is always open … unless we’re at 41 000 feet)
cockpit window = sun roof
nose cone (radar, antenna, and a really big dish inside)