Tag Archives: beach

Preview of the Talbot Museum in Carmel Valley, CA

During the US Round of World SuperBike (SBK) Ducati Owners Club, arranged a preview of the Talbot Motorcycle Museum for club members. It was a great, warm and sunny evening in Carmel Valley, amongst some amazing motorcycles!

Here are some photos from the event:
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Where you can view these wonderful machines:

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Steamer Lane Surfing Pics – Santa Cruz, CA

Between storms, the waves really picked up at Steamers Lane, Santa Cruz, CA.


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Steamer’s Lane has a rich surfing history. It is just off a point on the side of cliffs in the West Cliff residential area near downtown Santa Cruz, providing a good opportunity to view the surfing. The Santa Cruz Surfing Museum is in the lighthouse there. “Steamer Lane” is the preferred form of the name used by the locals. It was at Steamer Jack O’Neil invented the modern surfing wetsuit, “Just because he wanted to surf longer”.

I went out to capture some of the Saturday action:

Some photos from the O’Neil Coldwater Classic

Granted, it’s been a couple of weeks since the pros packed up and headed off to Pipeline for the last event on their years tour. I’m not always the quickest to get photos uploaded, with clients to service, mouths to feed, cars and bikes to work on and in there somewhere I try to have a little fun for myself.

So this morning I’m pulling up some pics from a few weeks ago that I’ve wanted to post up. One of these days I’ll get my watermarking done, but for now.. I’ll just have to trust that nobody finds these compelling enough to steal (here’s hoping).

St. Maarten aircaft landing videos

While talking about cool places to go, I was looking up links to St. Maarten (visited there in 2001).   Which, inevitably brings me to look up YouTube videos of landings there.    Here are a few that I really liked.. the last one gives you a REAL feel for how hairball that approach is!

Airbus A340 landing. Keep our head down:

No, really, you want to keep your head down! (KLM 747)

First of the takeoff videos. Does not show the human windsocks but.. you sort of get the idea:

What it looks like inside the jet. Yeah, that mountain really is pretty damn close!

This is the longest of them all, at more than 7 minutes, but there are some great shots of the takeoff there too (check time mark 2:00).

Shortly but goody. It looks like the jet is just at the fence while you are standing them having sand hit you at near super-sonic speeds. Good times!

Here is a short one shot from the Sunset Beach Bar.

Now.. this is the most hairball of the bunch. That fence on the end of the runway is only 5′ tall for a reason!

And, finish it all off with a pilot’s view of SXM

I’ve pirated the pilot’s comments from his video post since, you might never see them viewing the video in my page:

Landing St.Maarten from cockpit 747. After nosewheel landing camera touched windshield causing crackling noise.

For those viewers who made comments (or new viewers who are thinking about making the comment) that this approach is too high and/or too fast or whatever else you might think, here some free 😉 flying lessons from someone who’s flying B747’s for 20 years:

On an approach on instruments a B747 should cross the runway threshold (= the piano keys) with the main wheels at ± 35 ft above threshold. The 747 is so big that at that point the altitude of the cockpit is 35 ft higher, so the cockpit is at ± 70 ft when main wheels cross the threshold.
On a visual approach, as is the case here at St.Maarten, we have to have some more margin. Normally the pilot aims to see the runway threshold disappear under the nose at 80 ft (mind you, the main wheels are at that moment still NOT above the threshold) to have sufficient main wheel clearance.
If you look at the video and notice the altitude callouts, you’ll see the threshold disappear under the nose at the call 50, so actually I am a bit too low in stead of too high. (In fact I am only too low for a visual approach. If you look at my landing at JFK http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4YoXy… you will see that I cross the threshold also at 50 ft, which is normal on an instrument approach. Note: the automatic altitude callouts you hear on this video are Radio Altimeter altitudes. The Radio Alt is zero when the main gear is on the ground with struts extended.)

Now, there are quite some viewers who think we landed too far on the runway. What follows from earlier explanation is this:
We approach a runway at a three degrees approach angle. If main wheels cross the threshold at the correct altitude, the main wheels will hit the runway at approx 900ft (300m) behind the threshold, that is, if you don’t flare the airplane. If you look again at the video and wait till you hear 50,40,30,20,10 and see the solid white markers, they are at 900ft behind the threshold and the plane touches down right behind them, because I did flare the airplane. (Passengers seem to hate hard landings!!)
THIS IS THE NORMAL TOUCHDOWN POINT FOR A B747.
The FCTM(=Flight Crew Training Manual) from Boeing says: flare distance is approx 300 to 600mtr (=900 to 1800ft) beyond the threshold.

So, please, stop nagging about this landing being too far on the runway.

And then something about too fast: On this approach the 747 weighs about 260.000 kgs. The required approach speed is then 150 kts which is about 175 mph or 280 km/hr. So what about TOO FAST? If we fly slower, we will fall out of the air!!