Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: Yenny on December 05, 2008, 11:33:01 AM
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Prop to this gal, she was born w/o arms. She takes everything the hard way but she rocks at it. This clip is about her flying a plane. She got spirit! =)
Dear Skuzzie,
This video is safe for work, and summery ^
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ff1_1228488014
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Dude...props.
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Great clip and that was a nice looking aircoupe. Perfect plane for her with the interlinked rudder and ailerons.
:salute to her.
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Nice!
She's pretty cute too :aok
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To many people look at task and give up easily.....I wish they would pay more attn to people like this.
<S>
Race
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:aok :salute
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Wow... I would have thought that impossible.
Major kudos to her.
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Prop to this gal, she was born w/o arms. She takes everything the hard way but she rocks at it. This clip is about her flying a plane. She got spirit! =)
Dear Skuzzie,
This video is safe for work, and summery ^
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ff1_1228488014
She takes it the hard way? borat likes!
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friggin AWESOME
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Wow... I would have thought that impossible.
Major kudos to her.
Impossible for me is using a toilet. Flying is a thing of desire and tenacity.
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That's awesome. Kudos to her and her parents.
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:salute
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What a girl :salute
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:rock Aircoop is the perfect plane for her case.
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The ERCO Ercoupe is a low wing monoplane first manufactured by the Engineering and Research Corporation (or ERCO) shortly before World War II. It was designed to be the safest fixed-wing aircraft that aerospace engineering could provide at the time, and the type still enjoys a very faithful following today.
Targeted at the non-professional pilot, the Ercoupe was also designed to be spin-proof with no dangerous stall characteristics. A placard, which was the first for any aircraft, was allowed to be placed on the instrument panel reading: "This aircraft characteristically incapable of spinning." An elevator that could move upward and downward only a limited amount—13 degrees—plus automatic yaw correction, enabled the aircraft to actually fly itself out of a spin.