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Navigation and Air Route Flying

Navigation and Air Route Flying THE publication of an article on the requirements in aircraft equipment and ground organisation, from the point of view of an air pilot, seems a suitable opportunity for considering the present position in regard to the safety of passengers carried on organised air routes. The matter has been further brought into prominence by two recent bad accidents. In the one case, it appearswe write from information obtained from cables published in the English pressthat an American machine flew into the side of a hill in the dark. In the other, a German threeengined monoplane, shortly after leaving Croydon for the Continent, crashed in a wood when the pilot was seeking either to return or to land under foggy conditions. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology Emerald Publishing

Navigation and Air Route Flying

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology , Volume 1 (10): 2 – Oct 1, 1929

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Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
Copyright © Emerald Group Publishing Limited
ISSN
0002-2667
DOI
10.1108/eb029208
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

THE publication of an article on the requirements in aircraft equipment and ground organisation, from the point of view of an air pilot, seems a suitable opportunity for considering the present position in regard to the safety of passengers carried on organised air routes. The matter has been further brought into prominence by two recent bad accidents. In the one case, it appearswe write from information obtained from cables published in the English pressthat an American machine flew into the side of a hill in the dark. In the other, a German threeengined monoplane, shortly after leaving Croydon for the Continent, crashed in a wood when the pilot was seeking either to return or to land under foggy conditions.

Journal

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace TechnologyEmerald Publishing

Published: Oct 1, 1929

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