Newark (EWR) ~ West Palm Beach (PBI) - United Airlines - Boeing 737 MAX 8 - Full Flight
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- Опубліковано 28 гру 2022
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Flight Details:
Date: Tuesday 11th October 2022
Airline: United Airlines
Flight Number: UA1139
Registration: N27268
Aircraft: Boeing 737 MAX 8
Origin: Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR)
Destination: West Palm Beach International Airport (PBI)
Scheduled Departure Time: 8:55am.
Actual Departure Time: 9:35am
Scheduled Arrival Time: 10:00am
Actual Arrival Time: 10:11am
Camera: iPhone 11
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Excellent footage! Nice job.
Who hooo! First!
🎆
What seat were you in?
so early the quality is still 360p LOL! Good quality takeoff im not a fan of newark airport but i do like PBI for its simpilicty and what it serves
PBI has been an enjoyable experience. Very simple and quick unlike the major hubs
Lol EWR kinda sucks! Way to much air traffic on and off the ground, terrible delays no matter the day, overcrowded. I’ve never been to PBI, but it seems pretty good, that size of airport is the ideal size for short trips.
54:54 I could see my town
I don't know much, but does this feel like a late take off? The plane was still on the ground when it hit the target stripes (for landing)
Crew announced it was a full flight. Takes more runway to achieve V1.
@@paulvincent3299 V1 isn't takeoff speed
@@mikeg4541 Wrong flyboy. V1 is the speed of takeoff that still allows for abort. Any pilot alive will rotate at V1.
@@paulvincent3299 This is categorically incorrect. No pilot alive will rotate AT V1 unless V1 happens to equal Vr. Vr is rotation speed. Most airliners hit V1 shortly before Vr, so your confusion likely stems from this. V1 is the point of no return (read: abort) so to speak. That does not mean you take off at V1. It means you must commit to speeding up to Vr and then rotating. You commit because you can no longer abort. You COMMIT to take off at V1, not take off. There is a significant difference. Most airliners, when hitting V1, are still short of their rotation speed (Vr). The gap between V1 and Vr can vary greatly depending on the plane type, weight, etc. A small plane on a long runway doesn't even have a V1, but they certainly have a Vr. I don't know what the "flyboy" comment is about, but you're wrong and I don't need to name call to tell you that.
@@mikeg4541 ua-cam.com/video/kLCg0_Otuhk/v-deo.html