Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The end of my white-knuckling flights?

Given my fear of flying, you might think it odd that I'm getting pretty jazzed about the new Boeing 787 Dreamliner that just started its final assembly in Everett, Washington.

Made out of some sort of revolutionary graphite composite instead of aluminum, it will be the most technologically advanced passenger aircraft in the skies if it makes it's scheduled commercial service debut in 2008. Windows are supposed to be dramatically larger and electronically dimmable if the extra sunlight bothers you. Air is better circulated and retains a bit more moisture than the bone-dry cabin environments of today's planes. The cockpit is state of the art with all kinds of complicated gadgets, wires, and connections that sounds a bit scary when you think about what could go wrong if just one part of the circuit malfunctions.

But all of that isn't why I care. I could care less about the creature comforts added to the cabin space. No, I hate flying because of turbulence. Throw in just one little sudden 10 foot change in altitude, and I'm wimpering like a baby for the rest of the flight. And what's in the new Dreamliner? A top secret computer-controlled flight system that actually detects dramatic altitude changes faster than a human pilot ever could and dampens upward wind gusts "turning a roller-coaster ride in choppy air into one no more bothersome than a drive along a cobblestone street." Now if only they could stop those wings from flapping up and down. Yeah, maybe I'll keep those electronic window shades completely dimmed.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Would the picture in the post below look the same coming back up if you flew in a four seater single engine prop plane?