Great video! Would you be okay with me featuring parts of this departure in my series Weekly Dose of Aviation? Of course you will be credited both in the video and in the description. Thanks!
Beautiful Night Video👍👍!! One (1) thing about Chicago, it is one of the most "Well-Lit" Cities in the USA at night. On the Major Arterial Streets, the Secondary Neighborhood Streets, and the Alleys, the light poles are spaced about 75 to 100 feet apart, which makes the City a nice "Orthogonal Lighted Grid Pattern" at night. They eliminated the "Old 1973-1974 High-Pressure Sodium (Orange-Colored) Lights" and replaced them with these "New White-Colored LED Lights" throughout the City.
@@nixaviationthe description says seat 6F. I can tell just by looking at the angle of the wing from your seat that is not 3F. I’m a big aviation geek myself and on the 737-800 on southwest, one of my favorite seat is row 4.
Princess Ariel: well, girls, looks like we’ll be going to Hawaii in no time! Lorelai: Sparkling Seashells, I’ve never been on an airplane before, it’s my first time here, I can’t wait to do some Fin-Tastic Hula dancing! Princess Peach: Me too…(Squeals)…I’m so excited, I sure love this flight, now we better get some sleep until we get there, we’ll, goodnight, Lorelai and Ariel. Ariel and Lorelai: Goodnight. (They get to sleep) Ariel: 😴 Lorelai: 😴 Peach: 😴
I love flying through MDW. I remember one time on the way to Memphis, we landed there during a heavy snowstorm and temperatures in the single digits. Made it extra fun!
Google March 12, 1976 A Tornado near O'Hare Airport took out large trees in Park Ridge and lifted the roof off a hotel 4 miles east of the airport. President Ford's Motorcade was within a 1/2 mile of this tornado at the time it occurred.
There still telling you to wear a mask? Wow that was insane thwt lightning. I've never been in a plane with a thunderstorm before. But I have took a plane to California before.
They always bring up the mask when mentioning the oxygen masks. They ask you to remove your face covering before putting on the oxygen mask. It is fun flying in rough weather. I personally enjoy it.
I was on a flight from Omaha to Chicago midway back in 2018 there was turbulence due to a thunderstorm during the flight and when landing they came in for the approach really fast
@@User-jj9itI've never been to Memphis at all but thank you for actually mentioning the STAR and approach type. I use Microsoft Flight Simulator a lot and when I fly in real life, I never have any other aviation enthusiasts to tell what runway we're taking off on, the route or what approach we're on.
That`s what the installed weather radar is for - It displays the crew the intensity of convection cells ahead in scales of green, yellow and red. The penetration we see here on departure might just have been green to yellow.. Not more. Where the radar fails though is clear air turbulence - That cant be displayed. A combination of knowledge, communication and accurate weather charts are required for that.
They very much analyze weather conditions before take off. In some cases won’t take off if too severe and they fly around them rather than fly through them. (as long as they can). Pilots are trained to fly through turbulent conditions also.
@@Cl4rendon that doesnt explain anything...you can either see the developing weather or not...?..if no , why not?..its 2024..and "allegedly" we can fly into space...if you believe that nonsense...interdimensional yes not in a vacuum, where combustion obviously won't work...point is..where is all the fancy tech to predict weather patterns..or is it man made weather, manipulation ..