Air Travel – Mysteries Unveiled

passion — and questions.

If you’d like the answers, I highly recommend Patrick Smith’s new book, “Cockpit Confidential.” Mr. Smith is a pilot and blogger; much of the book’s format and contents are on display at his Web site, AskThePilot.com, or in the archives of the “Ask the Pilot” column he wrote for Salon.com for years.

But as a frequent flyer, I’d much rather have the book, which is a far more comprehensive book of questions and answers about airplanes, airports, airlines and the psychology of flying. Here are some excerpts — factoids that every flier should know:

“Turbulence scares me to death. Do I have reason to be afraid?”

No. “A plane cannot be flipped upside-down, thrown into a tailspin or otherwise flung from the sky by even the mightiest gust or air pocket. Conditions might be annoying and uncomfortable, but the plane is not going to crash.”

“If all of a jet’s engines were to fail, can the plane glide to a landing?”

Yes. “There’s no greater prospect of instant calamity than switching off the engine in your car when coasting downhill. The car keeps going, and a plane will too.”

“I understand that planes can jettison fuel. Is this done to lighten the load for landing?”

Yes. “For a few reasons, the obvious one being that touching down puts higher stresses on an airframe than taking off.” But Mr. Smith also points out that only some airplane models have the ability to dump fuel — the big ones. “The 747, the 777, the A340, and the A330 all can dump fuel. A 737, an A320, or an RJ cannot. These smaller jets must circle or, if need be, land overweight.”

“What happens when lightning hits an airplane?”

Nothing. The energy “is discharged overboard through the plane’s aluminum skin, which is an excellent electrical conductor.”

“Are the contents of airplane toilets jettisoned during flight?”

No. “There is no way to jettison the contents of the lavatories during flight.” Instead, the toilet contents are vacuumed out into a tank truck at the end of the flight.

“What do the dings and chimes mean?”

There are two kinds of chimes. “The first kind is basically just a phone call” from the cockpit to the flight attendants; it means, “pick up the intercom.” The other type is a “signaling device for the cabin crew” — when the seat-belt sign is turned on or off, when the plane reaches 10,000 feet (so that electronics are o.k. to use) and when initial descent begins, so it’s time to prepare the plane for landing.

“Many of the three-letter codes for airports make no sense.”

The non-obvious ones are probably holdovers from the airports’ previous names. “MCO is derived from MCCoy Field, the original name for Orlando International. Chicago O’Hare’s identifier, ORD, pays honors to the old Orchard Field.”

I should mention, by the way, that this book is frequently funny. For example, the author notes, “A campaign was launched in 2002 to change the identifier for the Sioux City, Iowa, from SUX to something less objectionable. The campaign failed.”

“We are told that modern commercial airplanes can essential fly themselves.”

Emphatically no. “A plane is able to fly itself about as much as the modern operating room can perform an operation by itself.” Autopilot is a tool, but “you still need to tell it what to do, when to do it, and how to do it.”

“Why the annoying rules pertaining to window shades, seat backs, tray tables, and cabin lights during takeoffs and landings?”

“Your tray has to be latched so that, in the event of an impact or sudden deceleration, you don’t impale yourself on it. The restriction on seat recline provides easier access to the aisle and also keeps your body in the safest position.” Raising your window shade, meanwhile, “Makes it easier for the flight attendants to assess any exterior hazards— fire, debris — that might interfere with an emergency evacuation.” Dimming the lights is the same precaution.

“Is it true that pilots reduce oxygen levels to keep passengers docile?”

No.

“Could some crazy or ill-intentioned person open one of the doors during flight?”

No. “You cannot — I repeat, cannot — open the doors or emergency hatches of an airplane in flight. The cabin pressure won’t allow it.”

Are cellphones and gadgets really dangerous to flight?

It depends. Laptops have to be put away for takeoff and landing “to prevent them from becoming high-speed projectiles during a sudden deceleration or impact.” As for tablets and e-book readers, “it’s tough to take a prohibition seriously now that many pilots are using tablets in the cockpit.” That’s why the Federal Aviation Administration is considering relaxing the ban on those gadgets.

And can cellphones really disrupt cockpit equipment? Probably not. “I’d venture to guess at least half of all phones, whether inadvertently or out of laziness, are left on during flight. If indeed this was a recipe for disaster, I think we’d have more evidence by now.”

My favorite bits of “Cockpit Confidential” are Mr. Smith’s rants. He’s a frequent passenger as well as a pilot, so he’s well equipped to rail about the stupidity of the methods for boarding a plane, and about the Transportation Security Administration’s expensive, absurdly misguided efforts. (One of the book’s funniest passages: the tale of the time he tried to carry airline silverware onto a flight, “part of my hotel survival kit.” The T.S.A. agent confiscated them — even though it was the same silverware the airline itself issues to passengers in flight!)

Truth is, the world would be a better place if the airline industry weren’t so secretive in the first place. The actions of pilots are hidden behind safety-reinforced doors, they speak to the flight attendants with signals and jargon and the airlines’ behavior in scheduling and pricing flights are always mysterious. They’d serve all of us better, including themselves, by offering a little transparency.

Until that day arrives, “Cockpit Confidential” is the document that belongs in the seat-back pocket in front of you.

Marital Intimacy

Joel R. Beeke wrote the following. He is president and professor of systematic theology and homiletics at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary and pastor of the Heritage Netherlands Reformed Congregation in Grand Rapids, MI. He has authored, co-authored, and edited over 70 books, including Friends and Lovers: Cultivating Companionship and Intimacy in Marriage.

What if your pastor told you that it was a sin to have sex with your spouse on Sundays, on the three days before taking the Lord’s Supper, and during the forty days before Easter? That’s what Christians were hearing in the Middle Ages.

Fast forward several hundred years to a town in seventeenth-century England. A popular book by a Puritan pastor is given to couples at their weddings. It says something like this:

“One of the best ways to keep your marriage safe from adultery—next to reverence for God and always thinking about Him—is that husbands and wives both really enjoy each other. Keep a pure love going between the two of you, making love to each other regularly. The Bible tells us that sex between husbands and wives is a good and holy gift from God to keep us safe from sin. In fact, we owe it to each other as debt of kindness, and it’s one of the most proper and basic acts of married life.”

What happened? How did the church go from frowning on marital intimacy to blessing it? What happened was the Reformation, a massive return to the Word of God. The Holy Spirit moved many people to turn away from bad traditions to get back to the pure teachings of the Bible, which strongly affirm intimacy between husband and wife.

Of course, real intimacy is far more than the conjunction of bodies. It is the fellowship of souls. Sex is not an athletic performance, but part of a relationship. Even when physical problems make sex impossible, couples can still enjoy sweet intimacy. Intimacy in marriage arises from being best friends. To paraphrase another Puritan writer:

“It’s a mercy to have a faithful friend who really loves you. You can open your heart and share your life with such a trustworthy spouse. He or she is there for you, ready to support you. You can share the burdens of family and work, and comfort each other in the sad times. What a blessing to have a life companion who shares your joys and sorrows every day!”

After decades of studying the Bible and reading the Reformers and Puritans, I have distilled out a dozen principles for couples in my book, Friends and Lovers: Cultivating Companionship and Intimacy in Marriage. The first part of the book guides you in how to build a sweet friendship with your spouse. The second part aims to fan into flame your sexual intimacy. All of it stands upon the Scriptures, especially the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

May God bless your marriage so that you can look at your spouse and say, “This is my lover, and this is my friend!”

Genuine Revival

“There were earnest longings that all God’s people might be clothed with humility and meekness, like the Lamb of God, and feel nothing in their hearts but love and compassion to all mankind; and great grief when anything to the contrary appeared in any of the children of God, as bitterness, fierceness of zeal, censoriousness, or reflecting uncharitably on others, or disputing with any appearance of heat of spirit.” – Jonathan Edwards, “Thoughts on the Revival,” in Works (Edinburgh, 1979), I:377, recording the experience of his wife under the influence of the Holy Spirit.

At The Gospel Coalition National Conference at Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, earlier this year, Tim Keller explored the theme of “A Biblical Theology of Revival.” Here’s a short clip where he makes note of the fact that genuine revivals are usually quiet affairs:

Revivals Make Churches Quiet from The Gospel Coalition on Vimeo.

Here’s the full workshop address:

A Biblical Theology of Revival – Tim Keller (TGC13 Workshop) from The Gospel Coalition on Vimeo.