ReadAllAboutIt92
ReadAllAboutIt92 t1_j71kn9p wrote
Reply to comment by x-munk in No charges to be filed against Coloma teacher who gave John Green book to students by AndeeElizabeth09
Crucible and Lord of the Flies are both out too… pretty sure I studied both of those by age 13 in the U.K.
ReadAllAboutIt92 t1_j0g0hzq wrote
Reply to comment by Hugsy13 in Jacinda Ardern auctions off ‘arrogant prick’ comment to raise money for prostate cancer charity by Laogama
If I were a politician (which thankfully is never going to happen) I’d always be way more suspicious of those who agree with me than those who challenge me. I don’t want someone to tell me how brilliant I am, I want someone to come and poke holes in my ideas so that they can be improved.
ReadAllAboutIt92 t1_iws3au0 wrote
Reply to David Beckham claims Qatar World Cup a platform for inclusivity and tolerance by loldonkimo
Looks like Joe Lycett’s going to be shredding that £10K
ReadAllAboutIt92 t1_jdujmwq wrote
Reply to comment by Qrkchrm in Does living in an airplane flight path, near an airport, pose a health risk? What happens to the lead from the jets fuel? by [deleted]
There is also a promising push within the industry that new build aircraft are fitted with engines that run on alternative fuels. Rotax engines that run on MOGAS (or standard car-grade gasoline/petrol) are becoming more popular. Diamond Aircraft from Austria fit the majority of their aircraft with a modified Mercedes Benz Diesel engine, which has its own issues, but removes the Lead content.
The issue in General Aviation is that these piston aircraft, with the right levels of maintenance, can run for decades, the majority of aircraft that students train in these days are 40-60 years old, still completely safe, and still completely legal, but running on technology that would otherwise be completely obsolete. However these engines keep going because they have the safety record to back them up, and rule number 1 of flying is to reduce risk and maximise safety at every opportunity.