@aliveculture: ‘Song of the Week’ @burnaboyofficial - “Vanilla” 🇿🇦 (Video Out Now)(Submit your song to be featured, simply hashtag #AliveSOTW and tag us.)~ Alive CulturePathway to the Kingdom.#BurnaBoy • #Vanilla • #AfroFusion • #AfricanMusic • #SOTW • #AliveCulture • #ALVE • #RayBan

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Wednesday 13 July 2022 17:53:39 GMT
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Working the line on both the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 is wild... honestly, it’s tough to pick a favorite because both these birds are straight-up awesome in their own way. Whether you’re sitting in a Dreamliner or an A350, the tech is next-level. From a maintenance engineer’s perspective, Boeing’s systems feel pretty solid and intuitive. When something pops up, you can often deactivate or isolate faults quickly and get the aircraft dispatched without too much drama. The 787’s electrical architecture is robust, and troubleshooting flows logically in a lot of cases. Airbus, on the other hand, is also rock-solid, but it leans heavily on software and automation . You end up doing more resets and working through the systems in a very Airbus way. This time around with the A350, they’ve made the circuit breaker setup more complex (lots of remote and electronic ones), which can turn a simple fault into a longer procedure. Still, once you’re in the rhythm, it’s impressive how modular and capable it is. Both planes push the envelope with composites, efficient engines, and modern avionics, and dispatch reliability sits high for both (99%+ range depending on the operator). For newer engineers coming up, getting hands-on experience or type ratings/authorizations on both is super important... especially if you’re at an airline or MRO that flies mixed widebody fleets. It opens up way more opportunities and gives you a broader skill set. I genuinely like working on both.... they each bring something cool to the table. What about you? If you maintain or fly these, which one do you vibe with more on the ramp or in the cockpit, and why? #avgeek #aviation #a350 #b787 #airbus
Working the line on both the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 is wild... honestly, it’s tough to pick a favorite because both these birds are straight-up awesome in their own way. Whether you’re sitting in a Dreamliner or an A350, the tech is next-level. From a maintenance engineer’s perspective, Boeing’s systems feel pretty solid and intuitive. When something pops up, you can often deactivate or isolate faults quickly and get the aircraft dispatched without too much drama. The 787’s electrical architecture is robust, and troubleshooting flows logically in a lot of cases. Airbus, on the other hand, is also rock-solid, but it leans heavily on software and automation . You end up doing more resets and working through the systems in a very Airbus way. This time around with the A350, they’ve made the circuit breaker setup more complex (lots of remote and electronic ones), which can turn a simple fault into a longer procedure. Still, once you’re in the rhythm, it’s impressive how modular and capable it is. Both planes push the envelope with composites, efficient engines, and modern avionics, and dispatch reliability sits high for both (99%+ range depending on the operator). For newer engineers coming up, getting hands-on experience or type ratings/authorizations on both is super important... especially if you’re at an airline or MRO that flies mixed widebody fleets. It opens up way more opportunities and gives you a broader skill set. I genuinely like working on both.... they each bring something cool to the table. What about you? If you maintain or fly these, which one do you vibe with more on the ramp or in the cockpit, and why? #avgeek #aviation #a350 #b787 #airbus

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