Flying Squid to pics • edit-21 day agoÍsafjörður Airport in Icelandimagemessage-square64arrow-up1652arrow-down19file-text
arrow-up1643arrow-down1imageÍsafjörður Airport in IcelandFlying Squid to pics • edit-21 day agomessage-square64file-text
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink7•edit-21 day agoLikely for the same reasons that any airport near a body of water is built. Layman’s guesses would be ease of embarking/disembarking, less likely to be affected by weather, standard airplanes are more common…
minus-squareFlying SquidOPlink2•1 day agoI don’t know that I’ve ever seen a modern plane that can land on water that carried more than a handful of passengers.
minus-square@AnAustralianPhotographerlinkEnglish2•24 hours agoLargest I know of are some Twin Otters in Canada have floats. 16-20 people, but I’d call them exceptional and a Cessna caravan type is a typical large float plane. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Canada_DHC-6_Twin_Otter
minus-squareFlying SquidOPlink2•24 hours agoThere you go. We’re just not flying the Spruce Goose and I’m guessing for cargo reasons if for no other, you want to be able to land large planes.
Likely for the same reasons that any airport near a body of water is built. Layman’s guesses would be ease of embarking/disembarking, less likely to be affected by weather, standard airplanes are more common…
I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a modern plane that can land on water that carried more than a handful of passengers.
Largest I know of are some Twin Otters in Canada have floats. 16-20 people, but I’d call them exceptional and a Cessna caravan type is a typical large float plane. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Canada_DHC-6_Twin_Otter
There you go. We’re just not flying the Spruce Goose and I’m guessing for cargo reasons if for no other, you want to be able to land large planes.