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plttn | 5 years ago
The planes that are relatively accessible aren't flightworthy without effort, and the planes that are flightworthy require violating federal law (in the US) to access them.
plttn | 5 years ago
The planes that are relatively accessible aren't flightworthy without effort, and the planes that are flightworthy require violating federal law (in the US) to access them.
gruez|5 years ago
That doesn't really answer the question though. Breaking into a house also violates laws, yet it happens all the time. If you've made it onto an airport tarmac, can you just steal a plane?
stephen_g|5 years ago
So assuming you're that far in, and you know how to start it up, you don't have a flight plan logged, so the tower isn't going to give you clearance to take off. If you take off without permission, they're going to call the air force, so you'd better be in a country that doesn't have a very big air force or a nearby base, and you probably want to choose somewhere where you can get into another country's airspace who isn't friendly with the country you stole the plane from...
Redoubts|5 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Horizon_Air_Q400_incident
https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/12/opinions/seattle-stolen-plane...
> most airlines do not lock airplanes because access can only be obtained by security vetted employees through jet bridges and coded door ramp access.
worewood|5 years ago