The 727...
...was my favorite airliner. Just loved flying that machine. You could put her in a 30 degree climbing bank all trimmed out....reach down in your flight kit and rumage around for a minute or so....look back up and there she'd be...... just as you had left her. A wonderful hand flying airplane. Steeply swept wings a pointy nose, no magic, 1950's technology. It needed a flight engineer to do the job of the modern computerized cockpits. Just a simple autopilot, VOR/ILS nav., thick levers and knobs.... hundreds of bulky switches, big round dials like God intended.
Approach to landings were a fun challenge. If one let the airspeed get a bit slow or the thrust a bit low...the sink rate would increase like a falling stone....it would take massive power to recover. Many a poor boy recovered too late and smashed the earth. As we always said....."You never knew when the 727 would dive for the dirt." But if you stayed on top of it she would reward you with landings unfelt.
Loved how she would continue to roll on the mains with the nose wheel 10 feet in the air, during rotation. When heavy "Miss Piggy" would roll along like that for a few hundred feet. Finally with a heave and groan she'd lift off. A slow climbing airlplane....she would come down at 6,000 fpm with the spoilers deployed....even at traffic pattern speeds. Once in cruise she was one of the fastest airliners in the sky. Mach .90 redline cruise. Of course it was so noisy at those speeds that one could hardly hear themselves think. Manual spoilers on landing made for super greaser touchdowns. Roll her on, ease out the spoilers, add a touch of reverse. begin lowering the nose to the runway....transition to gentle braking as one came off the reverse....ahh pure sex!
Three man/woman cockpit....made it a real gentleman's airplane.
The pictured 727 was in pristine condition when AA sold her. Too bad they turned her into a trash can.
Bob