Looks like they disembarked the last pax and just plonked it on the roof! Looks in very good nick actually (not sure being lifted by sticking an RSJ through the DV windows will help though, doubt thats listed as a jacking point in the engineer's manuals but hey ho!). I was going to say it looks in better nick than the ones I fly home on occasionally. I came into Brum at Christmas in the heavy snow on an F-100. touchdown was smooth but there was a fire tender suspiciously close to the end of hte runway. We made two turns off the runway so that we were parallel before stopping when the captain announced he was no longer able to steer the plane and we would have to be towed.
When the tug showed up, the driver noted that the main gear doors had collapsed onto the tarmac and needed to be secured! When we reached the parking spot, I noticed that the flaps had never been retracted either. Sounded suspiciously like a hydraulics fault
What are KLM replacing them with? Embraers? No more new Fokkers, I believe the -50s have gone already, do they still have -70s?
(not sure being lifted by sticking an RSJ through the DV windows will help though, doubt thats listed as a jacking point in the engineer's manuals but hey ho!).
The forum that is linked at the top of the page has a post that says that the cockpit was built that way so it could be used to recover the aircraft, so it could be in the recovery manual, whatever that is. Of coures, in real life I'm an aeronautical numbskull so what do I know? Not a lot.
Guess that makes sense actually, and defuelled and without pax or freight, the C of G is probably further to the rear than in take off configuration. it just looked very strange to see that, that's all!