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WingsAloft
03-09-2012, 05:40 PM
Hi, there! I am new to EAA, new to flight training, old to the Passion of Aviation.....and I've got a quick question: In the aviation cliche, "Life is lead points and habit patterns", just what in the world are "lead points"?? (and is "lead" pronounced "led" or "leed"?) Bonus question: What is the MEANING of the cliche? Thanks!

Floatsflyer
03-09-2012, 10:02 PM
I've been flying for 38 years and have had the infectious aviation disease since I could walk but I have never heard that phrase in the aviation lexicon. I haven't a clue what it means or if it has in fact an aviation related meaning or significance.

Bill
03-09-2012, 11:35 PM
While I've only been flying for 32 years, I've never heard or read of "lead points" in aviation either. There is a "lead point intussusception" medical term applicable to the human bowel, but I've never investigated the details, preferring to leave that to the province of colorectal surgeons (proctologists).

Chick
03-10-2012, 12:53 AM
It might be something to do with aerial gunnery. You fire as your target arrives at your lead point.

WingsAloft
03-10-2012, 06:23 AM
Thanks, maybe it's an obscure or obsolete saying...or perhaps even foreign. I got it from this webpage: http://pilotfriend.com/humour/jokes/cliches.htm It's about #75 down the page.The website itself seems Brittish, but there's plenty of American stuff there, too. Thanks again

WingsAloft
03-10-2012, 06:33 AM
Chick, do you think lead points is a military term?

steveinindy
03-10-2012, 07:09 AM
I've heard the term 'lead point' before as being just another way of saying 'starting point'....enunciated likes 'Leeds' without the 's'.

WingsAloft
03-10-2012, 07:31 AM
I've heard the term 'lead point' before as being just another way of saying 'starting point'....enunciated likes 'Leeds' without the 's'. Thanks. My curiosity can be leathal (to me). Do you remember when and/or where you heard this term? Were you ever in the military?

steveinindy
03-10-2012, 08:35 AM
I was in the US Air Force but I recall hearing it as a child from an RAF veteran who lived in the same town I did. He had married an American nurse and wound up over here after the war. I don't remember the exact context he used the phrase in but that is the only time I have ever come across it's use so I think it might be a WWII era British aviation term.

WingsAloft
03-10-2012, 02:27 PM
I was in the US Air Force but I recall hearing it as a child from an RAF veteran who lived in the same town I did. He had married an American nurse and wound up over here after the war. I don't remember the exact context he used the phrase in but that is the only time I have ever come across it's use so I think it might be a WWII era British aviation term.


Now this is getting exciting! Do you remember how "lead" was enunciated? thanks!

steveinindy
03-10-2012, 03:04 PM
Like the city "Leeds" but without the s. So as in a starting point or a clue in an investigation

WingsAloft
03-10-2012, 05:10 PM
Like the city "Leeds" but without the s. So as in a starting point or a clue in an investigation Thanks for your help. I think you're right, it must be a WWII fighter pilot saying, especially considering the source of where you heard it. Also probably why google had no info on it. I think I know where to go from here: The Vintage Aircraft Association. Thanks again