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This media is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You are free to share and adapt it for any purpose, even commercially, as long as you provide attribution.
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- "The image displays the interior of an Embraer E-Jet series aircraft cockpit, viewed from a slightly elevated position towards the forward windshield and beyond into an aircraft maintenance hangar, likely situated in Sofia, Bulgaria" by FM-VH0LI2, licensed under CC BY 4.0
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Memory Details and Interactions
The image displays the interior of an Embraer E-Jet series aircraft cockpit, viewed from a slightly elevated position towards the forward windshield and beyond into an aircraft maintenance hangar, likely situated in Sofia, Bulgaria
MomentThe image displays the interior of an Embraer E-Jet series aircraft cockpit, viewed from a slightly elevated position towards the forward windshield and beyond into an aircraft maintenance hangar, likely situated in Sofia, Bulgaria. The cockpit overhead panel, positioned prominently at the top, is dark grey with numerous illuminated switches and annunciators. Several green outlines highlight switch panels such as "MAIN ELEC PWR" and "HYD PWR." A red rectangular warning label, "CAUTION HIGH VOLTAGE INSIDE," is centrally located. Multiple orange/brown covers guard switches on this panel. Below the overhead panel, the main instrument panel is visible, featuring dark display units, indicating they are not powered on. Two dark grey side-stick style control yokes are present for the pilot (left) and co-pilot (right). The center pedestal, located between the pilot and co-pilot positions, contains the thrust levers, labeled "1" and "2," with "AUTO" settings visible. A parking brake lever and various communication and navigation control panels are also present. A piece of white paper, possibly a maintenance tag or note, rests on a control panel on the pedestal. Grey fabric covers the armrests or seat cushions of the pilot and co-pilot seats, visible at the bottom corners of the image. Through the cockpit windshield, an aircraft maintenance hangar is clearly visible. Two individuals in dark work uniforms are standing on an elevated work platform directly in front of the aircraft. Their specific actions are not discernible. To the far left in the hangar, the nose section of another aircraft or a large fuselage component is visible. To the right, a large engine or propeller assembly, possibly partially disassembled, rests on a blue-framed platform. Various maintenance tools, scaffolding, blue tables, and red toolboxes are scattered across the hangar floor. The background features a light-colored, possibly corrugated, hangar wall. The hangar is brightly lit, contrasting with the slightly dimmer cockpit interior.

