A380 hits CRJ-700 at JFK

April 12, 2011 on 1:00 pm | In Trivia | No Comments

Ever wondered what happens when a larger aircraft clips a smaller aircraft with its wingtip?  Wonder no more:

The Air France A380 hit the tail of the Comair (Delta) CRJ-700 Monday evening and spun the CRJ-700 around by 90 degrees.  Listen to the ATC audio on this clip:

 

Sometimes. . . it’s just that cool.

April 12, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Watch the videos of the Virgin Galactic WhiteKnight Two and SpaceShip Two lining up with a Virgin America flight to land at SFO.  Sometimes, things are just that cool.

 

Sunday Trivia

April 10, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Airbus was the first commercial airliner manufacturer to introduce full authority fly-by-wire into its aircraft.  The A320 was the first with the A330/A340 following it.  Airbus aircraft use a sidestick controller which resembles a computer game joystick to control its aircraft instead of a “yoke”.

Can you name the next commercial airliner manufacturer to introduce fly-by-wire technology?

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Sunday Trivia: The Boeing 737

April 3, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

In light of Southwest Airlines’ 737 decompression, I thought I would offer a bit of trivia on the 737.

Question 1:  How many family iterations has the 737 seen?

Question 2:  How long has the 737 been in production?

Question 3:  How many engines brands have been offered for each variant of the 737?

Question 4:  What airliner was the world’s most popular before the 737 overtook that place?

Answers after the fold:

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Sunday Trivia Question

March 20, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

The Airbus A320 aircraft family is just as popular as the Boeing 737 family and there are a number of huge operators throughout the world.  But the big domain of this aircraft is clearly Europe where several airlines operate big fleets.

Two Questions:

Can you name the largest European operator of this aircraft family and the largest operator of the A320 family in the world?

Find out the answer after the fold:

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Douglas DC-8

March 6, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

How about some DC-8 eye candy this Sunday? Enjoy the videos:

Notice the care taken not to over-rotate until the aircraft is fully aloft

A good old fashioned fly-by 50 feet off the deck with the wheels up.

Pan Am is coming back.

March 4, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 3 Comments

Well, in a way it is. The Pan Am name is already in the process of becoming airline again as I posted HERE back in November.  However, what I’m talking about today is a television show.

A pilot episode of a new TV show based on Pan American Airlines has been ordered by ABC.  The concept around the show is the romantic glory years of jet travel for Pan Am:  the 1960’s.  Executive producer Nancy Hult Ganis worked as a fligth attendant herself starting in 1968 after walking past a Pan Am office in Detroit.

This is the kind of show that would thrill airline enthusiasts if done right.  However, I firmly believe that this kind of show doesn’t have the kind of audience that ABC can view as a success.  This is a show better done by one of the cable TV channels a la Mad Men. 

But we can always hope that I’m wrong and it does succeed.

Heathrow T5

February 25, 2011 on 12:00 pm | In Trivia | No Comments

A fun video that I’ve not seen before. Enjoy!

Landings

February 20, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

A story on CNN’s website (which I can’t link to anymore) inspired me to post these videos of landings in various locations around the world.  Enjoy!


KLM 747 landing in Hong Kong


KLM 747 landing in St. Maarten


737 landing in the French Riviera


737 landing in Geneva


Landing in Courchavel

How about some eye candy?

February 6, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

A video of the SADDE SIX approach into LAX.

Tip of the hat to Cap’n Doug from From The Flight Deck Blog.

 

And a video of synchronized flying.

 

And Virgin Atlantic’s Mustang Sally 747 gets repainted

Your favorite airline as a USB Flash Drive

January 30, 2011 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

For the uber-airline geek, Bader models is making USB flash drives with the tail of your favorite airline.  You can see more HERE.  Among their samples, I’ve noticed iconic airlines such as Eastern and PanAm and I’ve noticed the distinctive tail of an L-1011.  Bader says you can order any aircraft and color you want. 

It doesn’t come cheap though.  The 4GB model is $53 and the jumbo jet version in 32GB is a whopping $120.  But you get to be one of the cool kids on the block with that sticking out of the side of your computer. 

I’m tempted myself.  I wonder if they’ll do a 727 tail with the first generation Braniff logo on it in white?

Braniff BAC 1-11

January 24, 2011 on 1:00 pm | In Trivia | 2 Comments

I mentioned in a post a few weeks ago that I had started collecting diecast aircraft.  One commenter asked why no BAC 1-11 aircraft.  Well, here it is:

 

From 2011 01 22 Fleet Additions

See the rest of the additions HERE.

The Fleet

January 2, 2011 on 12:15 am | In Trivia | 3 Comments

I recently decided to enjoy the hobby of collecting diecast airliners.  Actually, I decided to collect diecast Braniff International airliners.  After I had built a bit of fleet, I decided I wanted to photograph them.  Since I was going to photograph them, I wanted to try to put them into a setting that appeared “real”.  Here is the result:

Alfred Kahn

December 30, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Airline History, Trivia | No Comments

There is probably no one more villified for the 1978 deregulation of airlines in the United States than Alfred E. Kahn.  The Cornell University professor died at age 93 this past monday.

What would probably surprise many, especially those born prior to the 1970’s, is that Kahn had no background in airlines.  Despite that handicap, he did actually learn the arcane language and strategies of airlines as Chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board.  Mr. Kahn actually had to be pressured by both President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale before taking the job.

Prior to taking the job, airlines were just “marginal costs with wings” to him, said Kahn.

Was Kahn successful?  I would argue that he was although he left a gaping hole in what he architected that still plagues airlines today:  airlines were deregulated but their labor wasn’t.  Only the price side of the equation was ever really deregulated.  That’s caused more than 30 years of problems for airlines and it’s a problem that really is no closer to a solution than it was in 1978.  One only has to look at who enjoyed political power in 1978 to understand why.

You can read Alfred E. Kahn’s obituary in the New York Times.

Paint

December 10, 2010 on 1:00 pm | In Trivia | 2 Comments

Imagine you are a company who specializes in painting aircraft.  Imagine just how exciting mergers like the Delta/Northwest and Continental/United mergers must be for your business outlook.

KLM works social media magic

December 8, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Airline News, Trivia | 2 Comments

KLM took on a bet with a group of Dutch Dance fanatics recently via Twitter.  If KLM could get enough reservations to fill a plane on the site http://www.fly2miami.nl/ before December 6th, KLM would agree to do a non-stop flight from Amsterdam to Miami for these folks.  It seems the Dutch Dance Scene really wanted to get to Miami because they filled the flight in less than 5 hours and they now have 351 reservations.  So it’s on.

Obviously this flight isn’t going to dramatically change KLM’s balance sheet but they get to do what is essentially a charter filled with non-refundable fares and make some money.  The Dutch Dance Scene gets to dance in Miami.  It’s win – win for both parties.

The power of social media has proven itself again and it’s a message that quite a few airlines in the United States could stand to listen to (do you hear me United/American/Delta?).

Iran Air has the Star of David

December 5, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

It was recently discovered that Iran Air’s headquarters has the Star of David on top of its building and, as you might imagine, Iran is outraged to make this discovery.  You can see it HERE in this story.  Prior to the revolution in Iran in 1978, it was quite common for Israeli engineers to work in Iran. 

Israel even had a direct flight from Iran to Israel.  Engineers were hired to design and manage the construction of a great many public works buildings and they often performed other services.  Those whacky Israelis also had the habit of sticking the Star of David into difficult to spot places.  My father has a Iranian banknote from the 1970s that was printed by the Israelis.  The engraving for the background contains the Star of David.

You can also find this feature on top of a public building in a main square in Tehran that was also built by Israelis using Google Earth.

Going Through Security . . . In A Speedo

November 26, 2010 on 1:09 pm | In Trivia | 1 Comment

For your entertainment more than anything else.

Donald Nyrop

November 19, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Airline History, Airline News, Airline Service, Trivia | No Comments

I have to be honest, I thought Donald Nyrop was already dead.  I was wrong.

Donald Nyrop died on Tuesday, November 16th, at the age of 98. 

I’ll wager that quite a few younger airline fans may not even know his name.  Nyrop was one of the Titans of the airline industry and served as CEO of Northwest Airlines.  He should be thought of in the same category as Robert Six (Continental), Juan Trippe (Pan Am), Jack Frye (TWA) and CR Smith (American Airlines) in my opinion. 

Nyrop was a former government lawyer who ran Northwest as frugally as possible.  American Airlines is known for leaving their aircraft unpainted to save money but Nyrop did it for the same reason.  He kept their headquarters in Minneapolis in a non-descript building near the airport and he often fought with his airlines’ unions during his tenure. 

But he is the man who made that airline what it was and certainly it embodied his spirit in some form or fashion and for good or bad right up to the point it merged with Delta.   Don Nyrop retired from the Northwest Airlines board all the way back in 1984 leaving a legacy of frugality and safety.  Not many men could navigate those two prioties with the success he did.  Northwest was the airline that pioneered things like forecasting clear-air turbulence, for instance.

He wasn’t without his quirks.  Nyrop reportedly became convinced that employees were lollygagging in the restrooms reading newspapers and once had the doors to the stalls removed to stop it.   Like many other airline leaders of his time, he was also known for being very solicitous of his employees and looked after their well being with many simple, undeclared acts of kindness. 

He was tough with aircraft manufacturers and their salesmen and demanded safe aircraft that met Northwest’s needs.  He standardized their operations as much as humanly possible in his time insisting that aircraft all have the same configurations including engines.  He insisted on the best navigational equipment for Northwest’s routes to Asia and employees respected the way he made money in a business where that quality is rare.

I’ve often tried to find a biography on this man.  I always wished that Robert Serling had written about him and this airline because its a story that I suspect hasn’t been fully told.  Serling would have told it best, I believe. 

I find it a bit sad that his obituary appears only in the Minneapolis St. Paul Star Tribune because it should be noticed in so many more places given his contributions to both Northwest and aviation.  It’s even a bit sadder that Nyrop goes unmentioned even in the Wikipedia entry for Northwest Airlines (as I write this anyway).  So, if you happen to see a Northwest aircraft, especially one of the old DC-9’s, raise a hand and wave because it was bought under Nyrop’s leadership and it’s really quite remarkable that it continues to fly on today.

Air New Zealand Videos

October 24, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Something light for a Sunday. . . new Air New Zealand videos.

 

 

Story Time

The Intimate Art of Touch

Happy Hour

Dan and Dolly

Crazy About Rugby

All Black Livery

Bare Essentials

Nothing To Hide

Copyright © 2010 OneWaveMedia.Com

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