Lost Teenage Sailor Found with QANTAS jet

June 11, 2010 on 1:00 pm | In Trivia | No Comments

Teenage girl Abby Sunderland set off two emergency beacons after her boat’s mast was removed in heavy weather yesterday.  You can read details HERE.

The rather interesting part of this rescue operation, to me, was that she was located and contacted after a QANTAS A330 was chartered and sent to find her.  No coast guard aircraft could make that trip and very few (if any) military aircraft in that part of the world would have been capable of doing it.  An empty A330 could do it easily (it was about a 9 hour trip total).   The pilots of the aircraft were able to communicate with Ms. Sunderland when she used her marina radio.

American Airlines Breaks Bikes

June 9, 2010 on 11:30 am | In Airline Service, Trivia | No Comments

Update 6/10/2010 at 11:00am CDT:  I sent 2 emails yesterday afternoon to American Airlines’ Public Relations department and while I got several odd “out of office” emails back, no one yet has responded to my inquiry on whether or not they plan to comment or react to this video. 

 Original post:

So, I found this video this yesterday evening:

 

The real lesson in all of this is for American Airlines.  You never know *who* is flying on your airline and *who* your employees are potentially harming or lying to on any one day.  It might be some powerless schmo and it might be a powerful executive.   Even worse, it might be someone with pretty good graphic skills and who knows how to both tell a story and edit a video that goes viral beyond an airline’s worst dreams. 

The guy will probably gets some satisfaction from this.  Probably a new bike and based on what I saw, that’s probably a $2000+ bike.   But the cost isn’t the bike.  The cost is the PR nightmare that this will become over the next few days when this video truly goes viral worldwide.  And it’s good enough to do so.  The cost of everyone at AA now scrambling to deal with this will far exceed the cost of the bike and their efforts won’t fully repair the image problem. 

You can read more about the author’s problems at NYC Aviation.

Crosswinds

June 6, 2010 on 7:30 pm | In Trivia | 1 Comment

For a light Sunday, here are some videos of rather dicey crosswind landings by various aircraft.

 

Boeing 747 at Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Airport

 

 

Airbus A320 at Hamburg Airport

 

Singapore Airlines 747-400 landing in Zurich

 

The Airbus A380 learns to land in crosswinds

 

The Boeing 777 learns to land in crosswinds. Bonus shot of a 747SP doing the same.

The Concorde attempts a crosswind landing and decides to abort it on re-heat.

Comments on the past few days

June 2, 2010 on 12:26 pm | In Airline News, Trivia | 4 Comments

4 days of vacation and not reviewing anything to do with the airlines (or defense industry or the oil leak in the gulf) and it was quite relaxing.

Right.  Well, I see British Airways and Unite still haven’t got their act together.  These two desperately need binding arbitration.  British Airways needs it in order to bring back a degree of certainty to their operations.  Unite needs it to, well, preserve some semblance of the idea that they “won” something.  British Airways is winning this conflict now.  They’re winning it in public opinion and they’re winning it when it comes to employee viewpoints.  For Unite to continue without a deal only weakens them week by week.

I see that all kinds of politicians are questioning details of the Continental / United merger.  Oddly enough, many of them are from Texas and those folks are questioning the wisdom of Houston losing the Continental HQ.   Well, so do I but for vastly different reasons.  Houston is not going to be dimished as a hub nor is it going to lose many jobs.  In fact, I suspect they won’t lose any jobs in terms of “count” but I do think there will be transitions and changes.  This is a prestige objection on the part of Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison.  She lost the race for the Republican nomination for Governor in Texas and she desperately needs to appear to be looking out after “the people” in Texas if she expects to keep her seat in the Senate. 

I simply think it is stupid to move HQ to Chicago because it is fantastically more expensive there.  That’s all.

I saw a few stories about Australian airline JetStar adopting the iPad for inflight entertainment.  And, unlike most bloggers on the airline industry, I don’t care really.  I don’t see it as an industry trend, I don’t see it as unwise and I don’t think it’ll be but a blip on the airline horizon.  iPads are cool and probably cheap to deploy.  Oh, and you can deploy them quickly too.  Will it be a trend? I doubt it but I don’t care.  I really don’t. 

Boeing refuses to say whether or not they’ll bring a 787 to the annual flightshow in England this year in Farnborough.  They say they’ll make that decision closer to the show.  I say they would be insane not to give their customers a taste.  If they’re refusing to say, it may only be because they don’t know if their GE equipped test planes will fly their first flights on time.   Still, if I were to be money on an outcome, I’d be betting that ZA001, the first to fly, will be there all shiny and spiffy.  Maybe they’ll bring ZA003 which has seats.  One way or another, I’m betting there is a 787 at Farnborough. 

I refuse to talk about the person(s) who were left on United aircraft over the past few weeks. 

It’s been over a month since the new “tarmac rules” have been in place.  Am I the only one to notice only the soft sounds of crickets so far?  We’re 1 month into the thunderstorm season and nary a peep from anyone except Kate Hanni of FlyerRights.Org who wants rules in place to keep airlines from being punitive against people who want off an aircraft.  Actually, I somewhat support the notion but I think Kate Hanni is the wrong supporter for such a measure.  She’s got too much mud on her.

Braniff Airline Porn Day 2

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

A few more of my favorite Braniff commercials from back in the day.  It’s a regular work day for most of you out there but not for me.  Enjoy your day.

The Air Strip

Andy Warhol and Sonny Liston mix it up.

A rather odd look at what the future might be for Braniff . . . in 1975 from a 1960’s perspective.

Braniff Airline Porn Day 1

May 31, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

I’m off today and tomorrow  so I thought I’d offer up something light and airy and entertaining for the next 2 days.  Enjoy.

End of the Plain Plane

Braniff Bicentennial Commercial (Note:  The Bicentennial Flying Colors aircraft was actually a terrible hanger queen.)

Nice AirTran

May 23, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Nice aircraft, Airtran! And yet another strike at Midwest Airlines in Milwaukee.

Airliners.net Photo ID 1697258:
AirTran Boeing 717-231
Click photo for large version!

Robert J. Serling

May 21, 2010 on 3:00 pm | In Trivia | No Comments

I just found out that Robert Serling, an author on the aviation industry and writer of a number of fictional books revolving around the airline industry has passed away at the age of 92. He died on May 6th and was diagnosed with cancer just days earlier.  Robert Serling, brother to Rod Serling of the TV series “The Twilight Zone”, was quite literally my favorite aviation author.  I discovered him many years ago when I bought a book of his on Boeing.  I’ve since read virtually every book he’s written and I’ll miss his writing quite a bit.  His last book on Alaska Airlines was as good as any other he’s done. 

 

You can read a more extensive LA Times obituary on Mr. Serling HERE.  The new York Times Obituary is HERE.

Welcome to the Re-Launch

May 16, 2010 on 5:28 pm | In Trivia | No Comments

Welcome to the re-launch of the FlyingColors blog.  You may see things change still a bit more as I’m still tweaking it but I hope you enjoy it as before and, perhaps, find it a bit more readable.

Miracles

May 14, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Ordinarily I don’t like to speak on tragedies in the airline world.  CNN has this STORY on a woman who, in 1971, survived a fall of more than 2 miles from an disintegrating airliner (Lockheed turbo-prop) into the Amazon jungle.  She survived and then managed to make her way through the jungle for 10 days until she found help.  It is an an impressive feat.

Continental Dumps Fuel Over My Brother

May 10, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Airline News, Trivia | No Comments

Well, over New Jersey, actually.  He just lives there.

 

CNN had THIS report today about Continental Flight 9 from Newark, NJ to Japan having to return to Newark airport after developing hydraulic problems shortly after take off.  Because the aircraft was full of fuel for the long flight, fuel had to be dumped until the aircraft had a safe landing weight. 

 

An aircraft that can take-off with one weight can’t necessarily land with that same weight without risking damage (or worse) to the aircraft.  So fuel is dumped.  At least it is with large widebody aircraft such as the 777.  Otherwise the aircraft would have to stay airborn for 6 or more hours until it had burned off enough fuel.  The fuel vaporizes long before reaching the ground in almost all cases.  It’s regrettable but also unavoidable.

Antonov 225

May 7, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

I’ve always been fascinated by this aircraft, the Antonov 225.  Enjoy the video.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Germanwings

April 29, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

I am somewhat surprised we haven’t seen Airtran do this to Southwest Airlines yet.

 

 

And I can’t wait to see what Ryanair and EasyJet’s response might be.

On Record

April 28, 2010 on 2:15 pm | In Trivia | 2 Comments

I want to go on record for coining a new phrase.  A Super Legacy airline shall be known as an airline created from 2 or more legacy airlines.    I used it HERE.

Vueling Video

April 3, 2010 on 1:00 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Just a bit of fun from Vueling today:

Southwest Takes Over US Airways

April 1, 2010 on 12:01 am | In Trivia | 1 Comment

Southwest Airlines has announced HERE that beginning in the 1st Quarter of 2011, they will begin flying all of US Airways domestic routes.  US Airways, unable to get its pilots to agree among themselves much less on a contract with the airline, has decided it would be more profitable to turn over their domestic network to Southwest Airlines and form a joint partnership that has Southwest feeding traffic into US Airways robust international system of flights. 

 

The aircraft Southwest will use for these new routes will feature Southwest colors with the US Airways logo on the tail.  In return, US Airways will keep its own colors on its international aircraft but add the name “Southwest” along the upper portion of the aircraft fuselages. 

 

No US Airways flight crew will be moved over to the Southwest system nor will existing aircraft fleets be exchanged.  In a related announcement, Southwest has accelerated its existing orders with Boeing and announced a new 225 aircraft order for 737-800 and 737-900ER aircraft to be used to serve the former US Airways system.

Southwest vs Airtran

March 29, 2010 on 3:10 pm | In Trivia | 1 Comment

First there was this video from Southwest Airlines promoting the fact that the first 2 bags on SWA fly free.  The “competitor” is blurred out but quite obviously Airtran, their closest rival in the LCC wars.  (In fact, there is an interesting mistake in the interior scene of the “competitor’s” aircraft.)

 

 

Then Airtran came back with their own video and I have to say that their response was, in my opinion, a direct hit on Southwest Airlines.  Well done, Airtran.  Now we’ll see how Southwest comes back (and you can believe they will.)

 

BOAC Sergeant Major

March 29, 2010 on 10:43 am | In Trivia | No Comments

Is it just me or is this gentleman going around the cabin and simply turning off people’s lights and commanding them to sleep?

 

787 Video

March 23, 2010 on 5:00 pm | In Trivia | 1 Comment

This video shows the first 787, ZA001, on approach to land in Seattle filmed from a single engine small plane on a parallel course.

 

Small Boy Does ATC work at JFK

March 3, 2010 on 1:00 pm | In Trivia | 1 Comment

 THIS newstory by the Boston Fox TV station is about  a series of 5 transmissions made by a small boy in JFK”s tower a few days ago.  The boy does *not* give taxi clearances or landing instructions or anything that would be deemed critical.  He gives a few departure clearances and that’ s all. 

 

Personally, while I agree that this wasn’t the wisest thing in the world and it certainly isn’t something you would want anyone to make a habit of but the boy gives them clearly and precisely and no harm or risk is involved.  Frankly, the boy gives a more “clear” clearance than any of the ATC working in DFW Airport’s tower.

 

You can hear the boy by clicking below:

 

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