Flyboy36y From United States of America, joined Mar 2000, 3039 posts, RR: 8 Posted (10 years 2 months 3 days 13 hours ago) and read 1283 times:
Ok. I recently flew JFK / KJFK), USA - New York">JFK-LHR / EGLL), United Kingdom">LHR-DUB / EIDW), Ireland">DUB-BRU / EBBR / EBMB), Belgium">BRU-DUB / EIDW), Ireland">DUB-LHR / EGLL), United Kingdom">LHR-JFK / KJFK), USA - New York">JFK
JFK / KJFK), USA - New York">JFK-LHR / EGLL), United Kingdom">LHR-DUB / EIDW), Ireland">DUB-BRU / EBBR / EBMB), Belgium">BRU was on one day. We flew right over Dublin and the Irish Sea to land in LGR just to fly back to Dublin and back over the Irish Sea. Once we got there we took off, flew back over the Irish Sea, past London (where we had been a few hours before) and to Brussels. We spent 2 days in Brussels. Then, we flew back over London and the Irish sea to Dublin. We spent a few days in Dublin. From there we flew back over the Irish Sea to London. We got on an AA 777 and flew back over the Irish Sea, past Dublin, and to JFK / KJFK), USA - New York">JFK...
anyone else have such a redundant journey (espessialy the first part...)
USAFHummer From United States of America, joined May 2000, 10685 posts, RR: 54 Reply 1, posted (10 years 2 months 3 days 5 hours ago) and read 1209 times:
Barring bad weather...PHL-FLL and vice versa is almost always the same route...take off from PHL, turn south and stay over the Delmarva Peninsula, passing right over ORF and the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, then hugging the coast until Wilmington, NC and then continuing south, out of sight for land for the rest of the flight until a few minutes prior to landing....vice versa on the return flight...
Greg
Chief A.net college football stadium self-pic guru
Tango-Bravo From United States of America, joined Jun 2001, 3725 posts, RR: 31 Reply 3, posted (10 years 2 months 3 days 4 hours ago) and read 1171 times:
Seems like virtually all trans-Atlantic flights from the U.S. to the continent of Europe (with the exception of the Iberian Peninsula) overfly the U.K. somewhere between MAN and GLA.