GalaxyFlyer wrote:The subject here is airline pilots
Just about any career over 40 years is worth $5 million. So in other words, arbitrary nonsense that you just made up? Figures. Let's see: average career length in US as of 2022 is 13yrs 2mo. Men over 18 hold an average of 12 full time jobs over their working lifespan. Average lifetime earnings for ...
Jump to postWhen is the 787 delivery issue set to be resolved. Seems like everything I see/hear seems to pin everything bad on 787 delays. Bet Boeing would love to know the answer for that themselves, if anyone had a crystal ball. Alas, the most recent 787 delivery-halt has ended a few weeks ago. Here's hoping...
Jump to postBeachBoy wrote:I think the only way this makes financial sense is to launch LON-HNL-AKL.
I would guess DFW-SIN. No 787, offered or envisioned, would have the range for that, with a typical load. This is already being discussed in American Airlines Network thread This is the problem with the monster all encompassing threads - stuff gets lost. ^This. Always amazed me that AA and DL have ...
Jump to postIt has a relatively poor relationship with AI and sees it as a direct competitor ....because it is. UA and AI do not have anti-trust immunity and thus are direct competitors, from multiple stateside hubs to multiple Indian gateways. That they belong to the loosely-organized mass FFP marketing agree...
Jump to postUnfortunately, it'll happen overseas first, since the US is abrogating its leadership role. Why's that "unfortunate"... no one other than corporate bean-counters in a dark cubicle actually WANTS that. “We” as in the USA, as a population of 330 million don’t give out $10 million careers li...
Jump to postUnfortunately, it'll happen overseas first, since the US is abrogating its leadership role. Why's that "unfortunate"... no one other than corporate bean-counters in a dark cubicle actually WANTS that. “We” as in the USA, as a population of 330 million don’t give out $10 million careers li...
Jump to postBA777FO wrote:Where else are they going to send it?
tlecam wrote:It reads as an article that started with an agenda and looked for a story to fit it.
Because the get the benefits. Good things in life don’t come cheap, somebody pays. Reading is a good thing. Should that be expensive to learn? As a modern society, we’ve all agreed that a certain baseline of literacy, maths skills, etc are expected, so education, however good or bad are provided by...
Jump to postThe backlog is in precarious shape Quite an exaggeration, seeing as even without IR/D7 they still have 4yrs' worth of build for the A33N at the current production rate....... .....however Airbus decided just last month to increase that production rate, so they can't be all that worried about it: ht...
Jump to postMetchalus wrote:When new engines go on the 787 Airbus can't respond by putting them on the A330 it's too old and too heavy.
So far airlines retiring A330CEOs aren't chomping at the bit for NEOs thus far. Part of that is internal, as quite a few A330/A340 customers (SQ, FI, SK, AF, LH, EK, etc) decided to go with derated units of the A359 for some of their regional/shorthaul TATL needs, instead... which is a tradeoff I'm...
Jump to postA330neo is coming up for replacement. They should be targeting this space and the potential for an Airbus made 787 sized aircraft should cause Boeing concern. Unless you meant "CEO" then this makes almost no sense. The NEO isn't even 5yrs old, and hasn't yet targeted a replacement-cycle i...
Jump to postI don’t think the MAX 7 and 10 are without a foreseeable delivery date. ....the obvious followup being: well, then when is it? Not to be flippant, but I don't even think it's safe to try to predict which quarter it'll be in, let alone a foreseeable date. For Boeing's sake, one would hope that it'll...
Jump to postLooking better? Sure. Things still aren't all that rosy: ⋅ B37M and B3XM are running way behind schedule with no foreseeable date of delivery to customers. ⋅ B779 is still stuck in regulatory hell. ⋅ B778 has questions as what market role it will actually play (thought ...
Jump to postDo you mean the JV between BA and JAL? That's between Europe and Japan, not transpacific. Also, there's no agreement with Qantas, unless you're referring to the Qantas/American Airlines joint venture, which is unrelated to a thread on BA. D'oh! Was thinking about it from AA's perspective, forgot it...
Jump to postthe A380 will probably have ceased production. Huh? The A380 ceased production in 2021, so why are you writing this in future tense? Even LAX is a better run operation without it. #CitationNeeded But does BA make my money by revenue sharing or using its own aircraft?. Doesn't matter, as all USA-ori...
Jump to postJapan remains a difficult market for Airbus and a good market for Boeing. Is there any reason for this? Airbus has sold A32X of all kinds, plus A359s, A35Ks, and A388s to Japanese airlines. About the only modern thing missing is the A330NEO, and that's yet to really hit its stride in any region, mu...
Jump to postUnless, AI ops for the A359LR They might very well have right? Almost zero chance, seeing as it's a defunct concept compared to today's standard-produced A359s. Then there's the upcoming sunrise A35Ks, which will offer greater range at far superior payload; another factor for the obsolescence of th...
Jump to postGalaxyFlyer wrote:a $10-$15 million career isn’t cheap, nor should it be.
Isn't it true that Congress rarely gets involved in aviation rulemaking? Is Congress going to spend its time certifying aircraft and going through ADs? No, that's what executive delegation is for. Is Congress going to get embarrassed into asserting itself as the final aviation safety authority? Hap...
Jump to postThanks for the civics lesson. There may be those who needed it. Indeed, yourself included, seeing as you missed the biggest takeaway: Congress doesn't need "a reason," and as such often acts without having a particularly compelling one.... any of the 535 can get a hair up an orifice, and ...
Jump to postWhy is Congress involved? Why doesn't this follow normal FAA rule making procedures? All legislation and regulation (involving interstate transportation) is the under the original jurisdiction and purview of Congress. The FAA, as an Executive agency, is only granted the power delegated (expressly o...
Jump to postWould be interesting to see DL add India from LA with their market share in LA. That is add India servie, if they get an A350K or Russian overflies happen again. Although their track record to India is in and out historically(for legit reasons such as COVID etc). Highly unlikely for now, but only c...
Jump to postthat also has a payload limit departing JNB Do you not understand that any aircraft operating beyond 14ish hours is going to "have a payload limit".................. the block time as per the GDS system is 15:50 hours only. ................or that 16hrs departing from 5600ft elevation, is...
Jump to postInteresting; I wonder what the weight delta on the center gear was on a light vs MTOW takeoff. Obviously at a point if there is air under it, there is no weight on it. Wonder what point that is though. My guess is that its use came into effect somewhere at the 235-238tonne range, which was the limi...
Jump to postThe takeoff performance of the 787 is already very, very impressive. Exactly. Here's a BA 787-8 carrying cargo (complications with which made us 45min late) and fully laden with pax, operating a nonstop transatlantic (MSY-LHR) off of an only 7000ft/2134m runway. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmxW...
Jump to postand whether this has been done before? Was done all the time in ferries and the like. 0414986 I am guessing the A340-500/600 would not have this ability however? Correct. The -500/600 center gear was designed to bear weight upon landing as well as takeoff. The -200/300 gear only did so by coinciden...
Jump to postMalayil wrote:I’m sorry but your situation is not normal.
hl8208 wrote:To avoid having to make a connection with any city where the primary language isn't Hindi.
the A359 with 300 pax on board (AI configuration) has that been confirmed? to perform BOM-LAX/IAH/DFW nonstop without a payload restriction There's no aircraft extant nor planned that could perform any such route "without a payload restriction," the question is, if they want them done non...
Jump to postLAWA CEO has confirmed talks with all three of Vietnam's longhaul airlines for a nonstop to LAX, and at least two of them have confirmed their intent to eventually serve. The interesting thing, is the most advanced talks area actually with VietJet, but since their longest-ranged current aircraft is ...
Jump to postUnless, AI ops for the A359LR, it is highly unlikely that DEL-LAX-DEL can be operated by any of the airplanes on order by the carrier. The A359ULR is more or less defunct, because standard A359s now have the same fuel capacity and 3 more tonnes of MTOW with which to opt toward using it. Definitely ...
Jump to postIn Mumbai itself I heard chatter about BOM-LAX on AI (I was on the inaugural "new AI" SFO-BOM, which was an experience akin to if not better than SQ/QR/ect.), but chatter is chatter even though the flight was full of executives. When they were here 2004-2008, it was a direct BOM-LAX fligh...
Jump to postA while back, I saw one analyst's take on LAX-DEL, finding that it would've never worked with the economics of the 77L (but this was pre-pandemic). Which is interesting and odd, if accurate... seeing as the difference in distance is only 270nm, and both AI + the usual 1stop providers all charge sim...
Jump to postChecking not-so-recent stats from right before Covid: LAX remains the 5th largest US metro for Indian-born and Indian-American population in total (behind NYC, SFO, CHI, and WAS), but the only one lacking a nonstop. Seen a lot of false starts over the recent years, both immediately pre-covid and aft...
Jump to postI may be in the minority but in my opinion it feels less like a supportive gesture and more like a “jumping on the bandwagon” scheme….identity politics? It is. But still would rather see it than not. Hopefully someday it'll become a non-issue, because no one on either side will care one way or anot...
Jump to postI’m surprised other Asian carriers haven’t started at ONT since the majority of Greater LA Asian population lives closer to ONT. Shouldn't be, because that statement is in no way accurate. Majority of Chinese and Taiwanese, sure... but that's about it. Koreans, Filipinos, Thais, Japanese, Malay, In...
Jump to postInteresting to see DL separating themselves as the clear No. 1 carrier at LAX. Hope they can continue to grow there. Despite what DL inherited at LAX when they bought WA, I doubt anyone would have predicted 20 years ago that DL would be the #1 carrier at LAX. Funnily enough, go back a decade earlie...
Jump to postThe more likely scenario for DL intetnational ops is a return to the T2 FIS once that is reopened & redeveloped. BTW, where are we with that? Has LAWA/CBP (or whomever was the holdout) allowed FIS to return to the non-TBIT terminals? If not, is there a timeline for such? But now that the airlin...
Jump to postDo any current docs given the brochure range for an A321XLR with solely the permanent RCT (i.e. without the optional ACT in front?)
I suspect that this configuration will be fairly common, if not THE most common selected.
crimsonchin wrote:IADFCO wrote:I think I would have thoroughly hated a 10-abreast A340, if it existed.
How would that even have worked when 9-abreast is already obviously the limit?
Just a guess, but have trouble envision it being anything other than a medical, if the same plane was back on the route in barely an hour.
Jump to postAs far as looks A345 was the PRETTIEST and SEXIEST of all airplanes right there with all variants of 747 I'd call the A345 easily the ugliest commercial aircraft ever produced; stubby length and weird profile due to a 4wheeled center gear. At least the A346 had length to balance it out. Then again,...
Jump to postBoeing didn’t cover up a design flaw. All systems are prone to failure. The engineering analysis for the failure modes had a bad assumption about how the crew would react in the event of a system failure. It was poor judgement and an error. Not like it was some malicious intent to hide a design fla...
Jump to postI’d love to see Delta back in Barbados too. Do you know when they stopped? I've always been rather surprised at this one. Looks like service stopped in August 2017. “Delta served Barbados from December 2005 through 2011, offering flights from its Atlanta hub. Then they resumed service to Barbados e...
Jump to postTonyClifton wrote:I’d love to see Delta back in Barbados too.
Thirty years in service, hundreds of aircraft delivered, millions of flight hours flown, zero passenger fatalities. How many other aircraft have achieved this? A380 qualifies for all of those except time-- yet IMO still should be lauded for helping break the Air France curse! ;) In all fairness, Ai...
Jump to postLet's say it's $2M per person for a young person of 21 years old. A 90 year old's family will not get as much. This is simply how negligence pay outs work in accidents. Traditionally yes, but not always the case anymore... ....especially in relatively tort-friendly states (like here in Illinois, wh...
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