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Silverstreak wrote:I have noticed that the A340s belonging to Kam Air have their doors and emergency exit doors left open. Is it safe to assume they are W/O?
asuflyer wrote:Silverstreak wrote:I have noticed that the A340s belonging to Kam Air have their doors and emergency exit doors left open. Is it safe to assume they are W/O?
No they are not written off,
YA-KME hasn't flown since January, it is stored at KBL, along with YA-KMT, and two other 737s on a taxiway away from the terminal.
YA-KMH the aircraft involved in the terminal incident where the the was flown to Abu Dhabi, inspected and later to Mashhad and is being stored at Mashhad, Iran.
YA-KMU was flown to Mashhad and is being stored at Mashhad, Iran along with a 733, YA-KMK.
Many Kam Air crew have left Afghanistan to other countries.
asuflyer wrote:Silverstreak wrote:I have noticed that the A340s belonging to Kam Air have their doors and emergency exit doors left open. Is it safe to assume they are W/O?
No they are not written off,
YA-KME hasn't flown since January, it is stored at KBL, along with YA-KMT, and two other 737s on a taxiway away from the terminal.
YA-KMH the aircraft involved in the terminal incident where the the was flown to Abu Dhabi, inspected and later to Mashhad and is being stored at Mashhad, Iran.
YA-KMU was flown to Mashhad and is being stored at Mashhad, Iran along with a 733, YA-KMK.
Many Kam Air crew have left Afghanistan to other countries.
Silverstreak wrote:I have noticed that the A340s belonging to Kam Air have their doors and emergency exit doors left open. Is it safe to assume they are W/O?
TerminalD wrote:Turkey is in talks with the Taliban to “manage” Kabul Airport.
mjgbtv wrote:YA-KMU is airborne again heading SW near Kandahar.
asuflyer wrote:YA-KMH the aircraft involved in the terminal incident where the the was flown to Abu Dhabi, inspected and later to Mashhad and is being stored at Mashhad, Iran.
debonair wrote:I am getting old, my memory is not the best anymore I guess... Pls. forgive me, but what "terminal accident" you are talking about? Do you have more information?
contractdog wrote:Terminal incident with people literally over the aircraft (on top, on wings, etc )and jet bridge.
I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
32andBelow wrote:contractdog wrote:Terminal incident with people literally over the aircraft (on top, on wings, etc )and jet bridge.
I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
My experience with commercial airline insurance is that’s its negotiated yearly and based on ASMs
contractdog wrote:Terminal incident with people literally over the aircraft (on top, on wings, etc )and jet bridge.
I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
NIZMO wrote:contractdog wrote:Terminal incident with people literally over the aircraft (on top, on wings, etc )and jet bridge.
I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
I think your math maybe slightly off there....
$10 Million x 0.5 then Divide by 100 = $50,000
Not that unreasonable, I drive a 2014 Audi A4 Book Value £7500, my insurance works out at £500 a year, so looking comparatively a 0.5% hull to premium value is a bargain
NIZMO wrote:contractdog wrote:Terminal incident with people literally over the aircraft (on top, on wings, etc )and jet bridge.
I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
I think your math maybe slightly off there....
$10 Million x 0.5 then Divide by 100 = $50,000
Not that unreasonable, I drive a 2014 Audi A4 Book Value £7500, my insurance works out at £500 a year, so looking comparatively a 0.5% hull to premium value is a bargain
contractdog wrote:32andBelow wrote:contractdog wrote:I'd love to know what Kamair's insurance premiums are like at the moment? A former company of mine had a small aircraft stuck in Kabul for about a week after the Taliban entered the city. The DAILY premium was almost 0.5 PERCENT of hull value! So ten days for an aircraft with a hull value of say 10 million USD would work out at 500 000 USD! That's likely why they've had to move their aircraft swiftly out the country. The underwriters will have made it essential!
My experience with commercial airline insurance is that’s its negotiated yearly and based on ASMs
Not when it comes to operating in volatile areas such as Afghanistan. I've operated in these areas, and it's not uncommon for geographical exclusions on the insurance policy, to be continually amended depending on what's going on geopolitically at the time.