Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
BWIAirport wrote:Unfortunately, few passengers are aware of the exterior paint of their plane when they board. So many airport gates provide poor views of the aircraft anyway, and very few passengers are watching the aircraft arrive at the gate. At most, 1/3 of the passengers even have a window seat and can see outside; a small fraction of which may notice that the flap fairings or winglets are a different color.
Retro liveries are homages to the past
Wingtips56 wrote:AirCal was ingested in 1987, coming up on 36 years ago, so many flyers hadn't been born yet to know AirCal. PSA, Republic and Western went the previous year, with Allegheny and Piedmont well before that, so it's mostly us long-in-the tooth guys and gals that actually remember these companies. TWA was 2001, so there are people now of legal drinking age that weren't born yet.
LaunchDetected wrote:It is not more confusing than when you board a KLM plane after booking your flight on DL website.
BoeingGuy wrote:LaunchDetected wrote:It is not more confusing than when you board a KLM plane after booking your flight on DL website.
Maybe they forgot to read the part that very clearly said “Operated by KLM” in the booking and reservation.
IFlyVeryLittle wrote:I get that we enthusiasts think they're cool, but do average passengers get confused they are actually stepping aboard a TWA Airbus or a Reno Air 737? Or do they think a United plane in the old red, white and blue scheme is actually a plane from the 1970s?
conaly wrote:I believe more people notice than most users here would expect. Especially when a livery or the operating carrier is different from what they booked.
Last year I was booked on Ryanair CAG-PMI. The flight was operated by Lauda Europe with A320. It was standing next to a FR B738 at the gate, so some passengers were actually confused and inquired, that it is the wrong plane there are boarding. The gate agent was pretty annoyed about the discussion, as those passengers were holding up the boarding.
Not being an avgeek does not mean they don't know what they are flying on. I've talked to many "normies" that have absolutely no interest in aviation, but quite a lot of them could differentiate between airlines and even some airplane types.
JetBuddy wrote:I think frequent travelers will notice and know what it is when they spot a classic / retro livery. The average person who flies once every 2nd year will have no idea what's going on. But those people will rarely notice any changes anyway.
But I do believe the airlines would benefit from making a bigger deal out of these liveries than what they're currently doing. A notice in aviation magazines or forums isn't enough. Make a plaque inside the cabin, announce it at the gate when boarding, or by the crew after boarding.
cathay747 wrote:There are so many more which could be done and I wish would be, but the one that pisses me off is the GF bird. WHO at GF decided to make what was the purple color band gold? Hardly a retro/heritage jet if it's not accurate at such a basic level, and it's a shame because it was a wonderful livery.
flyaa757 wrote:I’m always interested if interiors of special logo aircraft’s have plaques etc. I know the UA 320 does…
I’ve flown a few.
DL738/752/764, AF 772, KL 190/739 Skyteam - nothing inside
DL BCRF 764, ACS 764 - nothing inside
Skywest 35th Ann CR9 - had a plaque
BWIAirport wrote:Unfortunately, few passengers are aware of the exterior paint of their plane when they board. So many airport gates provide poor views of the aircraft anyway, and very few passengers are watching the aircraft arrive at the gate. At most, 1/3 of the passengers even have a window seat and can see outside; a small fraction of which may notice that the flap fairings or winglets are a different color.
Retro liveries are homages to the past, and sometimes nods to the avgeeks who notice and care. My sister, who has been dragged into the world of aviation by me and is more aware than the average civilian, just noticed last year that Southwest departed from the Canyon Blue scheme to the Heart livery. It's just not something of interest to most.
Wingtips56 wrote:I'm very happy AA did the retrojet for my Air California/AirCal history, though I wish the fuselage was white, and correct.
Italianflyer wrote:I would LOVE to see DL get into the retro bandwagon but they are so brand-sensative I doubt it would happen. Think about a Widget A350 or Western beer can 321. Maybe Herman the Goose and blue Southern worms on a couple 737s. I doubt they would paint a Red Tail because it's too soon. One can dream ....
mga707 wrote:Italianflyer wrote:I would LOVE to see DL get into the retro bandwagon but they are so brand-sensative I doubt it would happen. Think about a Widget A350 or Western beer can 321. Maybe Herman the Goose and blue Southern worms on a couple 737s. I doubt they would paint a Red Tail because it's too soon. One can dream ....
Go farther back--a Northeast 'Yellowbird' A220 or a C&S 717! But I agree, Delta for whatever reason doesn't do 'retros' outside of their own historic scheme.
cathay747 wrote:mga707 wrote:Italianflyer wrote:I would LOVE to see DL get into the retro bandwagon but they are so brand-sensative I doubt it would happen. Think about a Widget A350 or Western beer can 321. Maybe Herman the Goose and blue Southern worms on a couple 737s. I doubt they would paint a Red Tail because it's too soon. One can dream ....
Go farther back--a Northeast 'Yellowbird' A220 or a C&S 717! But I agree, Delta for whatever reason doesn't do 'retros' outside of their own historic scheme.
Best of all: a Western Indian Head-liveried 763! I have a drawing done by an artist known for "fantasy liveries" saved on my hard drive but no way to post it here sadly...it's gorgeous. But yeah, a NE Yellowbird...wow! And being a fan of NC (my first flight was on them) I'd really love to see Herman for sure. But as you said, DL for some odd reason really doesn't want to go down this road. So sad.
lxman1 wrote:Some of them should convert their whole fleet back to retro. Many current liveries are blah, hence United, American. I realize that modern airliners are no longer made of aluminum that can be nicely polished, but AA's polished skin with the longitudinal stripes is one of the best looking ever.
https://www.airliners.net/photo/America ... 0wBw%3D%3D