A thick blanket of flog that reduced visibility in the Indian capital Saturday seriously disrupted flights and trains, leaving thousands stranded, officials said. About a dozen domestic and four international flights were delayed, officials at the Indira Gandhi International Airport said. One official said the airport was expected to return to normalcy towards midday. Trains [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Flights’
Thick fog hits flights, railways in Delhi
Fog disrupts flights, trains in Delhi again
Flight and trains schedules were again disrupted Monday as a heavy fog enveloped the national capital. The weather office, however, forecast a sunny day ahead. Many passengers were stranded at the Indira Gandhi International Airport here with several flights running behind schedule. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) said the fog would clear, making way for [...]
Tiger Air, South East Asian Airlines form partnership to operate Clark-Singapore flights
Tiger Airways Holdings and South East Asian Airlines have formed a partnership under which the company known as SEAir will lease aircraft from Tiger Air.
Using an initial fleet of two Airbus aircraft, SEAir will start flights from Clark in the Philippines to Singapore from Dec 16.
Seats will be marketed and distributed through tigerairways.com
Tiger Air says additional routes operated by SEAir using these new jets will be added to the programme over the coming months.
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Qantas A380s to resume flights 23 days after blowout
Qantas Airways, Australia’s biggest carrier, will resume Airbus SAS A380 services on Nov. 27, 23 days after grounding its fleet of superjumbos following a mid-flight engine explosion.
Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce will be on the first flight, which will go to London from Sydney via Singapore, he said at a media briefing today. The carrier will conduct further inspections with Airbus, regulators and engine-maker Rolls-Royce Group Plc before resuming other routes, it said in a statement.
Qantas has begun modifying as many as 16 Trent 900 engines following the Nov. 4 blowout that caused the grounding of A380s representing about 17% of its international capacity. Demand to fly on the airline’s six superjumbos is likely to withstand the explosion, said Jason Teh, who helps manage A$3 billion ($3.9 billion) at Investors Mutual in Sydney.
“It’s like if there was a shark attack in the previous week — it wouldn’t stop me going into the water the following week as long the shark is caught,” he said. “You assume that all airlines will meet strict safety standards.”
The carrier will have four 450-seat A380s in service before Dec 25, including two new ones, Joyce said. The airline is also due to receive two superjumbos next year. Qantas had been flying its A380s on long-haul routes to Europe and North America.
‘It’s so quiet’
“If the airline has made the assessment that it’s time to fly, then I would be on that aircraft,” said Binit Somaia, an analyst at the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation in Sydney. “I would rather fly the A380 anytime. It’s so quiet.”
The carrier has taken the 16 engines identified as having “a bigger likelihood of having a problem” out of service, Joyce said. Any necessary changes will be made before they are put back onto planes, he said.
Joyce said it is too early to estimate the cost of the disruption caused by grounding the A380s or to comment on whether the carrier will seek compensation.
Macquarie Group said in a note that the cost would likely be about A$20 million as Sydney-based Qantas “generally minimized the disruption.” The carrier used Boeing Co. 747s and other aircraft as substitutes while the A380s were grounded.
Qantas rose 0.4% to A$2.64 at the 4:10 p.m. market close in Sydney. The stock has lost 8% since Nov. 3. Rolls-Royce slumped 9.8% in London trading in the period.
Emergency landing
Qantas, which has never had a fatal jet accident, grounded its superjumbos after one of the four Trent 900 engines fitted to an A380 exploded in the skies above Indonesia. The plane made an emergency landing in Singapore, with the rear covering of an engine blown off and a wing damaged by shrapnel. None of the 466 people onboard were injured.
The blast, which Rolls-Royce said was caused by an oil fire, prompted the European Aviation Safety Agency to issue an airworthiness directive to A380 operators with Trent 900 engines requiring them to inspect turbines at regular intervals.
Singapore Airlines, with 11 Trent 900-powered A380s in its fleet, has replaced three engines. Deutsche Lufthansa AG, the only other Trent 900 operator, announced plans for its second swap last week. About 40 Trent 900s worldwide may need repairs to replace a faulty part, Qantas’s Joyce said Nov 18.
Emirates Airline, the largest customer for the A380, and Air France-KLM Group fly superjumbos fitted with engines from a General Electric Co. and Pratt & Whitney venture.
Rolls-Royce, the world’s second-largest maker of engines, has said it will miss its 2010 profit target because of the Trent 900 blowout.
Airbus, which is due to hand over more than 20 A380s next year, has said deliveries may be disrupted as it works with Rolls-Royce to help existing customers replace engines. The planemaker plans to press the London-based engine-maker for compensation.
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Google Dangles Free WiFi for U.S. Flights via Chrome
In an interesting promotion for its Chrome Web browser, Google said Nov. 8 it is offering free WiFi Internet access on U.S. flights via AirTran, Virgin America and Delta. – Google Nov. 8 joined forces with airlines AirTran, Delta and Virgin America
to offer free Gogo Inflight Wi-Fi Internet access on every domestic flight from
November 20, 2010
through January 2, 2011.
The news marks a change from and expansion of Google’s free holiday WiFi
offer last year.
Goog…
Singapore Air says to delay flights operated on A380 aircraft
The advice comes after an engine on a Qantas Airways A380 superjumbo exploded in mid flight, forcing an emergency landing in Singapore today.
Tiger Airways cancels flights on pilot shortage, press reports
Flights of fancy
It might seem fanciful but the reality of a car that turns into an aircraft is just around the corner.
The Terrafugia – Latin for ‘Escape from land’ – is what its US manufacturers call a Transition Roadable Aircraft.
Quite apart from the word ‘roadable,’ any would-be driver/pilot will have to fork out between US$200,000-US$250,000 for the privilege of owning one of the things, which apparently only require a startlingly little 20 hours of tuition.
There’s even something called a ‘full vehicle parachute,’ although it is unclear if both occupants – sitting side by side – get to have one.
As an aircraft it looks quite good – but as a car? Well, it’s probably not going to win any design awards but it’s a product of functionality – those wings have to go somewhere.
And the Terrafugia is actually quite frugal. Once airborne, it burns 18.9 litres per hour and does a respectable 105mph (172kmh). It could even get you a fair distance – 490 miles in fact.
It’s not clear though if the traffic’s bad whether you can just press a button to activate the wings and roar off into the air.
The website makes references to ‘airfields’ and ‘airports,’ so I’m guessing the Terrafugia is supposed to be operated on a formal rather than informal basis.
Qantas’ Jetstar to begin Singapore-Melbourne flights
The carrier will also start flights to Auckland in March from the Southeast Asian city-state using Airbus SAS A330-200 aircraft, the airline said in an e-mailed statement today. Other destinations being considered include Rome, Athens and North Asian cities such as Beijing, Chief Executive Officer Bruce Buchanan told reporters in Singapore today.
Qantas’s Jetstar plans long-haul flights from Singapore in 2010
Destinations may include Australia, North Asia and European cities with the carrier using wide-bodied Airbus SAS A330-200 aircraft, Jetstar said in an e-mailed statement today. The company will add about 200 jobs to support the move.
Tiger Air to launch new flights from Avalon Airport in Victoria
Melbourne-based Tiger Airways Australia Pty Ltd, the fully-owned subsidiary of Tiger Airways Holdings, today announced its third base for Australia and new flights to operate from Avalon Airport in Victoria later this year.
At the same time, Avalon Airport announces a multi-million-dollar expansion of its facilities to cater for more flights with today’s announcement that Tiger Airways will fly from the airport later this year.
SIA, Qantas maintain Bangkok flights amid protests
Singapore Airlines, Qantas Airways and All Nippon Airways Co. maintained services to Bangkok even as countries advised against travel to Thailand following fatal antigovernment protests, according to Bloomberg.
There are no reductions in flights or passenger loads, Singapore Airlines spokesman Nicholas Ionides said in e-mailed comments today. Cathay Pacific Airways, China Southern Airlines Co., China Eastern Airlines Corp., Air China, Japan Airlines Corp., Korean Air Lines Co. and Asiana Airlines Inc. are also continuing scheduled operations as normal.
All 100 charter flights due from China for this week’s Songkran holidays in Thailand have been canceled, the Bangkok Post said today, citing Vichit Prakobgosol, president of the Thai-Chinese Tourism Alliance Association.
Governments including South Korea, Italy, China and Australia have advised against travel to Thailand because of clashes between demonstrators and troops that have caused 21 fatalities and left 858 people injured.
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NATO suspends Kyrgyzstan flights
Flights supporting NATO operations in Afghanistan from a Kyrgyzstan air base have been suspended and some aircrafts have been relocated. However, Kyrgyz political unrest has not seriously disrupted Afghan military operations, the NATO-led force in Afghanistan said.
SIA tops Choice survey on world flights
This list included to Britain, the United States, Italy, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Hong Kong and Japan. The one destination where it was not No. 1 was to New Zealand, as its flights are operated by Air New Zealand (AIR.NZ).
US warns of attack threat to Sudan-Uganda flights
The United States has warned that “regional extremists” were planning a deadly attack on Air Uganda flights between southern Sudan and Kampala. The US Embassy in Khartoum did not name the potential attackers but has said in the past that terrorist groups were active in Sudan.
Grounded flights add to misery
Maiden flights for Boeing and Airbus: Upwards and onwards
Airborne at last, the Dreamliner and the A400M still have a lot to prove
ON THE face of it the A400M, a dumpy military transport made by Airbus, and Boeing’s sleek 787 Dreamliner (pictured) have little in common other than that they both flew for the first time in the past few days. But they share a similar history: both planes finally took to the air more than two years late and far over budget. Moreover, both were developed in unnecessarily complicated ways, even though big aviation projects are difficult enough without taking on further risks.
In an effort to reduce the cost of developing an innovative new aircraft, Boeing recruited “risk-sharing” partners who became largely responsible for designing whole sections of the plane, while creating one of the most complex and extended supply chains in industrial history. But Boeing failed to supervise its partners’ work adequately and has probably ended up spending more to put things right than it ever would have saved. With the A400M, European defence ministers jeopardised the project from the outset by setting up a politically conceived consortium to produce the aircraft’s giant turboprop engines rather than allowing Airbus to buy them from America’s Pratt & Whitney. …
SIA to add flights to US, India on demand
FAA Flight-Plan System Crashes Again, Delays Hundreds of U.S. Flights
A software configuration problem in one of the routers within the FAA’s telecommunications infrastructure system in Salt Lake City shut down its flight-plan and traffic-flow system Nov. 19 for about 4 hours all over the United States, the FAA says. The routing problem also shut down the system’s second node in Hampton, Ga.
– IT problems are still affecting the Federal Aviation Administration’s
flight-plan system even after its multimillion-dollar system upgrade went
online earlier in 2009.
A software configuration problem on a card in one of the routers within the
FAA’s telecommunications infrastructure system in …



