July 26, 20241 yr I know a Greek guy in New York and he was just telling me that he used to take Olympic Airways to and from Greece. He said that it was Aristotle Onassis's airline ... I didn't know that. He told me they had a 747 named Olympus and another one named Zeus. Olympic never put out much of a reach to North America ... just NY and Toronto, I believe. They bankrupted sometime post-9/11. Now, Greece only has much smaller Aegean, but they stick mostly to Europe, the Middle East, etc. Here's one of their 747s approaching Athens Airport next to the sea at Ellinikon. In looking up this airline and jet, they had a write-up on Olympic Airways Flight 411 which was using the 747 Zeus in 1978, so this was a fairly new unit. Fairly shocking for a veteran crew - 418 people on board - close call ...
August 21, 20241 yr Boeing is having issues again. In general, I see a slimmer product line for the near future: 777X (recent issues on the news) overtaking the 777-300 787 variant(s) 767 (born circa 1982) only for freight to continue 737 variant(s) - - - - Every now and then, I think of what the future Boeing 797 could be.
August 21, 20241 yr I remember working at Jeppesen (Boeing subsidiary) in 2007-2008 and going to a couple all-hands meetings that had briefings on the 787 development and delays... fascinating space to work in. I was working on software integrations w/ FAA data feeds on updates to routing/charting software. Edited August 21, 20241 yr by Robert Hall
September 7, 20241 yr The Airbus vs. Boeing debate goes on and on. Here, it's about the newer Airbus 350 versus the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. Realistically, the A-350 could only compare to a B-787-10, the longest version of the Dreamliner. That said, they often pit the A-350, which could carry a lot of passengers in 2 class configuration, against the B-777. I have flown on 3 Boeing 787s in the last 5 years. Two were medium-haul and one was transatlantic - Rome to Philadelphia's AA hub. I just flew on the Airbus 350 for the first time about a week ago. It was by Finnair, picked up at Helsinki after transferring there for the flight to the U.S. I was truly expecting more from the Airbus 350. It does what it's supposed to do. It seems to be getting more sales than the Boeing. I prefer the Boeing 787 Dreamliner by a slight margin. The most important thing is that the humidification felt better in the 787. They say the A-350 is quieter, but it's negligible to the untrained ear. Even though some complain that the crew can lock and control the window dimming on the 787, they did not do this on my flights and I loved it, complete with the big taller windows. The A-350 metrics seem to benefit the operator. The A-350 can seat more people, it burns slightly less fuel, and can fly slightly more nautical miles, but it seemed crammed and I didn't like the feel of the cabin, right down to shades on the windows. In waiting on the delayed plane A-350 for an hour, the heat gain against my window - with the shade down - was too much. I got up and walked around the rear galley where the air conditioning better cooled me down. Both have 3-3-3 seating and they say that the A-350 cabin width puts a few more inches on the seat. That doesn't come into play for me. Not only that, Airbus puts in more thin Recaro-looking seats that seem hard whereas the Boeing puts in seats with a more conventional sculpted silhouette. It's subjective. I didn't find the A350 all that much quieter and like the "open sky" architecture of the 787 cabin, the seats, the dimming, and the humidification. The A-350 has a straighter looking wing angle with curled wingtips that look cool when they are maneuvering. However, the fully upward curved wing of the B-787 is stunning. The B-787 is a slightly better looking plane. I wish more carriers of 9 abreast aircraft would follow Japan Air Lines' move (in their B-787) to 2-4-2, which would make the Dreamliner more of a dream. If 9 across (3-3-3), I would go with the Boeing 787. However, I could skip this debate and step down in size to Airbus's latest A330-900 neo. It's got some up the upgrades, and keeps skinny harder seats; however, the 2-4-2 seating is the way to go for more comfort.
September 11, 20241 yr I have given up on Boeing. I deliberately schedule flights to fly on Airbus when I can.
September 12, 20241 yr 22 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said: I have given up on Boeing. I deliberately schedule flights to fly on Airbus when I can. I am saddened by the state of affairs. They have always done better, as per the saying, "If it ain't Boeing, it ain't going."
September 12, 20241 yr On 9/11/2024 at 12:44 PM, A Horse With No Name said: I have given up on Boeing. I deliberately schedule flights to fly on Airbus when I can. 5 hours ago, trinacriabob said: I am saddened by the state of affairs. They have always done better, as per the saying, "If it ain't Boeing, it ain't going." Like all companies, greed at the executive level along with a careless attitude of if no one notices, no one is complaining loud enough, who cares as long as I get my big bonus. America is going to have a massive shock in regards to companies that used to be the best failing. It is a sad state of affairs and narcissistic CEOs are not helping the situation.
September 13, 20241 yr 12 hours ago, G. David Felt said: Like all companies, greed at the executive level along with a careless attitude of if no one notices, no one is complaining loud enough, who cares as long as I get my big bonus. America is going to have a massive shock in regards to companies that used to be the best failing. It is a sad state of affairs and narcissistic CEOs are not helping the situation. Agree. That being said, I try to buy from as many RESPONSIBLE American companies as I can. My favorite toy right now is my Darlington Labs MM 6 B Phono pre amplifier in my stereo. However, I am not flying THAT to Phoenix either. 18 hours ago, trinacriabob said: I am saddened by the state of affairs. They have always done better, as per the saying, "If it ain't Boeing, it ain't going." That seems to be exactly the state of things, It is Boeing, it ain't going....
September 13, 20241 yr 7 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said: A350 is one of my new Favorite planes. It's photogenic and, for the operator, a full A350 makes coin for them. Having flow on one for the first time in the last 2 weeks - Finnair, which is a good airline - but I wasn't crazy about it. I had to entertain myself for 8 hours and their seat-back screen programs weren't that good. Worse yet, there's no pull-down drink holder flap with the folding table back up in its place. That's a fairly basic need. Also, the only charging available was by USB so I couldn't open my laptop and keep it juiced. AC power is often under the seat in many modern planes.
September 13, 20241 yr I happened to see this video and thought I'd share. The answer? NOT MANY. Not at all .... see the video. That they made ~ 250 of these was decent. I thought they made about half of that number. I flew on 2 of these - one TWA and one Pan Am in the late '80s (to go to school ... and Miami for vacation, respectively). MD 10s and MD 11s are still around (FedEx and UPS, etc.) and the placement of the third engine on the MD 10-11 planes looks spindly. On the Lockheed Tri-Star 1011, that 3rd engine looks "very" engaged. The L-1011 was also known for the highest fuel consumption (per whatever metric they were using) among the wide-bodies, so it become unpopular with operators.
October 5, 20241 yr So, I just crossed the pond going east and, again, used Finnair after flying AA (the airline, not the organization) to get into their DFW gateway. Their flight attendants have been great on every flight. Q (me): Excuse me, but how would you say "airplane nerd" in Finnish? A (them): "lentokonenortti" (with nortti being the nerd part) This makes sense since the airport is the "lentoasema," so "lento" must mean air and used as a prefix - - - - - Italians are again selling out in preserving their language, and have always used "secchione" but have also adopted "nerd," pronounced "naird" I'd go with "secchione dell'aerei" for the boot country Edited October 5, 20241 yr by trinacriabob
October 9, 20241 yr 1 hour ago, oldshurst442 said: That plane makes me think of the Expendables Movie series. I think it is the same plane model.
October 10, 20241 yr Author On 10/5/2021 at 8:54 PM, oldshurst442 said: @G. David Felt Sorry David, but the plane on top would be the airplane from the Expendables movie. The second one in the franchise. It would be the Canadair CL 215. A waterbomber that fights fires. My dad worked at Canadair for 40 years. Now Canadair is under the Bombardier Aerospace name. And he worked on the CL 215 both in production and later the head engineer in quality control. The airplane I posted earlier today is the Martin Mars. Another water bomber and it took its final flight this summer. It landed on a lake in British Columbia somewheres to be retired in a museum there. At least I think that is the plan. That particular plane and the models themselves are no longer flying. But the Bombardier CL 215 became the CL 415 and then Bombardier Aerospace sold the rights to a company named Viking to which they will continue on building them as the Viking 515 with new modern avionics in. As many countries fly it to fight their forest fires. The CL 215 was updated to the 415 in the 1980s with then modern avionics but the 515 will have modern modern 2020s avionics. The Cl 215 is a design from the 1930s. It had the Canso PBY as inspiration and a mentor. In the first movie, the airplane was a Grumman HU-16 Albatross. Edited October 10, 20241 yr by oldshurst442
October 10, 20241 yr 13 hours ago, oldshurst442 said: @G. David Felt Sorry David, but the plane on top would be the airplane from the Expendables movie. The second one in the franchise. It would be the Canadair CL 215. A waterbomber that fights fires. My dad worked at Canadair for 40 years. Now Canadair is under the Bombardier Aerospace name. And he worked on the CL 215 both in production and later the head engineer in quality control. The airplane I posted earlier today is the Martin Mars. Another water bomber and it took its final flight this summer. It landed on a lake in British Columbia somewheres to be retired in a museum there. At least I think that is the plan. That particular plane and the models themselves are no longer flying. But the Bombardier CL 215 became the CL 415 and then Bombardier Aerospace sold the rights to a company named Viking to which they will continue on building them as the Viking 515 with new modern avionics in. As many countries fly it to fight their forest fires. The CL 215 was updated to the 415 in the 1980s with then modern avionics but the 515 will have modern modern 2020s avionics. The Cl 215 is a design from the 1930s. It had the Canso PBY as inspiration and a mentor. In the first movie, the airplane was a Grumman HU-16 Albatross. Very cool, as one that does not get into planes, those kind that can land on land and water all look the same to me. Reminds me of the Indiana Jones Movie plan that was on water too.
October 17, 20241 yr I saw this weird one changing planes at AMS. I usually sit by a window. Obviously an old 747 that's been put out to pasture, so to speak, that they've done weird things to ... so, then, is it a restaurant in the making? You can see KLM colors in the vicinity.
October 17, 20241 yr 2 hours ago, trinacriabob said: I saw this weird one changing planes at AMS. I usually sit by a window. Obviously an old 747 that's been put out to pasture, so to speak, that they've done weird things to ... so, then, is it a restaurant in the making? You can see KLM colors in the vicinity. Makes me think someone's Frankenstein Art Project for the Airport.
November 11, 20241 yr Sad, so SAD that we as humans cannot all use our brains to talk out our differences and instead due to greed, Narcissistic personalities have to resort to killing one another. History is repeating itself sadly as we enter another failed period of Fascist ruling.
November 11, 20241 yr Author 5 hours ago, G. David Felt said: Sad, so SAD that we as humans cannot all use our brains to talk out our differences and instead due to greed, Narcissistic personalities have to resort to killing one another. History is repeating itself sadly as we enter another failed period of Fascist ruling. Hence why we should and must celebrate Remembrance Day for British Commonwealth countries and Veterans Day for Americans. Lest We Forget. The eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.
November 22, 20241 yr Author ^^^ I think the last pic is an AI generated picture. YUCK!!! I mean, if it is one, its a GREAT image, the technology is both awesome and scary. Very real. But fake...and that is the yuck part of it all. The fakeness. I like REALITY.
December 11, 20241 yr On 11/11/2024 at 3:18 PM, oldshurst442 said: One of my old college friends had a B-25 that was still flying...he flew it regularly. He now owns a P-40.... On 10/9/2024 at 6:34 PM, oldshurst442 said: I love this series of aviation photographs.... On 11/11/2024 at 9:53 AM, G. David Felt said: Sad, so SAD that we as humans cannot all use our brains to talk out our differences and instead due to greed, Narcissistic personalities have to resort to killing one another. History is repeating itself sadly as we enter another failed period of Fascist ruling. Yep. And we are a knowledgeable literate society choosing it fully knowing what we are picking. Our country can piss completely off. On 10/28/2024 at 9:37 AM, G. David Felt said: This cracked me up! ? This is truth...
December 11, 20241 yr On 7/26/2024 at 12:49 PM, trinacriabob said: I know a Greek guy in New York and he was just telling me that he used to take Olympic Airways to and from Greece. He said that it was Aristotle Onassis's airline ... I didn't know that. He told me they had a 747 named Olympus and another one named Zeus. Olympic never put out much of a reach to North America ... just NY and Toronto, I believe. They bankrupted sometime post-9/11. Now, Greece only has much smaller Aegean, but they stick mostly to Europe, the Middle East, etc. Here's one of their 747s approaching Athens Airport next to the sea at Ellinikon. In looking up this airline and jet, they had a write-up on Olympic Airways Flight 411 which was using the 747 Zeus in 1978, so this was a fairly new unit. Fairly shocking for a veteran crew - 418 people on board - close call ... I so want to visit Greece
December 11, 20241 yr I saw several Tri jets converted to cargo at Rickenbacker here in Columbus last night. Always did like the way they looked.
December 11, 20241 yr 7 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said: I so want to visit Greece I just want to add Corfu and Zakynthos, plus more Athens, to my only trip there once before. I'm always more at ease vacationing where I know or can decipher the language. I may try to visit Bulgaria (language and alphabet ... ouch) and Romania for fall color next year. 7 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said: The video does not refer to causality. The SP was a weird model and not many were made.
December 15, 20241 yr Cool looking fighter jet, happy that Ukraine is destroying Russia on their own soil. Time to make them feel the pain they have wrongly brought to Ukraine. Ukrainian intel strikes deep: Aircraft destroyed in Russia
December 18, 20241 yr Interesting musical chairs I recently learned about. ITA Airways was recently acquired by Lufthansa. ITA, and preceding Alitalia, were in SkyTeam, headed up by Delta along with Air France and KLM. ITA came across as an unwanted stepchild for the more fastidious French and Dutch. SkyTeam is pricey, as are their award redemption tiers. With this transaction, ITA joins Star Alliance, headed up by United and with Lufthansa and Air Canada in the consortium. I'm happy about this. At least I am right now.
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