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#21
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Michael Ash wrote in
: Domestic or international? I couldn't say I'm too surprised to hear that about a domestic flight, although I thought they'd do better. It was a coast-to-coast domestic flight. For International, I "took a chance and flew Air France" (a very enjoyable flight). I would probably take Aeroflot before considering United. g -- |
#22
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In rec.aviation.student John Godwin wrote:
Michael Ash wrote in : Domestic or international? I couldn't say I'm too surprised to hear that about a domestic flight, although I thought they'd do better. It was a coast-to-coast domestic flight. For International, I "took a chance and flew Air France" (a very enjoyable flight). The foreign national carriers are often very nice. Being subsidized and not having to turn a profit has certain advantages, especially if you aren't paying taxes in the country in question. I would probably take Aeroflot before considering United. g Can't say I'd blame you. I think my last experience with United resulted in them stranding me in Beijing for a day after they cancelled my flight during the SARS scare and didn't bother to inform me of the change. Although other airliners are often scarcely better, and these bad experiences are frequently the luck of the draw more than anything. -- Michael Ash Rogue Amoeba Software |
#23
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FAA EEO wrote:
Sam Spade wrote: Matt Barrow wrote: "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... YougotitSam wrote: Here is the FAA's new priority with your tax money. Keep in mind we have RECORD airline delays Neither the FAA nor the Air Force would have the authority to fix the record airline delays. It would take the ability to put into place procedures that the air line lobby and their bought off flaks in congress and the executive branch would never allow. Or automation (that would allow such procedures) that the unions have opposed, and the funding structure that does not create a revenue stream that allows such modernization. It's mostly about commuter jets and not enough runways at major airports. Atlanta recently spent BILLIONS on a 5th runway and the delays there now are WORSE than when they had 4 runways. Apparently it is more than just a runway problem The facts are the FAA is out of control and is filled with incompetent women and minorities in senior management positions. Dance around it all day but the problem is BAD AND INCOMPETENT FAA MANAGEMENT PERIOD The truth of the matter... yes, Atlanta and the airlines (not the FAA) spent $billions on the 5th runway. Flight delays immediately decreased significantly. A couple of months later one of the otehr 4 runways was shut down for about 5 or 6 months for "renovations". During that time the airport again operated with 4 runways and delays did increase to even worse than before the 5th runway was completed. Once that runway was put back into service, delays dropped back to the lower, almost acceptable, levels. Can you imagine the problems if the 5th runway had not been built and Atlanta had to operate on 3 runways while the one was renovated. The biggest cause of flight delays is the airline scheduling and use of more Regional jets on the same runways... RJs take essentially the same runway space as traditional jets and only carry 1/4 to 1/3 as many passangers. More airline flights trying to use the same runways, so something has to give. Mike: N44979 Archer II at RYY -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#24
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Mike wrote:
FAA EEO wrote: Sam Spade wrote: Matt Barrow wrote: "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... YougotitSam wrote: Here is the FAA's new priority with your tax money. Keep in mind we have RECORD airline delays Neither the FAA nor the Air Force would have the authority to fix the record airline delays. It would take the ability to put into place procedures that the air line lobby and their bought off flaks in congress and the executive branch would never allow. Or automation (that would allow such procedures) that the unions have opposed, and the funding structure that does not create a revenue stream that allows such modernization. It's mostly about commuter jets and not enough runways at major airports. Atlanta recently spent BILLIONS on a 5th runway and the delays there now are WORSE than when they had 4 runways. Apparently it is more than just a runway problem The facts are the FAA is out of control and is filled with incompetent women and minorities in senior management positions. Dance around it all day but the problem is BAD AND INCOMPETENT FAA MANAGEMENT PERIOD The truth of the matter... yes, Atlanta and the airlines (not the FAA) spent $billions on the 5th runway. Flight delays immediately decreased significantly. A couple of months later one of the otehr 4 runways was shut down for about 5 or 6 months for "renovations". During that time the airport again operated with 4 runways and delays did increase to even worse than before the 5th runway was completed. Once that runway was put back into service, delays dropped back to the lower, almost acceptable, levels. Can you imagine the problems if the 5th runway had not been built and Atlanta had to operate on 3 runways while the one was renovated. The biggest cause of flight delays is the airline scheduling and use of more Regional jets on the same runways... RJs take essentially the same runway space as traditional jets and only carry 1/4 to 1/3 as many passangers. More airline flights trying to use the same runways, so something has to give. Mike: N44979 Archer II at RYY The ATL 10/28 was originally supposed to be a commuter runway only. The Federal Government or FAA whatever you want to call it kicked in quite a bit of the money also. I still say you can build 50 new runways but if you can't modernize and you treat your key personnel like crap it won't matter what you do. The FAA has ruined the controller relationship and caved into big contractors and purchased crap equipment that has to be re-engineered in the field. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJ7h1ETVTBs Unqualified and Incompetent FAA Management has led to the mess the ATC system is in. I am not sure short of a NASA type overhaul like after the shuttle Challenger blew up if anything of substance will be done. Sadly the FAA has not had it's Challenger. Yet. Here is the FAA priority with our tax money now.I am not sure what this link has to do with Air Safety but the FAA cares more about this crap than their mission now. Most of the FAA is consumed with political correctness and could care less about aviation. It's all about Kumbaya and Diversity. The Emperor has no clothes. https://employees.faa.gov/employee_s...ions_programs/ |
#25
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On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 21:43:27 -0400, Mike wrote
in : The biggest cause of flight delays is the airline scheduling and use of more Regional jets on the same runways... RJs take essentially the same runway space as traditional jets and only carry 1/4 to 1/3 as many passangers. More airline flights trying to use the same runways, so something has to give. It would appear that the majority of Boeing's airliner production is the 737 (118 to 215 seats*) currently: Boeing Reports Third-Quarter 2007 Deliveries CHICAGO, Oct. 04, 2007 -- The Boeing Company [NYSE: BA] today announced deliveries across its commercial and defense operations for the third quarter of 2007. Major program deliveries during the third quarter were as follows: Major Programs 3rd Quarter 2007 Year-to-Date 2007 Commercial Airplanes Programs 737 81 250 747 5 12 767 3 9 777 20 58 Total 109 329 Integrated Defense Systems Programs Apache (New Builds) 9 17 Chinook (New Builds) 1 7 C-17 4 12 C-32/C-40 0 2 F/A-18E/F and EA-18G 11 33 Satellites (Government & Commercial) 1 4 T-45TS 2 7 F-15 3 6 Delta II - Commercial 1 2 ### * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_737 |
#26
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Larry Dighera wrote:
On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 21:43:27 -0400, Mike wrote in : The biggest cause of flight delays is the airline scheduling and use of more Regional jets on the same runways... RJs take essentially the same runway space as traditional jets and only carry 1/4 to 1/3 as many passangers. More airline flights trying to use the same runways, so something has to give. It would appear that the majority of Boeing's airliner production is the 737 (118 to 215 seats*) currently: Boeing Reports Third-Quarter 2007 Deliveries CHICAGO, Oct. 04, 2007 -- The Boeing Company [NYSE: BA] today announced deliveries across its commercial and defense operations for the third quarter of 2007. Major program deliveries during the third quarter were as follows: Major Programs 3rd Quarter 2007 Year-to-Date 2007 Commercial Airplanes Programs 737 81 250 747 5 12 767 3 9 777 20 58 Total 109 329 Integrated Defense Systems Programs Apache (New Builds) 9 17 Chinook (New Builds) 1 7 C-17 4 12 C-32/C-40 0 2 F/A-18E/F and EA-18G 11 33 Satellites (Government & Commercial) 1 4 T-45TS 2 7 F-15 3 6 Delta II - Commercial 1 2 ### * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_737 Yes, the 737 has been the most popular passenger jet for some time now. But, the number of aircraft delivered by Boeing is not very signicicant... Check the number of aircraft delivered or in use by US airlines and you will find a huge increase in the use of Regional Jets. Remember, Boeing does not manufacture a RJ (neither does Airbus). The big RJ producers are Bombardier (Canadair RJ) and Embracer. Also, you can't look at the aircraft 'owned' by the major airlines because most of the RJs are flown by the "Commuter" airlines (ASA, Comair, American Eagle, etc.) Go to the major airport hubs where the long queues form for takeoff and look at aircraft types... about half will be RJs these days. (Because they fly shorter routes and turn around faster, they make more take-offs and landings than larger, 'standard' jets, compounding the problem.) Mike -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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