Richard Branson”s New UK Airline!!!!

Sir Richard Branson arrives in Edinburgh Airport on board the inaugural Virgin Atlantic Little Red flight.

Sir Richard Branson arrives in Edinburgh Airport on board the inaugural Virgin Atlantic Little Red flight. Photo: Getty Images

Virgin Atlantic has celebrated its first ever domestic flight, from London to Edinburgh.

Sir Richard Branson, the airline’s founder, was present at the launch of its inaugural domestic service, named Little Red.

He said the move would bring greater choice for consumers, potentially pushing down prices..

“Today marks the start of an exciting new chapter in Virgin Atlantic’s history,” said Sir Richard. “Our product, service and flair are known throughout the world, and we’re thrilled to be bringing that to domestic flying.

Virgin will soon fly 26 domestic flights a day, connecting Heathrow with Manchester and Aberdeen, as well as the Scottish capital.

The airline was granted new landing and take-off slots at Heathrow earlier this year following the takeover of Bmi by International Airlines Group (IAG) – the parent company of British Airways. Its foray into domestic services will also create dozens of jobs.

Nicola Sturgeon, deputy first minister of Scotland, welcomed the launch. “These new flights from Edinburgh and Aberdeen will create jobs, offer passengers easier access to Virgin’s global destinations and provide competition on these routes, resulting in a better deal for passengers,” she said. ?”Good access to Heathrow; Britain’s only hub airport, is essential for Scotland’s economic development.”

While Sir Richard was happy to reveal his specially-made outfit today, he may be less keen on the outfit he’ll be asked to wearnext month. On May 12 he will be boarding an AirAsia flight from Perth to Kuala Lumpur dressed as a female flight attendant to fulfil a bet made with AirAsia chief executive and F1 owner Tony Fernandes. Mr Fernandes, who once worked for Sir Richard’s music business, bet that his Lotus Racing team would perform better in its debut season than Virgin Racing, with the loser dressing up as a stewardess. Lotus Racing finished 10th, and Virgin 12th.

“The day of reckoning for Sir Richard has finally arrived,” Mr Fernandes said on Monday. “It’s an awkward moment when you go down memory lane and recall the times I used to work for Richard. And it’s hilarious to think now, that it’s Richard who will be working for me as a sassy flight attendant, complete with make-up, a pair of high heels and freshly shaved legs.”

The Telegraph, London

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Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/travel/travel-news/richard-branson-launches-new-uk-airline-20130409-2hj25.html#ixzz2Q4jgDLwa

 

A Question Answer Session With Chris Hadfield !!!

 

Question: What time zone do you live by? Do you switch off the lights at “night”?
We live on Greenwich time, UTC, same as London, England. We shut of most lights at bedtime – it feels right to do it.
Question: How long does it take for you to orbit around the Earth?
ISS orbits the world every 92 minutes, so that makes it 8 km/sec, or 500 km/minute – 28,000 km/hr. Or about Mach 25.
Question: Have you done any space walks? If so, what was it like?
I was Canada’s first spacewalker, doing two to help build the mighty Canadarm2 robot onto ISS. It was the most magnificent experience of my life. Alone in a 1-person spaceship (my suit), just holding on with my one hand, with the bottomless black universe on my left and the World pouring by in technicolor on my right. I highly recommend it.
Question: You tweet a lot. When do you find the time?
The priorities are crew health, vehicle health, work/science & then personal pursuits; I take photos, tweet & play guitar when I can!
Question: How long does the mission last?
I’m in orbit, working onboard ISS for 5 months, until mid-May 2013.
Question: What are your personal quarters like on the ISS?
I’m typing now in my ‘Sleep Station’, a small padded room with a door, completely private, like a bedroom without the bed, and phone booth sized.
Question: How often do you exercise on the ISS?
We work out 2 hours per day, every day, just to stay at a constant level of fitness to be ready to do a spacewalk, and to have strong bones and muscles when we come home.
Question: How long did it take you to learn how to maneuver in zero gravity? Are you much better at it now than when you originally came aboard the ISS?
 
I’m still learning! But sometimes now, I am graceful. I feel like an adapted ape swinging through the jungle canopy … until I miss a handrail and crash into the wall.
source:::babamailnet
Natarajan

Most Beautiful Airports Around The World !!!!

Changi Airport's Terminal 3 in Singapore features an impressive roof composed of more than 900 skylights, each adjustable to let in the perfect amount of light, as well as a five-story vertical garden in the baggage claim area. Indoor gardens scattered throughout the airport lend a calming atmosphere to this busy hub.

Changi Airport’s Terminal 3 in Singapore features an impressive roof composed of more than 900 skylights, each adjustable to let in the perfect amount of light, as well as a five-story vertical garden in the baggage claim area. Indoor gardens scattered throughout the airport lend a calming atmosphere to this busy hub.

 

Beijing International Airport's Terminal 3, opened for the 2008 Olympics, is one of the largest buildings on earth. From the sky, the structure is meant to resemble a dragon adorned in the traditional Chinese red-and-yellow color scheme. Huge skylights let in plenty of natural light, and the entire terminal is color-coded to help passengers navigate it effortlessly.

Beijing International Airport’s Terminal 3, opened for the 2008 Olympics, is one of the largest buildings on earth. From the sky, the structure is meant to resemble a dragon adorned in the traditional Chinese red-and-yellow color scheme. Huge skylights let in plenty of natural light, and the entire terminal is color-coded to help passengers navigate it effortlessly.

 

JFK's Terminal 5, also called the TWA Flight Center, serves as the airport's JetBlue Terminal. The space was designed by Finnish American architect Eero Saarinen in 1962, and was meant to look like a seagull in flight. The building's unique design has been used as a New York filming location for movies like "Catch Me if You Can."

JFK’s Terminal 5, also called the TWA Flight Center, serves as the airport’s JetBlue Terminal. The space was designed by Finnish American architect Eero Saarinen in 1962, and was meant to look like a seagull in flight. The building’s unique design has been used as a New York filming location for movies like “Catch Me if You Can.”

 

Madrid is quickly becoming a major travel center in Europe, and besides being one of the easiest airports to navigate, it's also beautiful. Terminal 4's architectural highlights include colorful steel pylons supporting a bamboo ceiling that lets in sunlight with the aim of creating a tranquil and calming space for passengers passing through.

Madrid is quickly becoming a major travel center in Europe, and besides being one of the easiest airports to navigate, it’s also beautiful. Terminal 4’s architectural highlights include colorful steel pylons supporting a bamboo ceiling that lets in sunlight with the aim of creating a tranquil and calming space for passengers passing through.

source:::::USA TODAY

Natarajan

Boeing 747…The “Jumbo Jet” Plane Which Redefined Airtravel….A Flash back!!!

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

The first 747 rolled out of the Everett assembly building in Washington State on September 30, 1968. A special hangar was built for its construction. By volume, it remains the biggest building ever made.

The plane was set to re-define air travel, with its ability to carry more people than previous aircraft, and played a major part in making long-haul journeys more affordable….

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

Pan Am was the first airline to receive a 747, and Pat Nixon, the First Lady of the United States, christened the aircraft Clipper Vector. The 747 entered service on January 22, 1970, on Pan Am’s scheduled flight from New York to London.

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

It also shared some historic highs. The 747 was often used to transport space shuttles, and here it is seen in 1978 giving the Enterprise a piggyback.

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

In 1984 a youthful Richard Branson launched his airline with a 747 flight from Gatwick to Newark.

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

The aircraft has been redesigned several times. Variants were launched in 1979 (747-100B), 1982 (747SP), 1983 (747-300), 1989 (747-400), 2006 (747 LCF), and 2011 (747-8, pictured).

Boeing 747: a history in pictures

The Boeing 747, launched more than 40 years ago, is one of the most influential and admired passenger aircraft ever to be built.

However the original “jumbo jet”, which has flown many millions of people in its decades of service, may finally be falling from favour. British Airways will take delivery of its first Airbus A380 “superjumbo” in July, and this week announced plans to buy 18 Boeing 787 Dreamliners. Both aircraft are quieter and more fuel efficient than the 747, which BA is now looking to phase out over the next few years.

source::::The Telegraph UK…

Natarajan

Images Of The Week !!!!

Flying formation……. Part 1…….    Two parrots captured in flight in Madrid

Flying formation……Part 2…..An Emirates A380 aircraft (L) and Qantas A380 aircraft (R) fly over Sydney Harbour to mark the official launch of a partnership between the two carriers.

SOURCE:::::bbc.com .news

Natarajan

Airline To Fly Woman to Taiwan to Fetch Her Lost Camera !!!!!

camera

China Airlines says it will pay for a Georgia woman to fly to Taiwan to be reunited with a photo-laden camera she lost on a 2007 vacation.

The camera belongs to Lindsay Scallan, who says she lost the waterproof digital camera during a nighttime scuba-diving trip in 2007.

“It was my first time in Hawaii ever, so I was pretty upset I had lost all my memories,” she tells Atlanta’sWSB-TV.

VIDEO: Camera found in Taiwan belongs to Georgia woman

But Scallan’s camera finally washed ashore this month, nearly six years after she lost it. And in Taiwan, about 6,000 miles from Hawaii.

It was on a Taiwan beach where a manager of Taiwan-based China Airlines found it while vacationing with his family.

The camera was covered in seaweed and barnacles, but its waterproof casing was still intact, according WSB.

“An employee of China Airlines found my camera, found the pictures still on the memory card and got in touch with Hawaiian officials to see if they could help find who the owner was — the mystery blond woman as they called it,” Scallan says to CBS Atlanta 46.

The Taipei Times reports that Scallan’s photos included a shot of a catamaran called Teralani 3, which the China Airlines employee tracked to Maui. That’s how the employee — identified by the Times as Douglas Cheng — got the idea to get in touch with Hawaiian officials.

China Airlines created a Facebook page that showed a picture of “the mystery blond woman” along with a page title saying: “China Airlines Is Looking For You.”

The Times writes Cheng “contacted Hawaiian authorities and the tourism bureau through (the airline’s) Honolulu office … .”

Eventually, the story made it to local Hawaii TV stations, with a report aired via the local Hawaii News Now TV platform.

Hawaii News Now says “the mystery unraveled” after it aired a report on Friday that then “went viral.”

“Facebook fans shared, and shared — thousands of times. A high school friend of Lindsay Scallan’s saw our story, and pointed us to her Facebook page Sunday morning. She calls it unbelievable,” Hawaii News Now says in its report.

Next up for Scallan: An all-expensive paid vacation to Taiwan, where she will meet Cheng and be reunited with her camera.

“China Airlines has offered to pay for me to go out there and my room, board and my food and everything,” Scallan tells CBS Atlanta. “An all expenses paid trip to come out there and get my camera back and meet the guy that found it. It’s been a wild ride.”

“Everyone’s talking about it. It’s pretty neat,” she adds to Hawaii News Now.

source::::USA Today

Natarajan

 

Budget Airline Easy Jet Follows Ryan Air in Removing Airport Check in Counters !!!

Passengers flying with EasyJet will need to check-in online after the airline removes all its check-in desks from airports.Passengers flying with EasyJet will need to check-in online after the airline removes all its check-in desks from airports. Photo: Bloomberg

European budget airline EasyJet is to close all its airport check-in desks, in an attempt to encourage more passengers to check in online.

The desks will be replaced by bag-drop desks, for those flyers wishing to travel with checked luggage, from April 30.

Passengers who forget to check in online will still be able to do so at the airport free of charge, but it is hoped the facility will only be used in “exceptional circumstances.”

Low-cost rival Ryanair abolished check-in desks in 2009 and currently charges passengers £70 ($A102) per person at the airport if they don’t check in online, or if they fail to print out their boarding pass. Last year a British woman, Suzy McLeod, received the backing of more than half a million Facebook users after she was charged £240 (the fee at the time was £60 per person) at Alicante airport after she forgot to print out four boarding passes. Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary responded in typically confrontational style, branding Ms McLeod “stupid”.

 

An EasyJet spokesman said an unspecified “transition period” would give passengers time to adapt to the new policy, but claimed that no plans were in place to charge a similar fee if they forget to check in online, or to print their boarding pass.

“We try to be a bit more customer friendly than Ryanair, and hope passengers choose to check-in online without the threat of punitive charges,” said a spokesman.

“EasyJet is always looking to make travel easier and more affordable. Online check in has proved popular with passengers, for whom it saves time queuing at the airport, and has helped easyJet keep its costs, and therefore its fares, low.”

He added that 80 per cent of passengers already choose to check in online, and that the move was aimed at making the airport journey quicker for all.

EasyJet passengers can check in online up to 30 days before they fly. They are currently permitted to travel with one piece on hand luggage, no bigger than 56 x 45 x 25cm. It charges customers £25 to travel with a single piece of hold baggage.

– The Telegraph, London

source::::brisbane times…australia

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Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/travel/travel-news/easyjet-to-remove-all-checkin-desks-20130325-2gpak.html#ixzz2OWAuOaCC

Fake “Pilot” in Cockpit !!!

A Frenchman wearing a uniform and claiming to be an Air France pilot was arrested on board a plane in the US city of Philadelphia after being found sitting in the cockpit, police say.
Identified as Philippe Jeannard of La Rochelle, France, the man was a ticketed passenger for the US Airways flight to West Palm Beach, Florida, according to a police statement that spelt his name two different ways.
Mr Jeannard, in his 60s, was found sitting in the jump-seat behind the captain’s chair on board a US Airways flight and claimed to be a 747 pilot for Air France.
”When [Mr Jeannard] could not produce proper credentials, he was removed from the flight and the police were notified,” the Philadelphia police said.
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”When arrested, [he] was in possession of a counterfeit Air France crew member identification card,” the statement read.
Mr Jeannard has been charged with criminal trespass, tampering with records, impersonating a privately employed person and presenting false identification to law enforcement.

source::::brisbane times…australia
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Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/travel/travel-news/fake-air-france-pilot-arrested-in-cockpit-20130323-2gmoj.html#ixzz2OW9atBin

A Private Jet Maker Is Thriving By Making Old Planes New Again !!!!!

Designing a new airplane is an incredibly expensive, complicated, and long process, one that can prove wasteful if not executed properly — as Boeing‘s troubled Dreamliner jet has proven in recent months.

nextant 400XT on Production Floor

In 2007, looking to avoid the costs and pitfalls that come with new aircraft, aviation entrepreneur Kenn Ricci created a business that would sell small jets for half of what they usually cost, thanks to a simple change.

Instead of building new jets, Nextant Aerospace would take old jets, refurbish them, and sell them for 50 cents on the dollar.

The result, President Sean McGeough says, gives you “everything a new aircraft gives you.” Unless a buyer is dead set on having a 100 percent new plane, he seems right. That’s because Nextant retains the hull of the plane, then replaces just about everything else.

So far, Nextant has produced one model, the 400XT, based on the Hawker 400. The huge cost of designing a plane from scratch does not have to be recouped, so the price of the planes stays low.

In refurbishing a jet, the airframe is kept, while the avionics and any life-limited components, along with the interior, are replaced. From start to finish it takes about 6,000 man hours of work, around 16 weeks.

Before re-entering service, the jets go through the same certification process and flight testing as any new plane. The end result, McGeough says, is a “virtually new” airplane.

 

Nextant 400XT interior

Nextant

In fact, he says, the updated planes are often improvements of their original selves, because they are outfitted with systems developed since the planes were first designed. Once a Hawker 400 becomes a Nextant 400 XT, its operating costs drop 30 percent, and its range improves by 50 percent, says McGeough.

 

McGeough joined Nextant as President after leading Hawker Beechcraft’s international operations in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia Pacific. Selling old planes instead of new ones was “very new territory,” he says, but he was drawn to Nextant by its value proposition and track record of high deliveries: 25 planes in 13 months.

Matt Doyle is the Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Flight Options, a fractional jet ownership company that has purchased 12 aircraft from Nextant (its chairman is Kenn Ricci, Nextant’s founder). Asked if he hesitated before buying refurbished aircraft, Doyle said no.

If Flight Options can offer essentially new planes to its customers for half the cost, and saves everyone money, it’s a good deal, Doyle told Business Insider.

 

Nextant 400XT on ground in front of hangar

Nextant

That’s especially important in a private jet industry that has been lagging in the United States in the wake of the recession. Nextant has sold aircraft to corporate clients, commercial fleet operators, and wealthy individuals.

 

Its business model has proved popular abroad as well: Despite expectations that its clients would be mostly domestic for the first few years, McGeough now predicts 60 percent of its products over the next three to five years will go to foreign buyers.

So far, Nextant has not gone beyond its first product, the refurbished 400XT. To build on its early success, the company is getting ready to announce its next model, a few months from now.

And while selling old planes may seem questionable, the saga of Boeing’s Dreamliner — the commercial passenger jet full of new technology that was designed to change the industry — proves its wisdom.

The Dreamliner debacle is an example of why remanufacturing works, McGeough argues: “You don’t go through the teething problems you would on a cleansheet design,” and you work only with proven technology.

source::::businessinsider.com

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Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/nextant-sells-old-private-jets-made-new-2013-3#ixzz2OBP66c41