Top 10 International Airlines with Best On time Arrival Performance Rating !!!

South African Airways

South African Airlines has been rated as the best on-time airline in the world. Picture: South African Airlines

FlightStats.com released it’s top 10 list of the best on-time major international airlines in the world overnight. Topping the list was South African airlines with an on-time performance rate of 94.71 per cent.

Here’s the top ten list.
1.    South African – 94 per cent
2.    Gulf Air – 90.7 per cent
3.    Japan Airlines – 90.24 per cent
4.    Air New Zealand – 89.68 per cent
5.    Singapore Airlines – 87.7 per cent
6.    Air Europa – 87.27 per cent
7.    KLM – 86.35 per cent
8.    Delta – 86.35 per cent
9.    Saudi Arabian – 86.28 per cent

10.    ANA – 85.51 per cent

The results are likely to be influenced by which airport airlines fly into. Some are far better than others. The airport with the best on-time departure performance is Seattle-Tacoma’s International Airport posting a 91.18 per cent
on-time departure performance in February. It unseated Tokyo’s Haneda for the top spot among the world’s busiest airports.

According to FlightStats.com the average on-time departure performance among the top 35 international airports in February was 73.29 per cent.
source::::news.com.au

Natarajan
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/the-airline-with-the-best-on-time-arrival-performance-in-south-african-airlines/story-e6frfq80-1226592065523#ixzz2MqsRr1aO

Brandenberg Airport”s Problem is Not That ”Light ” !!!

Berlin Brandenberg airport

Workers at Berlin Brandenberg airport are unable to turn off the lights. Picture: Berlin Brandenberg airport

BERLIN’S Brandenberg airport has a small problem.

There’s no way to turn off the lights in the brand new building.

Technical director Horst Amann told German news service Spiegel.de: “We haven’t progressed far enough with our lighting system that we can control it.”

Sky News reported that the cost of the project has doubled original estimates, now standing at $5.45 billion.

Yes, although they have spent $5.45 billion on the building there is no way to turn off the lights. No light switches at all.

The construction site that will eventually become the Berlin International Airport was originally scheduled to begin operations in October 2011. Since work started construction shortcomings, design errors and technical glitches have been found.

No opening date has been set and project directors are refusing to even estimate when it may open.

“I will only name a date when I can take responsibility for it,” Mr Amann said…

source:::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/world/berlin-brandenberg-airport-has-a-light-problem/story-e6frfqai-1226589904760#ixzz2MfpsvaQ9

You Can’t Get Closer To The Belly Of A Flying Plane Than At Maho Beach !!!!

Vacationers usually travel to Caribbean beaches for the clear water and smooth sand, but some travelers venture to Maho Beach, St. Maarten for a different experience.Instead of snapping photos of sunsets and sunbathers, beachgoers at Maho take pictures of the incredibly low-flying planes as they land at Princess Julianna International Airport, just meters from the beach itself.

Some people even push the limits to see how much of a jet engine’s wind gusts they can withstand.

Check out the photos to see what it is like for yourself.

It is a spectacle that will keep luring vacationers to Maho Beach for years to come.

The viral videos have even caused the local government to consider taking increased safety measures to help prevent injuries.

The wind gusts are powerful enough to blow people over.

Maho Beach St. Maarten

But getting such a view comes with a warning.

source::::business insider .com

Natarajan

Atlanta…Busiest Airport in The World …..

One might expect the world’s busiest airport to be located in New York or London or Beijing, but the distinction actually belongs to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, located in the southern US city of Atlanta, Georgia. No matter which way you calculate it, Hartsfield-Jackson has been the world’s busiest since 1998. Not only does it attract more travellers than any other airport in the world (with about 92.4 million passengers passing through in 2011, the last full year on record), it also manages more aircraft movements (that is, more takeoffs and landings) than any airport in the world – with about950,000 in 2010, also the last year on record.

All of this begs the question, why is Atlanta the busiest hub for air travel in the world?

The Delta factor
Atlanta is home to one of the world’s largest airlines. Delta Air Lines was founded in the city of Macon, Georgia (originally as a crop-dusting company called Huff Daland Dusters) and later moved its headquarters about 85 miles north to Atlanta in 1941 (after running its first passenger flights under the name Delta Air Service in 1929).

Until 2012, Delta held the record for most annual traffic – measured by “revenue passenger miles” (RPM) – of any airline in the world. The metric of RPMs takes into account both the number of passengers carried and the distances an airline flew during a given year. In 2012 though, Delta’s RPM was beaten by United Airlines, which had grown in size following the 2010 merger between United and Continental Airlines.

So it makes sense, then, that Chicago, home to United’s headquarters, hosts the world’s second busiest airport as measured by aircraft movements – with 882,627 in 2010 – and the world’s fourth busiest as measured by sheer passenger numbers – with 66.6 million passengers in 2011. (The second and third busiest by number of passengers in 2011 are Beijing Capital International Airport, with 77.4 million and London Heathrow Airport with 69.4 million)

Hartsfield-Jackson serves 225 destinations in 51 countries, receives more than 250,000 passengers a day, and sees nearly 2,500 arrivals and departures per day. Out of this, Delta runs about 1,000 flights daily, serving more than 200 destinations.

The location
According to data collected by Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, Atlanta is located within a two-hour flight of 80% of the US population, making the city a major port of entry into the US and a logical stopover for travel within the expansive country.

Hartsfield-Jackson is also the only airport located in Atlanta and by far the biggest airport in Georgia. Most other major hub cities, such as New York, split traffic between two or more major airports. The nearest major airport to Hartsfield-Jackson, is 250 miles northwest, in Nashville, Tennessee.

The city
Hartsfield-Jackson also happens to be located in a city that attracts its fair share of travellers. Atlanta has been ranked the seventh most visited city for business travel in the US – unsurprising, since it is home to the headquarters of 10 Fortune 500 companies, including Coca-Cola, Home Depot (a massive home improvement retailer), UPS (the United Parcel Service) and, of course, Delta Air Lines.

For non-business visitors, Atlanta is also home to perhaps the world’s largest aquarium, where visitors can find the biggest fish on Earth. Rivalled only by the new SEA Aquarium in Singapore (which also calls itself the world’s largest), the Georgia Aquarium holds more than 8 million gallons of water and provides habitat to around 120,000 animals, according to aquarium statistics.

Atlanta’s big companies also offer behind-the-scenes tours popular with all kinds of travellers. Coca Cola offers an attraction called The World of Coca-Cola, a sort of museum taking tourists into the history of one of the planet’s most consumed beverages. CNN, the 24-hour cable news channel available around the world, has a popular Inside CNN Studio Tour.

If you find yourself enduring the all-too-common layover in Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Jaunted offers five ideas for passing the time – including renting out a room at the airport’s unique Minute Suites, which let you rent out a private room by the hour or for the night in Terminal B, and dining at the upscale “southernnational” joint One Flew South, a restaurant in Terminal E incorporating southern ingredients and techniques to international cuisine fit for the typical Hartsfield traveller.

source:::::BBC.COM.TRAVEL

Natarajan

Take Off in the Miniature Airport !!!

Miniature airport           This is unbelievable !!!!
 
 
This must have required as much planning as the real thing.  
 
Amazing. I love the take offs!
 
 
It is hard to believe that all these Aircraft operations are ‘dummy” ….It is so realistic that you feel as if you are
sitting in control tower and watching aircraft movements and vehicle movements  on the dotted lines!!!!
Natarajan
source::::input from a friend of mine…

Google”s $82 Million Airport !!!

Google’s grip on Silicon Valley is about to stretch even further.
The search giant has proposed building an $82 million private airport for executive travel at Mineta San Jose International Airport, reports the local SF Bay Area CBS affiliate.
There is a very strong chance the offer will be accepted.
The 29 acre airport proposal is facilitated by Signature, a San Jose-based company that currently handles Google’s private jets.
Signature’s proposal will develop the west side of the airport under a 50-year lease.
Further specifics detail a 17,000-square-foot terminal, a 33,000-square-foot building for offices and retail shops, a 66,000-square-foot hangar, 18.5 acres for aircraft parking, and a 300-space car parking lot, according to NBC Bay Area.
William Sherry, the San Jose director of Aviation, along with four other evaluators gave Signature’s plan a 991 out of 1,000 rating. Officials liked the plan because of the likelihood to create jobs and additional revenues for the airport and the city’s General Fund.

source:::::businessinsider.com
Natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/google-private-airport-san-jose-2013-2#ixzz2KU7BFI3a

” Strange ” Plane at Melbourne Airport !!!!

 

The new 'plane' at Melbourne Airport is the centrepiece of a state-of-the-art training facility dubbed the Learning Academy Hot Fire Training Ground.The new ‘plane’ at Melbourne Airport is the centrepiece of a state-of-the-art training facility dubbed the Learning Academy Hot Fire Training Ground.

If you’ve visited Melbourne Airport in the past few months and wondered why an enormous, rust-coloured plane is sitting outside on the tarmac, wonder no more.

It’s not an art installation. It’s a full-sized mock-up aircraft fuselage that from mid-March will be laid with gaslines and set alight – like a giant barbecue – for use in aviation rescue and fire fighting (ARFF) training.

The structure – which is the centrepiece of a state-of-the-art training facility dubbed the Learning Academy Hot Fire Training Ground – will be quite the spectacle when alight and probably quite disturbing for those unaware that it isn’t an actual plane. A spokesman for Airservices Australia, however (the government-owned corporation that provides ARFF services at 21 of Australia’s airports), said passengers “shouldn’t be alarmed by smoke or flames from the training facility.”

Although this isn't the first aircraft mock-up that's been used for training purposes in Australia, Airservices said it's certainly the largest in the southern hemisphere, and possibly the world.Although this isn’t the first aircraft mock-up that’s been used for training purposes in Australia, Airservices said it’s certainly the largest in the southern hemisphere, and possibly the world.

“Airservices will take into account fire bans and existing wind conditions during the testing of the hot-fire training facility,” he said.

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Although this isn’t the first aircraft mock-up that’s been used for training purposes in Australia, Airservices said it’s certainly the largest in the southern hemisphere, and possibly the world. At over 56 metres long, 10 metres high and 29 metres wide, it’s almost three times the length of existing aircraft mock-ups currently in use in Australia.

The structure is basically a mash-up of replicated sections of aircraft including the Airbus A380, Boeing 767 and DC10 aircraft, to train crews in fighting fires on different types of aircrafts and to allow multiple training scenarios to happen at the same time. It is the first time Airservices has developed a mock-up that includes the A380.

“This facility now gives us the ability to train firefighters in responding to the largest aircraft that will land in Australian airports,” the Airservices Australia spokesman said.

Depending on training requirements, the aircraft mock-up can also be lit at different levels, creating wheel fires, engine fires or complete aircraft fuselage fires. The centre of the aircraft will also have drums filled with fuel to replicate fires inside a plane.

Although it won’t be used to train cabin crew as it isn’t equipped with escape slides, the interior is set up like a real aircraft, complete with seating and overhead compartments.

Unfortunately for those who have been admiring the rustic burnt orange hue of the structure as they fly into Melbourne Airport, the plane will be turning black once it starts burning.

source:::::brisbane times.com

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/travel/travel-news/firing-up-strange-plane-appears-at-melbourne-airport-20130204-2dtsf.html#ixzz2Jwp4bXBE

3rd Runway of Melbourne Airport will make Melbourne as the Gateway of Australia!!!!!

 

 

 source:::::: BIGPOND NEWS….Australia….
Natarajan

Tullamrine will challenge Sydney's title of Australia's gateway with plans to build a new $500m runway.

Tullamrine will challenge Sydney’s title of Australia’s gateway with plans to build a new $500m runway.

Melbourne Airport is planning a $500 million third runway which will challenge Sydney to the title of Australia’s gateway.

The new runway will mean thousands more jets will head for curfew-free Melbourne Airport with aircraft movements expected to jump from 200,000 to 281,000 by 2022-23.

Construction is likely to begin in 2016 and will take between two to four years to complete.

Melbourne Airport chief executive, Chris Woodruff, said the new east-west runway would provide additional capacity for the forecast growth in aircraft movements at Melbourne Airport by the end of the decade.

Passenger numbers are forecast to reach 40 million by the 2020 and more than 60 million by 2033.

The new runway will be approximately 3000 metres long and 60 metres wide and capable of handling aircraft up to the size of an A380.

Mr Woodruff said passengers would spend less time on the ground taxiing to and from terminals, and aircraft will burn less fuel on more direct flight paths and shorter trips from the gate to the runway.

‘However, there will be some areas within the existing noise contours that will experience more aircraft flying overhead as a result of the construction of a new runway,’ Mr Woodruff said.

‘We will be working closely with various stakeholders…on measures to minimise the noise impact on our neighbours, while ensuring we continue to operate the airport in the most efficient way possible.’

Mr Woodruff said the third runway would be part of a $10 billion investment over the next two decades in the growth of Melbourne Airport as the aviation gateway to Victoria and southeastern Australia.

‘Airports are critical pieces of our national infrastructure, and our draft Master Plan will set out the future vision for Melbourne Airport as a 24-hour gateway for the movement of people and goods to destinations and markets around the world,’ he said.

 

STRANGE….BUT TRUE !!!!…..AIRPORT SECURITY BREACH AT JFK….

SOURCE:::”:BRISBANE TIMES”….QUEENSLAND….15 AUG 2012…
Natarajan

‘I needed help!’ stranded jet-skier breaches $100m New York airport security system…..

In an era in which airline passengers cannot get past a US checkpoint with a bottle of shampoo, security experts were shocked on Monday by the case of a man who swam ashore, scaled a fence and walked dripping wet into John F. Kennedy International Airport despite a $US100 million ($95 million) system of surveillance cameras and motion detectors.

“Thank God it wasn’t a terrorist, but we have to look at it as if we had another attack,” said Isaac Yeffet, former chief of security for Israeli airline El Al. “That’s the only way we’ll improve the system.”

Immediately there should’ve been an armed response. Heavy weapons, armoured cars to the area that the perimeter was breached. The airport should have been locked down.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees JFK, quickly added police patrols to the airport perimeter and said it was investigating the security breach.

Breached ... New York's Kennedy Airport.Breached … New York’s Kennedy Airport. Photo: Reuters

Authorities said the trouble began on Friday evening when Daniel Casillo’s jet-ski ran out of fuel in Jamaica Bay. Casillo, 31, swam toward the bright lights of Kennedy’s runway 4L, which juts out into the bay, then climbed a 2.5-metre fence that is part of the airport’s state-of-the-art Perimeter Intrusion Detection System, authorities said.

 

Soaking wet, wearing a bright yellow life jacket, Casillo made his way across two intersecting runways – an estimated distance of nearly three kilometres – before he was spotted on a terminal ramp by an airline employee, authorities said.

According to the police report, Casillo told an officer: “I needed help.”

The intrusion-detection system, made by defence contractor Raytheon, should have set off a series of warnings, said Bobby Egbert, spokesman for the Port Authority police officers union.

“This system is made specifically for those types of threats – water-borne threats,” Egbert said. “It did not detect him climbing over a fence. It did not detect him crossing two active runways.”

Port Authority police interrogated Casillo and charged him with criminal trespassing. Authorities said the airport grounds were clearly marked with no-trespassing signs that indicate it is a “restricted area for authorised personnel only”.

Casillo was released without bail for a court appearance on October 2. A man who answered the phone at the home of Casillo’s girlfriend said the couple’s lawyer had advised them to stop speaking to the media.

“We have called for an expedited review of the incident and a complete investigation to determine how Raytheon’s perimeter intrusion detection system – which exceeds federal requirements – could be improved,” the Port Authority said in a statement.

The agency offered no explanation of what went wrong or whether it was human error or equipment failure.

A spokesman for Raytheon would not comment.

“The catastrophic failure was that nobody sounded the alarm to go to condition red intruder alert,” said former New York City Detective Nicholas Casale, who was deputy director of security for counter-terrorism at the New York metropolitan area’s transit agency.

“Immediately, there should’ve been an armed response. Heavy weapons, armoured cars to the area that the perimeter was breached. The airport should have been locked down.”

The intrusion-detection system employs sensors, motion detectors and video surveillance, Egbert said. A security guard employed by a private contractor is supposed to keep an eye on the footage from a monitoring room, he said. If the guard determines there is a threat, a private security officer is sent to investigate, Egbert said.

From there, it is up to the private security force to decide whether to notify Port Authority police, Egbert said.

The detection system, which was phased in several years ago, has been a source of tension between the Port Authority and the police union. The union contends that manpower – in the form of patrols in the air, on the water and on the ground – is the best way to protect the airport.

“This has all been structured to remove the police from the situation,” Egbert said. “Technology doesn’t catch terrorists. Boots on the ground do.”