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
Natarajan

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

Natarajan

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

Beluga….Super Transporter Plane from AIR BUS !!!!….A Jumbo Giant in Sky!!!!

Business is booming at Airbus: The European planemaker just closed a huge deal to sell $24 billion worth of A320 jets to Indonesia’s Lion Air, and it’s busy building the A350 XWB, the plane it created to compete with Boeing‘s 787 Dreamliner.

 

Airbus is based in Toulouse, France, but produces planes in the United Kingdom, Spain, Germany, and China.

To transport the wings and fuselages of half-built planes from one factory to another, it needed a plane bigger than any standard cargo jet.

So it built the Beluga.

Developed in the 1990s and based on the A300 (the wings, engines, landing gear, and lower portion of the fuselage are the same), the Beluga has one of the biggest cargo holds in the world.

It’s the best way to get the body of a jumbo jet, a fleet of helicopters, or even a priceless painting across the planet.

It’s also one of the strangest looking planes in the skies.. Airbus Created This Bizarre Plane To Fly Jumbo Jet Parts Around The World

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/meet-the-bizarre-but-useful-airbus-beluga-2013-3?op=1#ixzz2OB7bm82f

airbus beluga transport plane

With its main compartment open, the Beluga looks like a whale swallowing its prey…thus the name .It is built to fit entire aircraft fuselages..On a typical flight, Beluga carries more than 100,000 pounds of cargo.  It is 56 Feet tall !..And the diameter of the fuselage is  24 Feet…

The Beluga is available for charter. In 1999, it was used to fly Eugene Delacroix’s huge painting, ‘Liberty Leading the People,’ from Paris to Tokyo for an exhibition.
Seeing it on the ground, it’s hard to believe the huge plane can get airborne. But it’s actually made with a maximum takeoff weight of 341,713 pounds.

At the 2012 ILA Berlin Airshow in September, one was used to attract potential employees.   It’s official name is the A300-600ST Super Transporter.

The Beluga is available for charter. In 1999, it was used to fly Eugene Delacroix's huge painting, 'Liberty Leading the People,' from Paris to Tokyo for an exhibition.

From the ground, it seems almost like a normal jumbo jet — but not quite. Its wingspan measures more than 147 feet.

source::::businessinsider.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Air Koryo….North Korea”s One Star Airline !!!

Not many Westerners get to visit North Korea, and it’s a good bet most don’t realize the secluded country has its own airline.

 

The airline, Air Koryo, is the only airline in the world deemed bad enough to earn a 1-star rating from leading airline reviewer SkyTrax.

Why? Customers cited the strange experience on the flights, which include cordial but distant attendants, propaganda newspapers and state-approved music. There’s also the food, which looks nearly inedible.

Nonetheless, the airline hasn’t had any safety problems in years, and it functions quite well. While it is banned from flying in European Union air space, Air Koryo has regular international flights to Moscow, Vladivostok, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, and even Kuwait, according to the International Business Times.

And for tourists heading into the country to see it with their own eyes, Air Koryo is one of the few airlines that actually goes to Pyongyang. Its fleet of Russian-made planes fly out of Sunan International Airport in Pyongyang.

Mark F., a biomedical engineer from Australia, flew to Pyongyang on the notorious airline in August 2011 and put up some pictures on Flickr. Here’s what he, and a few others who decided to whip out their cameras while on other flights into the closed nation, saw on their trips.

 

This is an Air Koryo Ilyushin Il-62 P-885, a version of the Il-62 that was originally designed in the 1960s.

This is an Air Koryo Ilyushin Il-62 P-885, a version of the Il-62 that was originally designed in the 1960s.
Air Koryo also flies two Ukrainian-Russian An-148s; the first arrived in its fleet last month.

Air Koryo also flies two Ukrainian-Russian An-148s; the first arrived in its fleet last month.

source::::businessinsider.com

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/go-inside-north-koreas-1-star-air-koryo-2013-3?op=1#ixzz2NPhrAPXW

Cooking Oil Powers TransAtlantic Flights !!!!!

KLM cooking oil commercial flights Dutch airline KLM has begun powering some commercial flights on an eco-friendly fuel mix that includes 25% cooking oil and 75% jet fuel.

The same oil that fried up your lunch might be powering your next flight to Europe.

Dutch airline KLM has begun powering some commercial flights on an eco-friendly fuel mix that includes 25% cooking oil and 75% jet fuel. The cooking oil-fuelled Boeing 777 flights will be tested on 25 roundtrip transatlantic flights between New York’s JFK and Amsterdam’s Schiphol every Thursday for the next six months.

The leftover waste oil comes from restaurants in the southern US state of Louisiana, where it’s used to fry up cracklins, catfish and other Cajun treats before being refined at a plant near Baton Rouge and trucked to New York to fuel the flights.

Though some say the fuel smells like fast food, the cooking oil is safe for powering jumbo jets and provides exactly the same flying experience. Even better, it reduces carbon emissions by up to 80%.

It’s indistinguishable on a molecular level from regular kerosene jet fuel, Captain Rick Shouten, who piloted the maiden flight last week, told the New York Post. “For pilots, it’s totally transparent. It’s as if you’re flying a normal aircraft.”

KLM has been offering biofuel-powered flights for years, with its first demonstration flight fuelled by a mix of 50% biofuel made from camelina (an oily member of the mustard family) in November 2009. And while the Dutch airline started regularly using recycled cooking oil on some commercial flights between Amsterdam and Paris in June 2011, this latest usage represents the first time biofuels will be used on a regular weekly schedule on transatlantic flights.

What’s the future of cooking oil-fuelled flights?

In the near term, it’s more likely cooking oil will by frying up your French fries and falafels rather than fuelling your flight. That’s because biofuels made from recycled cooking oil are expensive – about $10 per gallon, or roughly three times the price of regular jet fuel – largely due to the costs of refining and preparing the oil for use on jumbo jets.

Most recycled cooking oil today is used to power diesel trucks or mixed with home heating fuel, a simpler conversion process. One innovative company,Grease Lightning, based in New York City, has been purchasing used cooking oil from local restaurants to convert into biodiesel fuel since 2011. And several Boston hotels, including the Saunders HotelLenox Hotel, and Ramada Inn Boston, are using recycled vegetable oil to fuel their laundry trucks and hotel shuttle buses.

Although the sustainability of these alternative biofuels makes it an environmentally friendly option for progressive airlines, widespread adoption of recycled cooking oil requires that usage spreads, making the fuel more affordable for budget-strapped airlines.

The air travel community is hoping for financial support from the governments where major airlines are based in the form of subsidies, research grants and tax benefits.

“A lot still has to happen before biofuel will be available on a large scale and for it to be economically competitive in relation to fossil-fuel kerosene,” KLM said in a statement. “We cannot achieve this alone. We absolutely need the commitment and support of all the relevant parties: business, government and society.”

source:::::bbc.com.travel

Natarajan

 

 

Cat Survives 3400 Miles Flight From Cairo to London!!!…Packed in Suitcase!!!!

This is a cat who has certainly used up one its nine lives – after it survived a 3,400 miles  journey from Egypt to the UK when she was accidentally packed in her owner’s suitcase.

Mervat Ciuti only realised her mistake when she was called by relatives in Cairo as she sat in a taxi in Radcliffe-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, on her way to visit her sister.

She was so convinced her beloved pet Bisou, a seven-year-old Persian would be dead that she had to get the taxi driver to check her luggage.

Trip of a lifetime: Bisou the cat who travelled in his owners luggage from Egypt to the UKTrip of a lifetime: Bisou the cat who travelled in his owners luggage from Egypt to the UK
An unimpressed-looking Bisou recreates the moment a taxi driver opened her owner's luggage and discovered the back-packing pussyAn unimpressed-looking Bisou recreates the moment a taxi driver opened her owner’s luggage and discovered the back-packing pussy

But when he opened the case they found that Bisou was happily curled up along with her clothes and enjoying a cat nap.

Vets said it was a ‘miracle’ the animal survived after its long journey in the cargo hold of a plane.

But Bisou has not yet been able to return home as he has been put in quarantine for six months!!!!

Ms Ciuti, 42, believes she unwittingly zipped her pet inside the case after Bisou crawled in for a nap.

The cat somehow managed to go unnoticed through security at Cairo airport and was stacked into the hold of the plane with hundreds of other bags.

She was called by relatives, who realised the cat was missing, as Ms Ciuti travelled from Heathrow along the M1 to her sister’s home.

Her sister Monica, 40, said: ‘When she realised what had happened she said she was trembling. She thought she would be dead.

Mike Binks, owner of Calagran Kennels in Chesterfield, says Bisou's survival of the plane journey is a miracle

Mike Binks, owner of Calagran Kennels in Chesterfield, says it’s a miracle that Bisou survived the plane journey

‘How could she survive? At the airport the cases could have been thrown and banged about.’

Mervat, 42, returned to Egypt after spending a few weeks staying at a flat in Mapperley, Nottingham, and visiting her sister.

But she had to leave Bisou in quarantine at a kennels in Chesterfield, where she is still waiting for the all-clear to be shipped safely back to Egypt in the summer.

Mike Binks, owner of the centre, described the cat’s adventure as a ‘miracle’.

He said: ‘She’s a healthy, happy, laid-back Persian who likes sitting outside in the sunshine.

‘I’ve never heard anything quite like it before. Apparently she was fine and when the bag was opened was like “well this is comfortable, if a bit different”.’

After Mervat took her cat to the vet for a check-up following her ordeal on December 28, Bisou was put into quarantine at Calagran Kennels Chesterfield, where she is still waiting for the all-clear to be shipped safely back to Egypt in the summer.

Notts County Council’s Trading Standards department arranged for Bisou to be kept in quarantine after they were contacted by the vet which Mervat had taken her to. Animal importation issues fall under the remit of trading standards.

Trading Standards manager Mark Hughes said: ‘It is a very unusual situation as we have dealt with cats coming into the UK in cargo containers – but never a suitcase! It was New Year’s Eve when we got the call; we just didn’t believe it. I’m amazed it survived.’

It is illegal to bring a pet into the UK without the right travel documents, which from Egypt include proof of rabies vaccinations, which Monica said Bisou had had done.

Trading Standards said they took no further action in Bisou’s case as they were satisfied she had been brought in by mistake.

 

source:::: mail online
Natarajan

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2288983/Stowaway-cats-accidental-journey-Persian-Bisou-travels-3-400-miles-owners-bag-Cairo-London.html#ixzz2Mr4cqrZt
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

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

Pilot Fast Asleep While at Control…But Safe Flight !!!

Air New Zealand

Air New Zealand says even though one of the two pilots fell into a deep sleep at the controls of the international flight “safety was not compromised at any point”. Picture: Mark Coote/Bloomberg Source: Bloomberg

AIR New Zealand said that one of its pilots fell into a deep sleep while at the controls of an international flight but insisted that safety aboard the aircraft was never compromised.

He was one of two pilots flying a 332-seat Boeing 777-300ER from London to Los Angeles in November 2011, according to a report released after a freedom of information request.

The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) document said the pilot voluntarily submitted a “fatigue report” with the regulator, recounting how he slept on the job.

The pilot, who was not identified, blamed a poor night’s rest in London, when air-conditioning problems in his hotel meant he had to change rooms three times, for his exhausted state on the flight.

“I suddenly, and without any warning, fell into a deep sleep on the flight deck. The same event occurred twice,” he said.

Air New Zealand said safety was paramount for the airline and it encouraged staff to report instances of fatigue as part of a programme to manage shift rosters to address the issue.

It said the flight in question had three pilots aboard.

“During the cruise phase of the flight one of the two operating pilots nodded off twice for around a minute and woke spontaneously,” it said in a statement.

“The other operating pilot on the flight deck was aware of this and safety was not compromised at any point.”

Air New Zealand said the pilot would not face disciplinary action as it did not want to discourage staff from reporting such incidents.
source:::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/air-new-zealand-pilot-was-asleep-while-at-the-controls-but-plane-was-safe-says-airline/story-e6frfq80-1226588606045#ixzz2MHxcQzeX

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