JohnR
Final Approach
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aJmRIapedEs0&refer=home
Same nickel and dime mentality that brings us user fees.
Same nickel and dime mentality that brings us user fees.
I feel like a bag of apples.Only issue to me is, how can you buy a ticket without going in person to some specially calibrated scale (FAA regulated?)? Their pricing structure is already the wost nightmare in the history of retail. I can see "Buy ticket within one week of departure at $3.47/pound. Stay overnight at least one Saturday, pay $4.42/pound."
Is it going to be the honor system for declaring your weight when you buy a ticket online??
After spending 4.5 hours on a SWA flight from PHX to BWI next to a large woman, I'd be happy to pay extra for seats where I can choose my neighbors. I had the window seat and another skinny guy had the aisle...and neither one of us had a comfortable flight.
To top it off, she ate crap for most of the flight.
hey... if i'm paying more based on size, i'm gonna want a seat that reflects the same!
Southwest is the ONLY airline on which you can choose your neighbor...
Law of unintended consequences anyone? How long until the FAA figures out that if you can weigh one person, you can weigh them all and forces the airlines in to doing actual W&B's instead of the 170(180?) lb average that they are allowed to use currently?
How would you like to have one of the last ten boarding passes issued?
Eggman
uh huh...
on-board masseuses, loofah scrubs and, of course, digital cable!
That's awesome. Someone is a quick thinker! http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/results.jsp?domain=flyderrie-air.com
That's awesome. Someone is a quick thinker! http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/results.jsp?domain=flyderrie-air.com
The Derrie-Air campaign is a fictitious advertising campaign created by Philadelphia Media Holdings to test the results of advertising in our print and online products and to stimulate discussion on a timely environmental topic of interest to all citizens.
How would you like to have one of the last ten boarding passes issued?
The captain would then only need to instruct the first officer to push a button. That would allow the captain to get as much sleep as possible which is necessary for the safety of the aircraft and its crew. The first officer could also get caught up on reading magazines, doing crosswords and solving sodoku puzzles.
I just wish they would freaking fly!!!!!
Three and a half hours sitting on the ramp in Baltimore Wednesday night. My flight that was supposed to get into O'Hare at 6:30 got in a little after 10:00. Got home at 12:15 (and I had no checked bags to wait for!).
I was in hotel in the Baltimore area watching funnel clouds and pretty big thunderstorms come in, one after the other. If you were the pilot responsible for ~200 lives, would YOU fly in that?
I wouldn't.
During the Thunderstorms - no. They shut the airport twice. Once at 5:00pm for about 20 minutes and the other time around 7-7:30 for about 20 minutes. In between, before and after they kept saying it was ATC flow control issues due to the severe weather west of us (they didn't say but I was assuming they were having to funnel traffic through a few holes). If true then I'm not blaming them but I've been lied to too many times before this to 100% trust what they're telling us. It's just frustrating sitting there watching other planes land and takeoff!
During the Thunderstorms - no. They shut the airport twice. Once at 5:00pm for about 20 minutes and the other time around 7-7:30 for about 20 minutes. In between, before and after they kept saying it was ATC flow control issues due to the severe weather west of us (they didn't say but I was assuming they were having to funnel traffic through a few holes). If true then I'm not blaming them but I've been lied to too many times before this to 100% trust what they're telling us. It's just frustrating sitting there watching other planes land and takeoff!
Hmmm... Has the FAA actualy conducted a series of random W/B experiment on a heavily loaded pressurized tube cattle car? Load it for the flight, rubber stamp the W/B then just before the plane gets to the runway without warning, pull all the cargo (people and boxes) and get out the weighing scale and run the actual numbers? I wonder how many of the original aircraft designers would have a heart attack when they looked at the numbers.
I'll take a lost engine on a single most times over a lost engine on a piston twin-engine aircraft; particularly on take-off and departure.I have another fuel saving tip.
If planes descend with engines at idle, why not shut off an engine? (only in a multi-engine plane of course for safety...)
I'll take a lost engine on a single most times over a lost engine on a piston twin-engine aircraft; particularly on take-off and departure.
Chances are those planes had been waiting hours upon hours too. This last week has been horrible up and down the coast. Our 2:00 departure left every day after 5:00. The planes you saw flying in an out were probably supposed to be there three hours sooner.
Everyone seems to think that we lie about delays, but we really don't...we don't gain anything by lying, I don't know why everyone thinks it's some scheme against them. If it's a mechanical, we'll tell you. If it's weather or ATC, we'll tell you. If we don't give you an update, it's probably because we don't know anything. If ATC puts a flow control program or delay program in effect and says "update in 90 minutes" or "wheels up in 90 minutes" we can call them all we want, but it's only going to slow them down more and elicit the same response..."update in 87 minutes."
Just because the weather has pushed past the field doesn't mean that the airport is out of the woods. When you're talking about arrivals and departures from Bravo and large Charlie airports, they have to funnel everyone in and out through departure and arrival gates...if one of those gates is blocked by storms, even 100 miles away, that's the ball game. And then, once the storms pass, they still have to have flow control so that all the delayed flights aren't descending upon them at the same time. It's like how traffic will be slowed down on a highway for an hour after a wreck is cleared....it takes a lot of time to get everything back up to speed. Throw into it IFR conditions so everyone has to be vectored for an approach and they can't use visual spacing minimums...
Tony does that!yea, but if you are at the end of the runway.....
why not just push the plane?