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Delta announces new Europe flights as US carriers beef up summer schedules

Delta trans-Atlantic summer Europe
Photo: Delta Air Lines.

US carriers are continuing to draw up next summer’s trans-Atlantic battlelines with Delta Air Lines Thursday announcing new routes and additional frequencies to Europe.

The move follows American Airlines’ announcement Wednesday of expanded European services that include new routes to Germany, Croatia and Italy.

American and Hawaiian also underscored the competitive pressures US carriers are facing in the tough Chinese market with both suspending flights to China.

READ American to cut Asian routes, boost Europe

Delta will launch it’s first nonstop flight from Tampa Bay, Florida, to Amsterdam to bring the number of services it flies between the US and Dutch city to 11. It is its second from Florida after the launch of Orlando-Amsterdam earlier this year.

The US carrier will also expand to daily flights services from Los Angeles to both Amsterdam and Paris Charles de Gaulle from June 16, 2019.

The LA to Paris service will be the third to the French capital to be operated using upgraded Boeing 777 aircraft, featuring the Delta One suites and Delta Premium Select, which will also feature on select flights from Atlanta and Minneapolis from December 13.

Delta is also expanding capacity from New York-JFK with the launch of second daily nonstop flights to both Paris and Israel’s Tel Aviv. This brings the number of flights operated to Paris by Delta and partners Air France, KLM and Alitalia to seven a day.

Both services will use A330-300 aircraft with lie-flat beds in business class and the airline’s recently upgraded main cabin meal service.

The Tel Aviv flight is a daytime departure timed to complement to the existing night-time departure.

The airline said its seasonal summer trans-Atlantic schedule to Europe from its JFK hub would return, including the only nonstop service by a US carrier from JFK to the Azores, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Berlin.

“Delta is putting great focus on our international expansion and Europe is an important part of this,” Delta’s vice president — trans-Atlantic Roberto Ioriatti said in a statement.

“Our new Tampa Bay flight and extra capacity on other key routes from our LAX and JFK hubs offer our customers more choice and convenient connections throughout the United States and Europe in connection with our partners.”

Burning 777 wiring prompted MAYDAY, global warning

The heat damage caused by the wiring short circuit. Photo: ATSB/Etihad

Airlines were warned to check aircraft wiring in the cargo holds of Boeing 777s after a short circuit on an Etihad Airways flight prompted an emergency landing and highlighted a potentially dangerous manufacturing defect.

The Etihad crew declared a MAYDAY after detecting smoke and receiving a cargo fire warning caused by arcing from an incorrectly installed wiring harness.

The wiring had chafed on a screw and turned out to the fifth incident involving chafed cargo hold wiring reported to Boeing, according to a report released Wednesday by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.

As a result, the manufacturer issued a fleet communication to Boeing 777 operators world wide warning them of the potential problem and followed up with a service bulletin covering about 1500 777-200, 777-200LR and  777-300ER aircraft.

It also introduced additional inspections on its production line and was considering installation and design changes to alter the position of the wiring harness on new production aircraft, the report said.

The Etihad Boeing 777-300ER carrying 349 passengers and 16 crew was northwest of Adelaide on a scheduled passenger service from Abu Dhabi to Sydney in October, 2017, when the flight crew noticed a burning smell coming from a vent.

Shortly afterward, a fire alarm sounded and master warning message “FIRE CARGO FWD” flashed up on the engine-indicating and crew alerting system.

READ:  CSIRO scientist says MH370 unlikely to be north or south of existing search area.

The crew ran through a non-normal checklist and armed cargo fire switches, with shut down a recirculation fan and closed air vents in the forward compartment, and discharged two fire extinguishers in the forward hold.

They declared a MAYDAY and a second flight crew coming off a rest period were briefed and took control of the aircraft, conducting an emergency descent to 12,500ft and diverting to Adelaide.

Because there were no signs of fire when the plane landed, the passengers and crew performed a “rapid deplane” using mobile stairs — rather than an emergency evacuation —and there were no injuries.

An inspection of the cargo bay found a small quantity of soot in the ceiling area as well as between the lower side of the cabin floor and the upper side of the cargo ceiling panel.

It also found a chafed 115-volt electrical wire in a wiring loom supplying the lower right recirculation fan.

Investigators said the crew had taken appropriate action to manage the situation and arming the forward cargo fire suppression system had cut electrical power to the recirculation fans preventing further arcing and damage.

A more detailed engineering inspection found the wiring bundle had been incorrectly routed and wires had come in contact with screws used in the cargo ceiling panel.

“Over a prolonged period of time, the 115V recirculation fan wire located within that bundle chafed through the insulation coating, allowing the wire to short circuit,’’ the report said, noting the significant heat generated by the short circuit damaged brackets and a carbon fiber beam.

Boeing found the wiring loom was likely to have been incorrectly positioned when the aircraft was built in 2013.

“Boeing reported that this was the fifth reported incident involving wire chafing and arcing in the cargo area of a Boeing 777 aircraft,’’ the ATSB report said. “However, this was the first event that triggered the cargo fire warning system and that had been detected in flight. In all of these cases, the wiring loom had been installed incorrectly during manufacture, allowing screws to chafe wires and short circuit.”

While classifying the incident as serious, investigators said the severity of damage was minimized through regulatory design requirements, the materials used in the aircraft, system protections and crew actions.

“In response to this, and four other incidents, the aircraft manufacturer utilized their system of communication to alert all operators of the issue and took actions in an effort to prevent reoccurrence,’’ they said in a safety message. “Regardless of this, operators and maintenance providers are another line of defence for detecting errors.

“Due diligence during scheduled aircraft maintenance and defect rectification will assist with ensuring that aircraft systems meet the design intent and function accordingly.”

American to cut Asian routes, boost Europe

NEA
Image: American Airlines.

New routes to Croatia, Germany and Italy are on the cards for American Airlines next summer as it expands its footprint in Europe.

But the airline will suspend flights between Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (ORD) and China’s Shanghai Pudong International Airport from October 27.

it will also reduce flights between ORD and Narita International Airport in Japan from daily to three a week from December 18.

The decision comes as Hawaiian Airlines also decided to suspend its three-times weekly Honolulu-Beijing service from October 11 and deploy its aircraft elsewhere.  Hawaiian has been flying to Beijing since 2014 and said it planned to return to the market.

American cited fuel costs and the competitive environment for its Asian decision and said it would seek a dormancy waiver from the US Department of Transportation for the Chicago-Shanghai suspension.

“We remain strongly committed to Asia and will continue to serve the region through our hubs in Dallas/Fort Worth and Los Angeles,” American vice president of network and schedule planning Vasu Raja said in a statement.

“Our Chicago–Shanghai service is unprofitable and simply not sustainable in this high fuel cost environment and when we have opportunities to be successful in other markets.”

Passengers will still have the option of 10 flights a week between Tokyo and Chicago when daily flights by alliance partner Japan Airlines are taken into account.

American said JAL would also increase its service during the peak June-August summer season so that the carriers would offer a twice-daily service.

“As with Shanghai, American will continue to serve Tokyo through our hubs in Dallas/Fort Worth and Los Angeles,” Raja said.

Read:American to allow free carry-on in basic economy.

Nine new European routes will see American add a daily year-round service from Charlotte to Munich, daily summer seasonal services from Dallas/Fort Worth to Dublin and Munich as well as a daily summer seasonal service from Chicago to Athens, Greece.

The US giant will add three new destinations with the introduction of summer seasonal Boeing 767 flights from Philadelphia to Berlin- Tegel Airport, Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport in Italy and Dubrovnik Airport in Croatia. There will also be a new summer seasonal service between Philadelphia and Edinburgh, Scotland.

The ninth route, a daily seasonal service from Phoenix to London, will complement existing flights provided by partner British Airways. The airlines together operate 70 flights a day from North America to London.

“By providing the only nonstop service from North America to Bologna and Dubrovnik and adding Berlin to our international footprint, American is making it easier to see the world,”  Raja said.

The new routes come after American this summer launched seasonal service from Philadelphia to Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport in Hungary and Vaclav Havel Airport Prague in the Czech Republic.

It also launched flights from Chicago to Venice Marco Polo Airport in Italy and from Dallas Fort Worth to  Keflavik International Airport in Iceland.

 

MH370 unlikely to be north or south of existing search area, says CSIRO scientist

MH370

CSIRO scientist David Griffin does not believe his team’s drift modeling research supports extending the hunt for MH370 north or south of  (opens in a new window)areas already swept by searchers.

Acknowledging that the mystery surrounding MH370 is now deeper than ever, Dr. Griffin says five options remain after the failure of the second search as far north as 25°S.

These are that the wreckage is north of 25°S; it is south of 39.6°S; it is between those latitudes but further from the 7th arc than has been searched; it is within the search area but overlooked; or somewhere “we can’t imagine”.

However, he says respective experts in various fields find all of the scenarios unlikely.

He noted that the first two options were inconsistent with the drift modeling as well as satellite communications data and flight path simulations

“We cannot completely rule out the possibility the aircraft is located either north or south, but the available information suggests to us that the intermediate latitudes are much more likely,’’ he said in his first online update since the search for the missing Boeing 777 ended.

“We leave it to relevant domain experts to assess whether the search should extend either farther from the 7th arc, possibly at just a selection of latitudes, or focus on the so-called ‘holidays” (gaps in the sonar coverage where the terrain is difficult).’’

CSIRO modeling raised hopes that the wreckage would be found during the second search by Ocean Infinity by identifying several hot spots.

The failure to find the wreckage in a 120,000 sq. km area swept by Ocean Infinity’s high-tech fleet of sophisticated underwater autonomous vehicles left experts grappling with where to look next.

There have been several suggestions as experts rake over the data but little likely to be enough to convince the Malaysians to back another search.

Most recently, independent group member Victor Ianello said flight simulations indicated it could be worth widening the search on either side of the 7th arc north of 25°S, the northern end of the most recent search conducted earlier this year by Ocean Infinity.

But he acknowledged that until new insights become available, it would be difficult to establish a new search area.

READ: New analysis possibly identifies new MH370 location.

Respected University of Western Australia oceanographer Professor Charitha Pattiaratchi believes MH370 is lying just outside the area already searched.

Prof Pattiaratchi said in June UWA drift modeling indicated that the priority region to target would be between 33°S and 28°S along the 7th arc.

Pilots and a Canadian air safety investigator who argue the aircraft was deliberately ditched at the end of its flight believe it is further afield. Critical of findings the aircraft was uncontrolled when it hit the sea, they believe it would have glided well beyond the defined search areas.

Central to the CSIRO argument is the timing of the arrival of debris, particularly a moveable wing panel called a flaperon found at Reunion Island.

The flaperon, which is still held by French authorities, is at the center of the controversy over whether the aircraft was uncontrolled when it plunged into the sea.

The CSIRO used a genuine Boeing 777 flaperon and model that looked at satellite data and the trajectories of buoys drifting freely on the surface of the ocean to conclude that crash sites from the southern limit of the search to about  30.5°S were  consistent with the observed arrival date of the flaperon of July 29, 2015.

It found latitudes from 30.5°S to 26°S were “less consistent but not inconsistent”.

Although crash sites to the north of the searched area and up to  23°S  had a high probability of the flaperon reaching Reunion, it would arrive many months earlier than observed.  And those further north than this point resulted in trajectories that missed the island completely.

Dr Griffin noted that other “low-windage’ debris, such as those pieces found on African shores, had a high probability of arriving, as they were observed to do,  from December 2015 onwards if the crash site was between 37°S and 33°S.

He said crash sites north of 33°S were only consistent with the debris evidence if it was assumed that wreckage arrived before December 2015, which was possible but increasingly unlikely.

“Assuming our simulation is correct, the question of whether Ocean Infinity has exhausted the range of northern latitudes that are worth searching, therefore, hinges on the question of whether 50 percent of the debris from MH370 could have washed up on African shores, unnoticed, throughout much of 2015,’’ he said.

“We are not prepared to assume this is true. Consequently, we think the available evidence from African shores is consistent with the flaperon evidence, and that MH370 is much more likely to have crashed south of 25°S.”

For the sites south of 39.6°S, the CSIRO pointed to its earlier arguments that the debris would not have arrived as early as observed and there would have been debris on Australian shores, something targeted searches had failed to find.

“Hard evidence (that was known to us in 2016 but not included in our report) that debris floating in the SE Indian Ocean finds its way to Australian shores despite the frequently-adverse winds is provided by the trajectories of (undrogued) drifting buoys,’’ Dr Griffin said. “This also had a bearing on how we identified 35°S as the most likely region of the crash.”

The CSIRO scientist admitted the tools used to model the drift of debris on the surface — data assimilating hydrodynamic models and trajectories of satellite-tracked drifting buoys  –  were not ideal because they were designed to simulate and observe the movement for a surface layer 10 metres thick.

He said it was necessary to use the buoy information carefully and combine it with data from many other sources in order to simulate the drift of aircraft debris, particularly items with complex drift characteristics such as the flaperon.

“We did this in 2016 to the best of our ability at that time,’’ he said. “As modeling techniques improve, retrospective drift analyses will undoubtedly become more accurate, possibly leading to different conclusions to ours and shedding more light on the location of MH370.

“In particular, models with finer spatial resolution will undoubtedly result in a wider range of simulated travel times across the ocean.”

Dr Griffin said the CSIRO hoped to revisit its conclusions at some time in the future and expressed the team’s sincere regrets that “the committed efforts of many dedicated people have not yet solved this enduring mystery”.

New analysis possibly identifies new MH370 location

MH370
Case 6: A simulated end-of-flight path for the left generators turned off before fuel exhaustion. Credit: Victor Iannello

The possible final flight paths of MH370 have been examined by Independent Group member Victor Iannello after he was given exclusive access to simulation data produced by Boeing for the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.

After analyzing all the simulation data Mr. Iannello recommends “the next search should occur along the 7th arc north of 25S latitude at a width (from the 7th arc) of about +/-25 NM. (46km). The search up till now has been 22 NM either side of the 7th arc.

The 7th arc is the line that runs down and away from the Western Australian coast and is based on the Inmarsat satellite returns from MH370.

Recently one of the world’s most respected oceanographers the University of Western Australia’s Professor Charitha Pattiaratchi emphatically said that MH370 is lying just outside the area that has been searched.

“Yes absolutely, just outside where we have been looking,” Prof. Pattiaratchi said.

However, Prof Pattiaratchi says that the University drift modeling indicates that the priority region to target would be the area between 33°S and 28°S along the 7th arc.”

And CSRIO scientist David Griffin agrees with Prof Pattiaratchi. Read more here. 

Mr Iannello in his blog said that “with the failure of the recent search by Ocean Infinity to locate the debris field along the 7th arc at latitudes as far north as 25S and at widths equal to or exceeding +/- 22 NM, (41km)” we have to consider whether it is possible that with the assumption of uncontrolled flight, the plane could have impacted the ocean farther out.

Mr. Iannello asked the ATSB for more details about the conditions modeled and the results of the ten simulations that we used as the basis for the search.

“Although legal restrictions prevent the ATSB from providing specific details about each of the ten simulations (referred to as Cases 1-10), the ATSB did reveal that the initial speeds varied between M0.75 (894km/hr) and M0.83, the starting altitudes were either FL350 (35,000ft) or FL400, the initial headings were either 178°, 184° or 190°, and turbulence was either light or moderate. Winds at various altitudes were included in the simulations.”

The ATSB also provided Mr. Iannello with a variety of other data and has permitted him to share the results so that a broader group of investigators can independently analyze the results.

“To my knowledge, this is the first time these results have been released to the public,” said Mr. Iannello.

“Although not included in the files, derived quantities such as ground speed, Mach number, track, vertical speed, vertical acceleration, bank angle, and wing loading are all calculable, although some parameters such as Mach number and calibrated airspeed need assumptions about the wind and temperature fields.”

MH370
The 10 simulation case studies down by Boeing for the ATSB

Mr. Iannello found that “in none of the simulations did the plane fly straight with level wings after the autopilot was disengaged. Ultimately, the magnitude and direction of the bank that develops is the net effect of many factors, including thrust asymmetry, TAC, manual rudder input, weight imbalance, aerodynamic asymmetry, and turbulence, with the dihedral effect of the wings and center-of-mass tending to restore the bank to zero.”

Mr. Iannello’s full report is here.

 

Cabin baggage targeted by high-flying criminals

cabin baggage theft malaysia
Security was called after a man was caught rifling through another passenger's cabin baggage. Photo; Faiz Mokhtar/Facebook.

Airline passengers have been warned to keep a wary eye on cabin baggage after a man was filmed allegedly stealing from a business class overhead locker on board a Malaysia Airlines flight.

Faiz Mokhtar was on a flight from Ho Chi Minh City to Kuala Lumpur with four business partners when one of his colleagues noticed a man brazenly taking Mohtar’s laptop bag out of the overhead locker and taking it to his seat in the fourth row.

Mokhtar, who cataloged the theft on Facebook and was in the second row, caught the man rifling through his bag and about to pocket euros and US dollars.

“I confronted him with the rest of my partners surrounding us,’’ he said. “I did a thorough checking of my bag because my biggest concerns were my traveling documents (passport etc.) and whether he had implanted any illegal items in an attempt to use me as his transporter (read: drug mule syndicate).”

Cabin crew were alerted and quickly took action to call in security and police.

The plane had yet to depart and the man was taken off the flight.

“Apparently, the crew informed us, there is a syndicate that has been conducting this modus operandi on China, Hong Kong, and Vietnam flights,’’ Mohtar said. “That guy was from Hong Kong and he is flying to KL with no return ticket, probably his route depends on his ‘loot’.”

READ MH370 is one of 83 missing aircraft since 1948.

Authorities have been warning for some time about an increase in cabin baggage theft and that criminal gangs are targeting passengers.

Hong Kong police reported a 25 percent rise in the number of cabin robberies in 2015 to 60 reported incidents, according to an article in The Economist that pointed to a Turkish businessman who lost $US260,000 in cash and goods during a flight to Hong Kong.

The South China Morning Post also reported criminals were working flights coming into Hong Kong and Middle Eastern countries in a first-hand article published earlier this year.

The Post quoted statistics showing 77 reported cases in 2015, although this dropped to 22 in 2016 and six in the first 11 months of 2017.

Mokhtar praised the professionalism of the Malaysia Airlines cabin crew and particularly the head flight attendant, who offered to remain in Vietnam to make a police report on his behalf.

He said this was not necessary because he was able to do it in-flight.

He warned that the syndicate was “quite bold” because there was no inflight CCTV footage and played “the language barrier”.

“So everyone, please be careful of your belongings, and use extra safety tool, i.e. bag lock, and do travel in groups when possible,’’ he said.

In a statement to media, Malaysia Airlines said the crew had lodged a report with Vietnamese authorities and were trained to handle situations such as this.

It reminded passengers to keep tabs on their valuable items and to avoid keeping them separately.

Have a spare $1 billion and want the ultimate VIP 747?

747

Have a spare A$1 billion and want the ultimate VIP aircraft?

That is what you will need to acquire a Boeing 747-8I VIP aircraft up for sale with just 436 hours on the clock.

The VIP 747 is part of the Qatari Royal Family fleet but they have two and are downsizing.

But rather than seating for 400 plus this one seat just 76 passengers.

READ: Qantas using 747s on transcontinental route 

The 747 was delivered in 2012 but then took two years to fit out at Boeing San Antonio.

The cost?

Well, the list price is $US400 million or $555 million but the bespoke fit out can sometimes cost as much as the plane.

READ: New analysis points to a possible new location of MH370

Then there is the operating cost and this aircraft burns about 13 tons of fuel an hour and then there is the crew cost, hangar, maintenance and the list goes on and on.

So you will not much spare change out of $1 billion.

747

And the list of feature goes on as well.

It has three galleys – Forward Galley, Rear Galley, and the Upper Deck Galley.

And eight loos;  two forward,  two mid-cabin, four aft, and two on the upper deck

However, the interior may not be to everyone’s liking with its Arabian influence.

Above: The study

Above: The upper deck lounge

 

747

Above: Master bedroom

Above: Formal lounge

The 747-8I is the latest version of the iconic aircraft. Boeing has received orders for 150 of the largest version of the 747 and has delivered 128.

In that number are eight VIP 747s and that does not include 2 Air Force One aircraft that are being fitted out for the US Air Force.

Boeing had looked at closing the 747 line down after 50 years of production but orders for the cargo version continue with giant parcel company UPS recently ordering 14 plus 14 options.

 

Melbourne Airport hits new record as locals seek warmth

Victoria
Photo: Melbourne Airport.

Victorians heading off to warmer climates during the Australian winter helped Melbourne Airport establish a new record passenger month as it handled more than 3.3 million international and domestic passengers in July.

Smashing a previous record of 3.2 million passengers in December 2017, the airport also recorded a new busiest day, with 20,193 people touching down on July 15, and a record week for international arrivals, when 131,294 people arrived from July 12 to 18.

Australian airports usually peak during the Christmas-New Year period but Melbourne Airport chief executive Lyell Strambi said July was now rivaling the summer highs.

Figures released by the airport  Monday show that international passenger numbers grew by 2.4 percent in July to top 1 million.

Domestic passengers were up 1.6 percent to 2.28 million to give an overall growth rate of 3.3 percent.

“Victorian travelers have always loved to escape the winter chill by flying overseas or venturing to warmer destinations on the domestic network during July, however, we have never experienced such a whirlwind four week period,” Strambi said.

READ: Perth Airport in color from the 50s and 60s.

“Now more than ever there are more point to point options available, which is one of the reasons why passenger volumes are so high, especially in International Arrivals, which is most likely due to Victorians returning home from leave.

“Other factors contributing to such high passenger volumes include school holidays in Europe and the USA, Victoria’s snow season and significant international business events held in Victoria.”

Growth at Australian airports is generally being fuelled by increased international arrivals as domestic carriers continue to keep a tight rein on capacity growth within Australia.

Government statistics released Monday showed the 4.91 million passengers carried on Australian domestic commercial aviation in June, 2018 was just 0.2 percent higher than in June, 2017. The number of aircraft trips fell by 4.8 percent to 53,253 and capacity, as measured in available seat kilometres, fell by 0.8 percent.

Strambi said the Melbourne Airport was firmly focused on international services and the construction of a third runway would allow the airport to increase aircraft movements from 55 an hour to 100 an hour.

“The possibilities to connect Melbourne to cities that were never before available is truly exciting, and one of the main motivations to build a third runway,’’ he said.

“Supporting the Victorian economy is also a key consideration and Melbourne Airport plays a major role in facilitating opportunities for international visitor spend.

“Our 2018 Master Plan preliminary draft states that during 2015-16 Melbourne Airport facilitated 71.9 million visitor nights and $8.9 billion in tourism spending in Victoria.”

Sydney Airport, which also reported July traffic statistics Monday, said growth remained solid.

Passenger numbers were up 2.6 percent in July compared to a year ago, with international traffic rising 5.4 percent and domestic passenger numbers up 0.9 percent, driven by an increase in load factors.

“Nationals from India (+19.4 percent), Philippines (+18.3 percent), Japan (+13.0 percent) and the USA (+7.2 percent) recorded notably strong growth, with those from South Korea (+4.5 percent) and China (+4.5 percent) also contributing to the overall performance,” Sydney Airport chief executive Geoff Culbert said.

“Pleasingly, Australian growth was also strong at 6.7 percent.

“Overall international passenger growth was predominantly driven by the delivery of additional seat capacity.”

 Steve Creedy also contributes to the Australian Airports Association’s The Airport Professional blog.

MH370 is one of 83 missing aircraft since 1948

MH370

Since 1948 there have been 83 aircraft, including MH370, that have disappeared without a trace.

As the relatives and aircraft industry urges another search for the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 the number of aircraft that are missing is sobering.

According to website aviation-safety.net, 26 of the missing aircraft are passenger, 19 freighters, 19 military, 19 ferry flights and 10 others.

READ: New analysis possible points to a location of MH370

Aviation-safety.net says 59 were lost at sea and 25 on land – either in jungles or in mountains.

MH370

In WW11 literally, thousands of aircraft went missing with some still being found today, particularly during freak low tides.

It is interesting to note a large number of flights that have been lost in the area known as the Bermuda Triangle.

However, the reality is that the area is a hurricane and thunderstorm hotspot and many of the aircraft lost were suspected of drug and gun running.

Missing aircraft have a special meaning for AirlineRatings.com editor Jerome Greer Chandler who lost his stepfather when the plane he was piloting disappeared on March 15, 1962.

MH370

Jerry takes up the tragic story;

“It just evaporated. To this day, just what happened to it is unknown, but speculation is rife – speculation fueled by the eyewitness report of those aboard a tanker who witnessed the craft’s destruction.”

March 15, 1962 a Flying Tiger Line L1049H Super Constellation, bound from Agana Naval Air Station in Guam to Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines simply ceased to exist. N 6921C, Flying Tiger Flight 739/14, disappeared at 13º13’ North Latitude, 140º00’ East Longitude – over an all but bottomless patch of the Pacific, an abyss called the Mariana Trench. This deepest of all depressions in the Earth’s crust is an astonishing 6.78 miles deep – this compared to the relatively shallow 300-feet or so along MH370’s original projected flight path.

“In all probability, it’s the virtually bottomless depths of the Pacific that entomb the remains of “21 Charlie,” the call sign of the Flying Tiger Connie.

“21 Charlie, operating as a charter flight for the Military Air Transport Service, was ferrying American Army personnel from Travis Air Force Base, California to Saigon, to a country we once called South Vietnam. There were 107 people on board that airplane.”

Read the whole story here

Spate of bomb threats forces landings

bomb threat

Up to five, passenger planes across the world have made forced landings are a spate of bomb threats.

The planes have been forced down in Argentina, Chile, Peru and Greece.

According to News Corp and Reuters LATAM Airlines fight 2369 that departed Lima for Santiago, Chile, was forced to land at an airport in southern Peru due to a bomb threat received by Chilean authorities, Peru’s Transportation Ministry said.

READ: Indonesia AirAsia passes a major safety audit

Giovanni Circella‏ tweeted “Everybody stuck on board – the captain just informed us of an alert for a bomb threat on our plane from Mendoza to Santiago – we will need to disembark in the runway. Hopefully, everything will be fine!
bomb threat
Onboard the LATAM aircraft. Credit: Giovanni Circella‏
He then tweeted: “Everything is Fine. What an experience! We had to disembark on the taxiway for a bomb alarm – flight LA433 from Mendoza to Santiago. We are safe, no worries!
Bomb Threat
Deplaning the LATAM aircraft. Credit: Giovanni Circella‏

 

Another, Latam flight from Mendoza in Argentina to Santiago, was also grounded.

The UK Independent says that two flights operated by Chile-based Sky Airlines bound for Rosario, Argentina, and the northern Chilean city of Calama returned to Santiago without incident.

And on Crete, a Condor Airways flight made an emergency landing at Chania airport over an alleged bomb threat on board, local media say.

The aircraft with more than 270 passengers was en route from Egypt’s Hurghada to Duesseldorf, according to Skai broadcaster.

Local military officials say the Boeing 757 jet was escorted to Chania airport by two Greek air force F-16 fighters scrambled after the pilot reported the threat, and landed without incident late Thursday.

More to come…..

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