CARGOHOLIDAYS, RESULTAT DE RECHERCHE MARQUEURS

VOS TAGS EN IMPORTATION DE MOTO ANGLAISE

Tag Archives: MLKJETS

Embraer LINEAGE 1000E Private Jet Charter EMBRAER LINEAGE 1000E PRIVATE JET HIRE EMBRAER PRIVATE CHARTER MLKJETS7 - The Historic TWA Terminal and Lockheed Consellation at JFK

[ad_1]

INTRODUCTION:

As I passed the curb-parked convertible and entered the doors of the Eero Saarinen-designed TWA Terminal with its winged, flight-suggesting roof at JFK International Airport on a mid-September day, nothing, I noted, had changed, except that the passenger check-in counters flanking either side were refreshingly devoid of lines. Perhaps that should have been a hint.

Mounting the dozen stairs and then redescending those that led to the familiar Sunken Lounge, I eyed the Solari split-flap arrivals and departures board, its panels periodically flipping and clacking like stacking poker chips, but they only revealed blank squares. There were no flight numbers, no times, and no destinations.

Yet by views of the vintage airliners on the ramp through the floor-to-ceiling angled glass displaying TWA’s red-and-white livery, but lacking a single jet engine, my destination today could only be labeled “history” or, even “aviation history.” Perhaps that was appropriate for the “luggage” I brought: a carry-on consisting of a clipboard and a pen.

The scene before me was a suspended one. The period music and the announcements echoing through my head transported me to the one I was not in.

“TWA Starstream Flight 802 to Paris, now boarding at gate one,” they said.

My eyes, scanning past the location of the once famous and familiar Brass Rail Restaurant toward the dual, main terminal connecting tubes still covered with chili red pepper carpeting to the departure area, I fully expected to take in one or more Boeing 707-320Bs with their bluntly pointed, radome noses, 35-degree swept wings, and Pratt and Whitney JT3D-3B low bypass ratio turbofans.

Yet the Lockheed L-1649A Starliner Constellation, representing the pinnacle-of-piston development, indicated that the era preserved and depicted “out there” was not the one my mind tried to convince me still existed “in here.” Instead, it was two decades earlier, of the 1960s, and I had entered a preserved pocket of time.

THE TWA TERMINAL:

As an expression, representation, and development of the post-World War II-fueled, technology-facilitated commercial airline industry and the then-named Idlewild International Airport whose evolution resulted from it, the TWA Terminal was and is an architecturally aesthetic symbol of it all. It captures the sensation of flight with its wing-resembling shell and the fluid, open interior beneath it.

Unlike many of today’s single-building, multiple-airline facilities, it traces its origin to 1954 when the Port Authority of New York devised its terminal city concept. Anticipating the need for infrastructure to cater to increasing travel demand, it implemented a plan in which each major carrier would design, build, and operate its own terminal, fostering, in the process, brand identity. Although the TWA facility was the architectural response to the Port Authority’s masterplan, its airline-association was one of its intentions from the start, as stated by the project commission, which first sought an efficient ground operations infrastructure, but secondarily wanted “to provide TWA with advertising, publicity, and attention” with it.

That the chosen site for it was at the apex of the airport’s access road, cemented the intention almost as much as the hardened substance which formed it, and that it still does today, despite the two-decade interval since the airline’s demise, serves this post-carrier purpose.

Eero Saarinen, a Finnish-American architect and designer and sometimes considered a mid-century master, was chosen to transform both Idlewild’s and TWA’s vision into concrete reality in 1955. Tracing his own genealogical roots to his father, Eliel Saarinen, an architect, and his mother, Loja Saarinien, a textile artist, he could claim that the talent ran through his veins just as freely as did his blood when he was born in 1910. After studying sculpture in Paris, architecture at Yale University, and design at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan, he transformed material into aesthetic function in such creations as the St. Louis Gateway Arch and Washington-Dulles International Airport.

Although Eero Saarinen achieved his goal of crafting an abstract representation of flight in the TWA Terminal, its inspiration was never definitely determined, some suggesting that a thumb depression into a hollowed grapefruit rind resulted in the eventual curved, concrete, symmetrically positioned roof sections that seamlessly flowed from the piers that supported them and were only separated by narrow skylights. The four met at a circular pendent center point.

The roof’s wing surface curvature or camber continued in the crimson and white interior by means of the upper walkaway supported columns that merged into both floor and ceiling as if they were integral to them. Its lack of rectangularity was evident in its other features. The stairways, for instance, were curved and its terminal and departure lounge connecting corridors were more like cylindrical tubes.

Its overall expression was one of 1960s neo-futurism and space-age Googie architecture.

Despite what ultimately proved to be Saarinen’s architectural achievement, it also became his legacy, since a year after he inspected its superstructure in 1961, he passed away at 52, never having seen his finished product.

While it was intended to serve small piston airliners whose capacities never exceeded a hundred, it was not suited to TWA’s narrow body jets, such as the 707 and the 727, much less its widebody ones, including the 747, the L-1011 TriStar, and the 767, requiring the addition of jetbridge-connected boarding satellites.

After the carrier’s 2001 demise, its signature terminal awaited purpose or preservation. Its demolition, at least, had already been spared. In 1994, it was designated a New York City landmark, at which time then Chairwoman of the Landmark Preservation Commission, Larie Beckelman, commented in “The New York Times,” “This is perhaps the quintessential modern form, expressing movement and the whole concept of flight.”

Eleven years later it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. With its presence at least assured, it still awaited the two “p’s”-preservation and purpose.

THE TWA HOTEL:

Preservation and purpose, in the event, became two sides to the same coin-that is, restore the 392,000-square-foot terminal to recreate its 1960’s splendor and serve as the anchor and lobby to another two sides-in this case, two rectangular, black glass buildings with 512 hotel rooms developed by MCR/MORSE and four architectural firms at a $250 million-plus cost.

Architect Richard Southwick, who oversaw the project’s restoration, noted of the TWA Flight Center, “(It was) the perfect symbol of post-war optimism, the magic of flight, and the elegance of mid-century modern architecture.”

Its first guests were accepted in May of 2019.

As a “lobby,” it contains the Sunken Lounge with the Solari flight board; a cocktail lounge; a Sundries Shop with vintage copies of “Life,” “Time,” “Good Housekeeping,” and “Family Circle” magazines; an old-fashioned shoe shine station tucked in the corner (of course); a TWA Gift Shop whose every item, one way or the other, displays the airline’s logo; a 10,000-square-foot fitness center with a cycling studio, treadmills, ellipticals, a spa section, and personal trainers; and the Paris Café by Jean-Georges, which occupies the footprint of the original one, along with that of the Lisbon Lounge, on one of the two mezzanines and serves cuisine inspired by TWA in-flight menus. There is also 50,000 square feet of meeting and event space.

The two cylindrical tubes-the “Saarinen” to the left and the “Hughes” to the right-lead, by way of midway, originally nonexistent cutouts, to the two seven-story glass, metal, and concrete hotel structures, which were required to be complimentary to, but distinguishable from, the landmark terminal.

Seven layers of triple-glazed, 1,740-pound, insulated, floor-to-ceiling glass ensure in-room silence, despite the fact that ramp-taxiing aircraft are only yards away.

Rooms, which either overlook this scene or the terminal, rent for $250 per night, with lower priced intervals bookable for transit passengers who only seek a short sleep and a shower.

The roof features the Infinity Edge Pool and observation deck, along with a bar.

Only the “Saarinen” tube, back on the main level, leads out-or, in the reverse direction, in-to this preserved pocket of time, as expressed by the two floor designations-or eras-on which the elevator at its end alights: “1960s TWA Hotel” and “Present Day JetBlue,” according to the two buttons the passenger can press to travel there.

THE MUSEUM DISPLAYS:

While the Eero Saarinen designed terminal can be considered a collective, retro, but still-living arena, several areas serve to accentuate it in museum form.

“Located in various spots throughout the former TWA Terminal-the heart of our hotel-as well as in the event center and in the areas that connect our hotel flight tubes to JetBlue’s Terminal 5, the exhibits (curated by the New York Historical Society) allow visitors to experience the jet age through authentic artifacts, interactive displays, and personal narratives,” according to the TWA Hotel website.

Its 2,000 items hail from the TWA Museum in Kansas City, as well as from the former airline employees who donated them.

“Exhibitions focus on TWA’s history, including Howard Hughes tenure as owner, TWA uniforms from 1945 to 2001, and Saarinen’s development of the terminal at Idlewild Airport,” the website continues.

Stressing the latter’s importance, Mike Thornton, New York Historical Society curator, stated, “The Saarinen terminal is a monument to the optimism and vision of the jet age. These exhibitions invite people into the glamor and fun that Saarinen and TWA worked so hard to create and foster.”

A desk, old fashioned typewriter, and system timetable set-up next to the elevator, for instance, recreates a TWA corporate office, while wall displays tell the carrier’s story, along with its Howard Hughes influence and its historic aircraft.

Black-and-white photographs gracing the walls opposite the hotel check-in counter depict TWA’s early “airline of the stars” image, with the likes of Jimmy Durante, Marilyn Monroe, Lucille Ball, Elizabeth Taylor, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, the Beatles, and Mary Tyler Moore boarding aircraft as diverse as the Ford Trimotor and the Boeing 707.

A TWA flight crew uniform and luggage exhibit is located on the second of the two mezzanines.

“The glamor of air travel in the jet age catapulted TWA pilots to star statuses, many of them celebrated as much for their dashing good looks as their ability to navigate a transatlantic flight,” according to the exhibit. “Pilot uniforms with gold epaulets, pins, and jaunty hats burnished their admired role as those who could fly through the clouds on the new jets of the 1960s.”

The evolution of flight attendant uniforms, displayed on mannequin bodies, depict the five designers who created them: Don Loper (1960-1965), Dalton of America (1968-1971), Valentino (1971-1975), Stan Herman (1975-1978), and Ralph Lauren (1978-2001).

THE LOCKHEED CONSTELLATION:

Jotting notes in the Sunken Lounge as I awaited my flight, I realized that even here I was immersed in Saarinen’s world, bodily cradled by womb chairs at tulip tables, both of which he designed.

The board continued to click and clack, sometimes displaying departures by carriers such as Pan Am. Even it had taken off for a final time, deposited in that dimension known as “history.”

Ground attendants-I guess the in-flight “stewardess” counterpart was an acceptable, albeit sexist, title in those days-took drink orders.

Subliminally, subconsciously, and emotionally, I suddenly knew that it was time to board my flight. No one called it. History did-the lure and love of aviation history, that is. Responding, I rose from my Sunken Lounge seat, filing down the corridor past the library-cum-bookstore Reading Room, and finally opened the door to the tarmac. There were no lines. No one stopped me. No one asked me for a boarding pass. Flights destined for yesteryear apparently did not require them. What has already played out in time was free and available to anyone who wished to recreate or relive it.

Walking over the lines painted to represent mock Runway 04-Right/22-Left, I approached the airliner, poised on the ramp in its 1960’s glory. If I could have stood on a ladder, I could have faced it, nose-to-nose. As a six-decade technological interval, its propellers did nothing to detract it from its sleek design profile.

From the long, angled, aft-retracting nose gear strut, which touched the tarmac with its dual, equally angled tires to save rubber during tight ground turns, my eyes moved up to the black nose cone and the seven-pane cockpit windscreen. The fuselage, emulating an airfoil, gently sloped upward behind the cockpit and downward again at the rear, just before the triple vertical stabilizers, an engineering solution to low-ceilinged hangars. The straight, but tapered wings, mounted at a seven-degree dihedral and lined with deicing boots on their leading edges, sported four, three-bladed propeller, Wright Turbo-Compound engines. The aircraft, registered N8083H “Star of America,” had returned “home” and in many ways was Trans World Airlines.

Eagerly anticipating its refurbished cabin, I climbed the boarding steps, which proclaimed, “Up, up and away with TWA,” and stepped inside. “Away” I would.

THE EARLY CONSTELLATION VERSIONS:

Like the Eero Saarinen designed terminal, the Lockheed Constellation was a product of the same force-ever-increasing post-war demand, except the airliners, embodying advancing technology, also needed to remain competitive with other carriers that operated rival designs.

TWA, however, had an additional urgency for a modern fleet replacement. Compared to United’s northern and American’s southern route coverages, its mid-continent one placed it at a disadvantage.

What was needed (by all three airlines) was a larger capacity, longer-range, more comfortable counterpart to, if not replacement for, the ubiquitous twin-engine DC-3 on one-stop transcontinental routes.

“Howard (Hughes) had the idea he could steel a lot of the Hollywood crowd’s business away from the other fellows, if we had a super-deluxe airliner that could fly nonstop L.A. to New York, or even one-stop via Chicago,” according to Jack Frye, TWA’s Vice President of Operations in Douglas J. Ingells’ book, “L-1011 TriStar and the Lockheed Story” (Arco Publishers, 1973, p. 73). “He was talking eight or nine hours flying time, coast-to-coast, about post-posh interiors with a club car atmosphere in a day plane, and Pullman-style berths for night trips. It all sounded far out, but Hughes was dead serious.”

Three quad-engine, new-generation airliners were proposed by the three competing aircraft manufacturers at this time: the DC-4E from Douglas, the B-307 Stratoliner from Boeing, and the L-44 Excalibur from Lockheed, which, in April of 1939, served as the Constellation’s early foundation, featuring a triple vertical tail, a 36-passenger complement in a pressurized cabin, a 1,200-US gallon fuel capacity, and a 40,000-pound gross eight.

As a larger development of the Excalibur, the L-49, which would prove the first in a series of more ambitious versions, was powered by four 2,200-hp Wright Duplex Cyclone engines, and could carry a 6,000-pound payload at between 250 and 300 mph at a 20,000-foot cruising altitude. Its still-air range was 3,500 miles. Most unique to the design, however, was its fuselage.

“… The Constellation’s fuselage, of circular cross section throughout its length, featured a cambered centerline to give it an airfoil profile in side view,” according to M. J. Hardy in his book, “The Lockheed Constellation” (Arco Publishing Company, 1973, pp. 12-14). “This served both to increase the maximum width of level floor, especially in the nose and tail sections, and to shorten the nose wheel leg by drooping the front fuselage… “

After reviewing the design’s specifications and making corrections of his own, Hughes ordered the type-initially nine, but subsequently 40. Since TWA itself could not afford the expenditure, he had no choice but to pay for the aircraft himself. “Send the bill to the Hughes Tool Company,” he instructed.

First flying in prototype form on January 9, 1943, it demonstrated that all of its design goals had either been achieved or exceeded. Maximum (not cruise) speed was 347 mph and gross weight was incrementally increased from an initial 68,000- to a final 86,250-pound maximum.

Its intended commercial application, however, was placed on hold. The December 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor attack, opening war in the Pacific theatre, relegated the luxurious airliners to a troop and supply transport, and those L-49s rolling off the production line and modified for wartime service, were redesignated C-69s and were delivered to the US Army Air Force instead. On one such flight, an aircraft in TWA colors and piloted by Hughes during the first half of its transcontinental sector and by Frye on the second half of it, covered the 2,400-mile Burbank-Washington distance on April 17, 1944 in record time, clearly demonstrating the design’s potential.

“We did not deliberately set out to establish a new transcontinental record,” Frye later stated. “The trip was made in six hours, 58 minutes simply because the Constellation was designed and built to fly at such remarkable speeds.”

The first production Constellation, now designated L-049 to distinguish it from the original, pre-war variants, was certified by the Civil Aeronautics Board on December 11, 1945, and TWA inaugurated the type into transatlantic service between New York and Paris-Orly three months later, on February 5. Powered by R-3350 engines with three-bladed, 15.2-foot-diameter, reversible pitch, fully feathering propellers, the appropriately named “Star of Paris” carried 35 passengers to the City of Light via Gander and Shannon.

Ten days later it placed the type on the transcontinental route between New York and Los Angeles, completing the eastbound leg in 9.45 hours and the westbound one in 11. In comparison to American’s and United’s slower, unpressurized, two-stop DC-4s, the Constellation offered a distinct competitive advantage.

Lockheed’s “Of Men and Stars” history noted, “In the five months that followed introduction of the Model 049 to commercial airline service in February 1946, the majestic triple-tail transports set new standards of speed, comfort, and safety. They made 300-mph schedules a reality (and) ocean-to-ocean nonstop flights commonplace.”

While the type’s 92.5-foot length and 123-foot wingspan initially remained the same, two subversions introduced increased range and improved performance.

The L-749 intended for intercontinental services, carried 565 additional US gallons of fuel, for a new 5,820-gallon total, increasing its range by some 1,000 miles. Maximum take off and landing weights were respectively increased to 102,000 and 87,500 pounds.

Both versions introduced new propellers, flap deflection increases, and improved cabin heating, cooling, and ventilation systems.

A significant Constellation operator, TWA counted 12 L-749s and 25 modified L-749As in its fleet, over and above its original L-049s, enabling it to serve transatlantic routes to London, Paris, Rome, and then-named Bombay.

Accommodation varied according to market. Its “London Ambassador” service, for example, which was inaugurated on April 8, 1951, was configured with 18 berths. “Sleeper Flights” carried 32. Five-abreast, all-coach transatlantic services seated 60 and US domestic ones 81.

TWA retired its last L-049 at the end of 1961.

THE SUPER CONSTELLATION:

Technical advancements, along with increased speed, safety, and comfort introduced in the five years since the end of World War II, created unprecedented demand for both domestic and international air service, toward which Lockheed, with its three basic L-049, L-649, and L-749 variants made a significant contribution. Although subsequent updates, designated L-749B and L-849, would have offered even greater performance with, respectively, uprated piston and Napier Eland turboprop powerplants, passenger demand indicated the need for greater capacity instead, achieved through stretches of the existing fuselage. Because flight tests with L-749s demonstrated that its gross weight capability could be as high as 137,000 pounds with its original wing, no major design modifications were required.

Based upon studies for an earlier, 100-passenger, but never built L-949, the first and, in the event, only stretched version, the L-1049A Super Constellation, incorporated a new wind screen, an 18.5-foot fuselage insertion for a new 113.4-foot overall length, rectangular passenger windows that replaced the previous oval ones, and provision for 730 additional gallons of fuel in a new center section tank.

Powered by four 2,700-hp R-3350-956C18 CA-1 engines, it incorporated a larger fin to counteract the additional weight, a 728-cubic-foot underfloor baggage and cargo volume, an improved pressurization system to create a 5,000-foot altitude at 20,000 feet, a 6,550-US gallon fuel capacity, and a 120,000-pound maximum weight.

Certification, although initially only at a 100,000-pound gross weight, took place on November 29, 1951 and TWA, which ordered ten of the 24 L-1049As produced (Eastern operated the remaining 14) inaugurated them into service on September 10 of the following year.

“Model 1049 emerged as a stretched version of the original Army Air Corps cargo transports,” according to Ingells (op. cit., pp 80-82). “In its original form, Connie was designed to carry 65 passengers. Model 1049 could carry 99.”

“Connie was a lady, who simply had to keep up with the latest styles,” he went on to say (p. 83).

The new version enabled TWA to inaugurate transcontinental Ambassador Service on October 19, 1953, which retained the Chicago intermediate stop on westbound legs, but omitted it on eastbound ones. These were completed in under eight hours. Despite the competitive promise it carried when pitted against American’s DC-6Bs, it only lasted six weeks. Thereafter, its DC-7s could cover the distance nonstop in both directions.

The Super Constellation series culminated with two other versions. Power equaled payload and performance and the introduction of 3,250-hp Wright Turbo-Compound R-3350-972TC18 DA-3s, along with the optional installation of two 600-US gallon tip tanks, provisioned it with a 7,750-US gallon total, giving it a 4,620-mile range with reserves. Ninety-nine single-class passengers could be comfortably accommodated in the 92-foot-long, highly sound-proofed cabin. Northwest Orient, launch customer for the resultant L-1049G, took delivery of the type on January 22, 1955.

TWA placed orders for 12 and then eight L-1049Gs in October of 1953 and November of 1955. Its aircraft featured weather radar, the two wing tip fuel tanks, 700 pounds of cabin insulation, and two-compartment General Electric air circulation ovens that could simultaneously heat 60 pre-cooked meals.

THE STARLINER:

If any aircraft, and any version of that aircraft, were symbolic of Trans World Airlines, it was the Lockheed L-1649A Starliner. It seemed to make that statement today.

Necessity, as always, provided the direction and pointed to the destination, the latter being the long-range ones airlines had to cover without wind, seasonality, and payload restrictions, and Douglas, soon to introduce the intercontinental version of its DC-7C “Seven Seas” with its ten-foot greater wingspan, injected Lockheed with new impetus if it wished to remain competitive. Although the resultant L-1649A was a technical success, the year required for its considerable redesign alas placed it on the market too late for anything but paltry sales.

A modified wing, key to its improved capability, served as a foundation laid earlier for an L-1449 to have been powered by turboprops from either the US or UK, but which, in the event, had neither been proven suitable nor certifiable. Nevertheless, it incorporated 37-foot-long, integrally stiffened skin panels, full-depth tank end ribs for a new four-tank fuel system, closely spaced ribs, and a revised trailing edge and Fowler flaps.

While work on this version ceased in early-1955, engineering resources were reassigned to what would become the definitive, longest range version, the L-1649, which was later designated L-1649A Starliner. Overall length remained the same as that of the Super Constellation series, but a tapered, 150-foot, thinner wing of higher aspect ratio was mounted further back on the fuselage and four 3,400-hp Wright R-3350-988TC18 EA-1 Turbo-Compound engines were installed further outboard, reducing cabin decibel levels. The larger-diameter, synchronized, low tip-speed Hamilton Standard propellers, coupled with 900 pounds of additional cabin insulation, cemented its quiet interior.

Its maximum take off weight was 156,000 pounds.

The first of two flying prototypes in its three-aircraft test program took to the air from Burbank on October 11, 1956 and TWA took delivery of the first of 25 L-1649As the following April.

Configured for 30 first and 34 coach seats, along with an eight-berth first class sleeping compartment, it operated “Nonstop Ambassador” service from New York to Los Angeles and San Francisco, later introducing the concept from Boston and Washington. Its transatlantic service, “The Jetstream,” served London with 74-passenger coach cabins as of July 1, 1957 and was subsequently extended to Paris, Frankfurt, and Rome. Transpolar flights, from Los Angeles to London with an intermediate stop in San Francisco, commenced October 2. The following year, in March, the London-San Francisco sector was covered in 19 hours, 5 minutes, which beat its previous record. All-coach “Golden Barron” transcontinental services were also operated with the type.

Compared to the initial C-69 military transport, the L-1649A Starliner had weight, power, and capacity increase of, respectively, 44.5, 47, and 72 percent.

“Rugged, reliable, easily flyable, distinctly styled, and naturally graceful” is how TWA Captain Dave Richwine described the aircraft (Morgan, op. cit., pp 8-9). “The Lockheed Constellation has been a star performer… and is most certainly a candidate for one of the all-time great commercial transports… Conceived in love for aviation and in hope of enhancing the future of commercial air transportation, she was born in the last World War II years, first serving her country as a military air transport. Following her strenuous baptism as a 93,000-pound fledgling that started life sans steerable nosewheel and reversible props, she took her place in the commercial air transport industry. Since then, she has probably undergone more developmental stages than any other commercial air transport in history to finally emerge supreme as a member of the piston royalty in the form of a 160,000-pound 1649A Jetstream.”

A total of 856 military and commercial Constellations, which only featured two fuselage lengths and two wingspans, of all versions was built. Before TWA operated the last one, albeit in freighter form, on May 11, 1967-replaced by Boeing 707-120s-its Constellation fleet had transported an estimated 50 million passengers between 1946 and 1967, and during 1959, the type’s peak, it counted 32 L-049s, 12 L-749s, 27 L-749As, 9 L-1049As, 28 L-1049Gs, and 29 L-1649As in its inventory. I was in one of the latter ones today.

“STAR OF AMERICA:”

The Constellation that stood ready to accept passengers at the restored TWA Terminal on that mid-September day, N8083H, had rolled off of Lockheed’s Burbank production line in 1958, flying under the carrier’s colors, first as a passenger airliner, then as a freighter, for only four years.

As I entered the cabin, I thought of M. J. Hardy’s words. “An outstanding example of piston-engine airliner design at its peak, the Constellation well befits the dictionary definition of its name as ‘a group of fixed stars, or an assemblage of splendors or excellences,'” he said (Hardy, op. cit., p. 7).

While “Star of America” was configured as a cocktail lounge, there was enough of its design as an airliner left to inspect.

A view into the metallic green cockpit, in which the JFK tower frequency issued an unceasing barrage of instructions to active flights, provided a glimpse into what the pilots viewed-from the sky through the three forward and four side window panes to the half-moon yokes, engine indications on the center panel, the four throttles on the pedestal, and the flight engineer’s station, on whose table was laid both a normal and an emergency checklist. Aside from his own panel that sported a myriad of indicators, there were also throttles, engine superchargers, mixture controls, and fuel shut-off valves.

Behind and to the left of the cockpit was the separate navigator’s station, whose crew member determined the aircraft’s location by taking star fixes through the roof-installed astrodome.

The cabin-converted cocktail lounge was configured with both burnished gold upholstered banquets and traditional four-abreast seats with TWA headrest covers, and the carpeting was airline indicative bright red.

Since no boarding pass indicated the one assigned to me, I chose a window one on the port side, settling into the 1960’s dimension and studying the upper wing surface and the two projecting piston engines. Propellers they certainly sported!

A Royal Ambassador menu detailed what might have been served if I had been in flight at that time: hors d’oeuvres of American caviar and an assortment of delicacies from the cart; cream of asparagus soup; a garden salad with bleu cheese or French vinaigrette dressings; entrees such as chateaubriand, chicken champagne, lamb rib roast, and lobster thermidor; a cheese board with a selection of fresh fruit; cassata siciliana; and after-dinner coffees. Vintage wines, of course, flowed throughout the repast.

The Constellation’s cocktail menu today indicated purchasable items, such as “Cocktails 316,” spirits, wine and champagne, beer, nonalcoholic beverages, and snacks like a charcuterie, marinated olives, hummus, and a cheese board.

A cutout provided a view of the aircraft’s framework-that is, the outer skin and longerons of its fuselage.

Paris and Hollywood mural replicas adorning the aft sidewalls represented those eight-by-four-foot ones designed by Mario Zamparelli that depicted 25 TWA-served destinations from Boston to Bangkok in the Starlight Lounges of its Constellations.

As I deplaned through the aft, left door and descended its boarding stairs, I thought of Douglas J. Ingells’ concluding words about the airliner.

“Her sleek lines, the shark-like profile of her fuselage, her distinctive triple tail, and the many advanced features she pioneered, left a high heritage in the annals of commercial aviation. She had class, grace, and beauty. And of all the so-called ‘Sky Queens,’ her reign will never be forgotten,” (Ingells, op. cit., p. 83).

THE JOURNEY:

I spent some three hours immersed in the Eero Saarinen created era, and it took far less time than that to walk down the Constellation’s aisle, from its forward to its rear door. Yet as my feet once again made contact with the ground-and, perhaps, the 21st century-I realized that I had just completed a six-decade journey into history, not of motion, but of mind.

Bibliography

Hardy, M. J. “The Lockheed Constellation.” New York: Arco Publishing Company, 1973.

Ingells, Douglas J. “L-1011- TriStar and the Lockheed Story.” Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, Inc., 1973.

Morgan, Terry. “The Lockheed Constellation.” New York: Arco Publishing Company, 1967.

[ad_2]

Source by Robert Waldvogel

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on The Historic TWA Terminal and Lockheed Consellation at JFK
Mlkcorporate card exclusive access for private jet charter and private yacht charter elite membership2 1 - Becoming a Flight Attendant - Understanding Charter for international private jet charter

[ad_1]

Most large and legacy carriers are not hiring unless you speak an unusual language. However, some of the options below offer similar benefits and are taking applications at the time of this writing.

One – Charter

These include worldwide operations such as Omni or World, corporate such as NetJets, and numerous other small charter operations. With the big international carriers you may travel anywhere in the world and be gone for two to three weeks at a time. This is the least predictable of the various options, and also likely to have long (multiple day) layovers.

Most are not presently hiring. Your travel privileges will be limited to wherever they have a plane going at any given time, and interline agreements with other carriers.

In a small jet operation, the flight attendant works almost like a concierge who is also the passenger safety expert. In large operations, you work with multiple other attendants in flight.

Two – Regional Contract

Regional contract carriers travel throughout the U.S. and frequently Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean utilizing small jet aircraft commonly referred to as RJs, or regional jets. Up to fifty seats requires a single flight attendant. The newer, slightly larger 70 to 90 seat models require two flight attendants. Because these airlines operate under contract to legacy carriers, employees frequently get travel benefits on those airlines. Companies include Mesa, Pinnacle, Chautauqua, Shuttle America, Skywest, Express Jet, and others.

These carriers gain and lose contracts, so there is a bit of luck involved. However, they are also likely to be the first to begin hiring again, and can be an excellent option for someone wanting flight privileges on an international carrier. Some are presently taking applications.

You may work by yourself or with one other flight attendant, up to eight or nine flights per day at some carriers. Layovers vary from small to large cities.

Three – Commuter Contract

These carriers generally fly smaller propeller aircraft, as opposed to small jets. However, there are now propeller aircraft with up to 74 seats, requiring two flight attendants. The smaller 20 – 49 seat aircraft use one attendant, while under 20 seats does not require a flight attendant. These companies include Colgan, Commutair, Gulfstream, Great Lakes, and others. Many are taking applications or actively hiring.

You may work alone or with one other attendant. Layovers tend to be small cities or just out-and-backs from your hub with no overnights. Many short flights per day, usually six or eight.

Many flight attendants have started with one of these non-traditional flying options only to decide to stay with it rather than go to the bigger companies when they were hiring. Some prefer working alone, others want to live in their base city rather than commute to work. In the end, thinking about what you want to get out of the experience should help you decide where to apply.

You can find out who is hiring by going to each airline’s web site and following the “employment” or “career” link. Sometimes, this is buried in the “about us” or “corporate” links. You may have to search. Again, unless you speak an in-demand language like Mandarin, do not waste a great deal of time on big international carriers at the present time. Good Luck!

Copyright 2009

[ad_2]

Source by Kimberly Bates

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Becoming a Flight Attendant – Understanding Charter for international private jet charter
The best selection of private jet charter for charter a jet on 20204 - The Fairchild-Dornier Do-328JET and the best private jet companies uk

[ad_1]

1. Turbine Triumph:

The power of engines, as historically demonstrated, extends beyond the thrust they produce to move airplanes. They also move passenger-toward a particular aircraft, when it is powered by the type that attracts them.

When the first long-range, pure-jet airliners appeared at the end of the 1950w in the form of the de Havilland DH.106 Comet, the Boeing 707, and the Douglas DC-8, it was concluded that this technology would be restricted to those sectors, since its speed could not be adequately exploited over shorter ones, leaving them the domain of piston aircraft, such as the Convair CV-440 Metropolitan and the Martin 4-0-4.

What was underestimated was the power the pure-turbine had to draw passengers to such airplanes, causing them to demand and ultimately expect this engine type on all route types. And manufacturers responded.

By the early-1990s, history repeated itself. The turbine, it was thought, could never be economically viable on regional-range routes, once again leaving the piston and later turboprop airliners with capacities of between 19 and 50 to serve them. But, when Canadair sparked the regional jet revolution with its 50-passenger CRJ-100 and Embraer closely followed suit with its own ERJ-145, there seemed no market for which the turbofan was not suitable-except, perhaps, for the very thin one, supporting no more than 30 seats.

Passengers again responded. And consensus was once again proven wrong.

2. Regional Jet Revolution:

Although powerplants usually precede designs, in the case of the regional market, designs preceded powerplants and provided the crossroads between larger airliners, business jets, and turboprop aircraft. Regional jets could thus originate from four potential sources.

The first, as previously mentioned, trace their roots to business jets-in this case, to the Canadair CL-600/-601 Challenger, which bred the stretched-fuselage regional airliners that followed it. In the second case, Embraer adopted the twin-turboprop EMB-120 Brasilia into a pure-jet counterpart, the ERJ-145. In the third, an existing airliner, intended for longer-range sectors, was scaled-down to produce a lower-capacity derivative, as had occurred with the MD-95/717, a shrink of the MD-90, and the A-318, a shorter-fuselage version of the A-319. Finally, regional jets originate as all-new designs, such as the Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke VFW-614, the western world’s first 44-seat regional jet; the Fokker F.28 Fellowship, which was succeeded by the modernized F.70 and F.100; and the British Aerospace BAe-146, which itself begot the re-engined Avro International RJ70 to -100 family.

All of these types fueled the regional jet revolution, which created a fundamental change in the market, mirroring the impact the pure-jet engine first had on the long, then medium-, and finally short-range routes, and blurring the line between the major and regional carriers. It also became the most rapidly growing segment of the industry.

According to the Department of Transportation (DOT) report entitled “Regional Jets and their Emerging Roles in the US Aviation Market,” seven US carriers operated 99 regional jets between 126 city pairs and served 103 markets from ten hubs at the beginning of 1998. The domestic regional jet fleet at the time was expected to double, to 200 aircraft, by January of the following year.

And these figures only escalated like the clockwise rotations of analog altimeters installed in climbing aircraft. Indeed, in order to remain competitive and retain market share, airlines were forced to order regional jets. Almost 80 percent of the 570 regional airliners ordered in 1998 were for pure-jets, eclipsing, for the first time, the number of turboprop deliveries the following year with 217 jets as opposed to 120 turboprops. By 2000, 726 regional jet sales were recorded, a 42-percent increase over the year-earlier period and it constituted more than 90 percent of all regional airliners ordered. The diminishing popularity of turboprop types, resulting in a 28-year low in sales, saw the sunset on once ubiquitous models, such as the British Aerospace J41 and the Saab 340 and 2000.

These sales figures, however, reflected more than passenger popularity. Compared to heavier twins, such as earlier BAC-111s and DC-9s-which had not been designed for regional routes, but which were artificially suited for some of them because of then significantly lower fuel prices-aircraft intended, from inception, for this purpose, offered two advantages: their lower structural weights burned less fuel and were rewarded with reduced landing fees, and their decreased thrust capabilities optimized them for lower cruise speeds, since a greater portion of regional flight sectors entail the climb and descent phase than do longer ones.

Barry Eccleston, Executive Vice President of Fairchild-Dornier Aerospace, predicted that the market for regional jets accommodating a maximum of 110 passengers would be worth some $205 billion, amounting to 9,000 aircraft, over the first two decades of the 21st century-or more than two-thirds the $280 billion-worth of ultra large capacity airlines, such as the Boeing 747-8 and the Airbus A-380-except that the regional segment of the industry represented seven times the number of airplanes. He also identified four phases of the regional jet revolution.

The first, entailing the initial breed of 50-seat Canadair CRJ-100s and -200s and Embraer ERJ-145s served to prove the concept, attract the passengers, and demonstrate the economic feasibility of it, its roots planted by Comair in the US and Lufthansa CityLine in Europe. The former initially provided feed to major carrier hubs and the latter bypassed them and instead served short and/or thin sectors between secondary city pairs.

Paving the way by demonstrating the overwhelming passenger acceptance of these aircraft, the 50-seat regional jet planted the seed for the second phase, establishing the seamless service interchange between mainline and microjets and creating demand for pure-jet service on routes even too thin for the 50-seaters. Scaled-down for accommodation of between 30 and 40, these types could altogether replace the comparably sized turboprops, especially since a design such as the ERJ-135, although a smaller derivative of the original -145, was itself a development of the Brasilia turboprop.

Like a rolling snowball, once the concept gained momentum, it was unstoppable and increased in size. So, too, did the aircraft representing the third phase, which offered capacities not unlike the traditional short- to medium-range twins, but at decidedly lower seat-mile costs. Examples of these were the Fokker F.28 Fellowship, the British Aerospace BAe-146, the Fokker F.70 and F.100, the Avro International RJ70 to -100, the Bombardier CRJ-700 to -1000, the Embraer ERJ-170 to -195, the Antonov An-148 and -158, the Sukhoi Superjet 100, and the Bombardier CS-100.

Regional jets accommodating 100 passengers, but flown by major carrier crews because of pilot scope clauses prohibiting their operation characterized the fourth phase.

Closing the gap between major and regional airline profiles, this type of operation entailed the replacement of first generation twins, such as DC-9s and 737s, with their advanced, higher-capacity regional counterparts, yet offered comparable levels of comfort, service, and speed on thinner, point-to-point, hub-bypassing sectors-in the process reducing airport congestion.

Integral to this quad-phase regional jet revolution-and particularly to the second of them-was, of course, the 37-seat Embraer ERJ-135. But, before it even flew, it had competition across the Atlantic, in Europe, in the form of another turboprop-turned-turbofan, the even-smaller Fairchild-Dornier Do-328JET.

3. From Turboprop to Turbofan:

Founded as Dornier-Metallbauten in 1922 by Professor Claude Dornier, that company was known for its massive, 12-engined, Do-X flying boat, becoming Daimler GmbH in 1972 and Daimler-Benz Aerospace 15 years later, when Daimler-Benz itself acquired a majority share holding. It was finally designated Daimler-Chrysler.

Its high-wing, twin-turboprop commuter aircraft, offered in 15-passenger Do-228-100 and 19-passenger Do-228-200 versions, amounted for 270 sales, and led to a 34-seat successor.

Seeking to divest itself of what had intermittently become a loss-making subsidiary, it sold a majority stake of Dornier Luftfahrt, located near Munich, in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, to San Antonio, Texas-based Fairchild Aerospace in 1996. Fairchild itself built the venerable 19-passenger Metro commuter turboprop, which sold in excess of 600 during a 35-year production run, and was initially an international partner in the 34-seat Saab-Fairchild SF-340, which accounted for 456 sales.

The Do-328, in the eyes of new owner Fairchild, had potential, and its strength-literally-lay in its robust, German over-engineered design. Already the second-fastest turboprop regional airliner after the 50-passenger Saab 2000, it lent itself to a minimal-modification retrofit with pure-jet engines, although former design owner Daimler-Benz had consistently failed to see the feasibility of the project.

But additional impetus came from several less-than-positive circumstances. The pure-turboprop version, already weighing 2,200 pounds more than targeted and subjected to high production costs, suffered from fierce competition with similar types, such as the Fokker F.50, itself the product of DASA’s previous Dutch subsidiary, and sales were sluggish.

Based upon Fairchild-Dornier’s survey of 50 worldwide airlines conducted between October of 1996 and January of 1997, passengers preferred turbofans, regardless of route type and length, and a turboprop-to-turbofan transition was not only logical, but left little choice, provided it could offer comparable performance and economics.

Powerplant popularity, however, was not the only factor behind airlines’ orders. One of the latest attractions was the ability of an aircraft manufacturer to offer a family of regional jets, as was beginning to occur with Bombardier and Embraer, so that derivative-associated design similarities and common pilot type ratings would offer the cost-effective flexibility to match capacity to route type and departure time.

Although Embraer’s own scaled-down regional jet was now on the horizon, the economics of such 30-seaters had yet to be proven. Nevertheless, if they could, this type of design was foreseen as fulfilling two purposes: (1). It could replace comparably sized turboprops on existing routes, and (2). It could create an entirely new market-one too long for a turboprop’s speed, yet too thin for the higher-capacity of the increasingly common, 50-passenger regional jets, thus heralding a new class of aircraft.

If successful, it could potentially replace some 1,200 aircraft in US service alone. With the ERJ-135 about to become the second member of Embraer’s regional jet family, and the Do-328 notching up less-than-stellar sales, Fairchild-Dornier had little choice but to combine its existing airframe with turbofan engines or concede the race-already as a distance third-to the other two contenders.

4. Do-328JET:

Modifications to the turboprop’s turbofan counterpart and, in many ways, successor, were few.

Because the fuselage was milled from solid material, the aluminum alloy for the pure-jet version retained more at frames 24 and 26, which corresponded to the wing and undercarriage attachment areas, while the upper-fuselage fairing, which served as the blending point for the wing, was also retained, as were the two aft, ventral strakes previously required by the turboprop’s air flow. Although the powerplant change had rendered them superfluous, they were not removed in order to avoid recertificaton costs.

The newly designated Do-328JET featured a 68-foot, 73/4th-inch fuselage and 69-foot, 9 3/4th-inch overall length.

Utilizing the same TNT (Tragfluegels neuer Technologie), supercritical wing as its Do-328 predecessor-which was originally designed for the smaller Do-228-and equally employing solid-milled skins to minimize the amount of riveting, the regional jet sported a unique planform. Aside from differing in its high-wing mounting, it featured highly-swept leading edges near the wing tip, parallel edges inboard of the engines, and a trapezoidal shape outboard of them.

Combined with the turbofans’ thrust capability, its wings, which retained the turboprop’s inflatable, leading edge boot deicing system, facilitated short-field performance, yet feisty climb rates (of 14.2 minutes to 31,000 feet), offering comparable block times to the ERJ-135 with which the aircraft would eventually compete.

High-lift devices encompassed single-slotted trailing edge Fowler flaps.

Internally, the Do-328JET’s wings incorporated a 200-liter fuel capacity increase, dual fuel pumps, and 30-percent larger-diameter fuel lines.

Sporting a 68.10-foot span and 430.6-square-foot area, they introduced a 100-mm trailing edge flap extension and thus increase in chord, rendering an 11.0 aspect ratio, for an ultimately targeted 400-knot cruise speed.

Like the turboprop -328, the regional jet retained the t-tail, but introduced a larger rudder trim tab to counteract the engines’ greater thrust.

The pylon-mounted, thrust-reverser devoid, 6,050 thrust-pound Pratt and Whitney Canada PW306B engines themselves, replacing the nacelle-shrouded turboprops, were originally developed as -306As for the Galaxy business jet and incorporated an 840-mm, 22-bladed, wide-chord fan; a five-stage high pressure compressor (four axial and a single centrifugal); a two-stage high pressure turbine; and a three-stage low pressure turbine. Compared to the corporate version, the commercial powerplant offered a 30-percent increase in core flow and higher temperature-resistant materials in the high pressure turbine.

In order to cater to the Do-328JET’s increased weights, the twin-wheeled, hydraulically-actuated, tricycle undercarriage featured a Dunlop dual-braking system, with carbon disc brakes; a reinforced trailing link; and an anti-skid system to compensate for the lack of engine thrust reversers. Its nose wheel retracted forward, while its two main units were stored in fuselage-side fairings.

An AlliedSignal GTCP36-150 auxiliary power unit (APU) provided power for cabin lighting and air conditioning and engine starts.

Aircraft access was attained by means of a forward, left, out- and downward-opening, airstair- and handrail-equipped Type I crew and passenger door; a Type III emergency exit apposite it, on the forward, right side; a second Type III emergency exit on the aft, left side; and a Type II galley servicing door on the aft, right side.

Standard cabin configuration entailed 32 to 34 three-abreast, one-two-arranged seats at a 30- to 31-inch pitch and an aft galley and lavatory. Because of the 4,000-foot altitude increase in the Do-328JET’s service ceiling-to 35,000 feet-cabin pressurization was equally increased-from 7.0 to 7.4-psi, yielding an 8,000-foot elevation. Internal dimensions were 33 feet, 10 3/4th-inches in length and six feet, 2.5 inches in height.

Baggage, cargo, and mail were stored in the main deck compartment located between the aft cabin wall and the rear pressure bulkhead and accessed via a port door.

5. Flight Test Program:

Unlike clean-sheet design flight test programs, the Do-328JET’s entailed considerable comparison-between the handling and performance of what had been a 365-knot turboprop to one penetrating the 400-knot realm with pure-jet engines. The transition from one to the other had been even less of a leap than initially imagined, since the first -328JET prototype had been nothing more than the turboprop’s second prototype and even retained several of its features.

That prototype itself, registered D-BJET and rolled out for the first time on December 6, 1997 for public viewing, made its maiden flight from the 7,800-foot runway at Fairchild-Dornier’s Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, complex at 11:16 on January 20 of the following year, piloted by Meinhardt Feuersenger, Chief Test Pilot of the Do-328 turboprop program, and Peter Weger, who, in 1994, had first flown the Eurofighter EF2000.

Maintaining a southerly course over the Bavarian Alps, the aircraft, slated to gauge performance and test envelope expansion, attained a 220-knot speed and 25,000-foot altitude during its almost two-hour sortie.

Evaluating the prototype’s performance in comparison to the turboprop foundation upon which it was based, Feuersenger noted the absence of propeller wash and the smooth, over-wing air flow, no longer needing to continually retrim it as a result of power setting changes. Performance either approximated or exceeded computer calculations.

Assessing the regional jet after landing, Feuersenger said it performed “flawlessly” and “pilots will love this aircraft.”

Three other prototypes took part in the 18-month, 950-flight, 1,560-hour flight test program, which was delayed by four months because of the need to redesign the Dunlop braking system and Messier-Dowty shock absorbers to cater to the aircraft’s deceleration without propeller braking effects. Aircraft D-BWAL, first flying on May 20, was involved in performance certification testing. Avionics integration, the realm of the third prototype (D-BEIR), commenced with its July 10 first flight, and function and reliability testing began three months later, on October 15, when the fourth prototype first took to the air.

The first production-standard aircraft, featuring a five-foot wingspan increase and 8,160-pound fuel capacity, entered its intended aerial realm after the four prototypes.

6. Test Flight:

Initial Do-328JET performance could be gauged by the test flights its prototypes undertook.

The aircraft’s two-person cockpit, with a Honeywell Primus 2000 integrated avionics system, featured five, eight-by-eight-inch CRT displays, the primary flying (PFD) and multifunction (MFD) displays duplicated before each pilot and the engine instrument and crew advisory system (EICAS) located in the center.

The reclinable seats, with five-point harnesses, were equipped with storable armrests and were adjustable forward and aft.

Engine starts, using bleed air from the auxiliary power unit, were automatic, their parameters registered by the full authority digital engine control (FADEC).

After the flight plan had been entered into the flight management system (FMS) and the windshield panels had been electronically heated to prepare them for bird strikes or other foreign object impact eventualities, the twin-jet was steerable by means of its rudder pedals, provided the variation was no more than ten degrees to either the left or right, although sharper turns required the nose wheel steering tiller.

The aircraft was offered with two gross weights. The lower, designated the Do-328-300, could carry a 7,200-pound payload, had a maximum take off and landing weight, respectively, of 33,510 and 31,063 pounds, and a 740-nautical mile range with this payload and reserves at a 31,000-foot altitude. The higher, designated the Do-328-310, could carry an 8,104-pound payload, had a 34,524-pound take off weight and a 31,724-pound landing weight, and a 900-nautical mile range.

A corporate version, the Envoy 3, typically accommodated between 12 and 19 in layouts specified by the operator, but which usually included easy chairs, tables, work stations, divans, sofas, wardrobes, galleys, and lavatories. Additional fuel tankage increased its range to 2,000 nautical miles.

Calculated and entered take off reference speeds varied, of course, according to gross weight and atmospheric conditions. A 27,488-pound ramp weight, for example-including 5,000 pounds of fuel-resulted in V1, VR, and V2 speeds, respectively, of 103, 110, and 117 knots in prototype D-BJET.

Flap settings included 12 degrees for take off, 20 for approach, and 32 for landing.

With the altitude, airspeed, attitude, vertical speed, and cleared altitude visible on the PFD, and the departure track on the MFD, the aircraft, cleared for take off and brake-released, initiated its acceleration run, its throttles advanced and its PW306B turbofans under FADEC control.

A 15-degree pitch angle ensured a best rate-of-climb of a little over 5,000-fpm.

Cruising at its 35,000-foot service ceiling, it assumed a Mach 0.69 speed with a 97.6-percent N1 fan, resulting in a 1,797-pound-per-hour fuel burn. Maximum cruise speed, at 25,000 feet, was 405 knots.

A 4,000-fpm descent rate, to 20,000 feet, was accomplished with a flight-idle power setting and Mach 0.61 airspeed.

The elimination of the previous version’s propellers necessitated a 20-knot increase in approach speed and ground spoilers automatically deploy after touchdown.

7. Sales and Service:

Sales, as with any other aircraft, depended upon quality, price, and the ability to fulfill its design goals. In the case of the Do-328JET, however, that aircraft actually created-and needed to create-its own market niche and therein lay the first obstacle to its orders-namely, was there a requirement for a 30-seat regional jet with in-house competition from its own turboprop and from the likes of the British Aerospace J41, the Embraer EMB-120, and the Saab 340, and could it fulfill its mission as economically as these types?

Not all carriers were likely to follow the 30-passenger pure-jet trend, especially those that saw little benefit in operating a type which was not part of a family, a strong competitive advantage Bombardier and Embraer both enjoyed over Fairchild-Dornier.

So similar, in fact, were its turboprop and turbofan siblings that they shared the same production line and airlines were able to wait until six months before scheduled delivery to choose a powerplant type.

Several factors, however, seemed to indicate its need.

Analyses of 300- to 1,000-mile route sectors revealed that they were either too infrequently served or were done so with inappropriately sized equipment, resulting in low load factors.

Seeking to exploit the former case-in which demand often exceeded capacity-Fairchild-Dornier foresaw initial-and ideal-deployment on traditional 19-seat turboprop routes, which it envisioned as stimulating demand because of its cabin class comfort, in-flight service, and pure-jet speed, the same way the 50-seat regional jets had “recreated” the 30-seat turboprop market.

Finally, because of restrictions inherent in US pilot scope clauses, dictating the number of regional jets that could be operated by major-aligned, code-share partner carriers, orders for turbofan aircraft accommodating 50 passengers or more were limited. Falling below this restriction with its 32 to 34 seats, the Do-328JET was exempt from these regulations. At the same time, it gave carriers the opportunity to close the lower-end service gap between traditional-turboprop capacity and that of the new breed of regional jets, enabling them to substitute mainline flights with increased, businessman-attracting frequencies and those operating during off-peak, service-scarce or altogether -devoid times, particularly midday.

Orders, as with any aircraft, increased as the program progressed. Launched during the 1997 Paris Air Show, the program itself attracted initial orders for six aircraft from Proteus Airlines, based in Dijon, France, and Aspen Mountain Air of the US for four. At the time of its first flight, there were 17 firm and 15-optiioned orders, and by July of 1998, there figures had respectively increased to 51 and 28, of which 11 were for Envoy 3 business versions. Continuing to mount, these totals increased to 75 and 101 by February of 2000 and 141 and 91 by early-2002.

Skyway Airlines, “the Midwest Express Connection” established in 1993 by Midwest Express itself to serve short-range routes and provide feed to mainline flights at its Milwaukee hub with a fleet of 15 19-passenger B1900Ds, took delivery of the first Do-328JET on August 4, 1999, employing it on route-proving sectors before inaugurating it into scheduled service two months later, on October 6.

Although the B1900Ds were suited to certain routes, they created a capacity gap in mainline Midwest’s fleet, whose aircraft featured four-abreast leather seats and premium, all-business class service. Skyway’s Beech aircraft offered little more than standup headroom.

Because 75 percent of Skyway’s traffic was origin-and-destination in nature, and these passengers seldom experienced its parent’s full-service product, its reputation was less than it should have been.

What was needed was an airplane that could accommodate half that of its DC-9s, but offer comparable speed, comfort, and service. The 50-seat CRJ-100/-200 and ERJ-145, considered too close in capacity to them, were quickly discounted.

The solution lay in Fairchild-Dornier’s microjet, of which five were ordered, with another ten on option, and they were seen as serving four purposes.

1). Increase capacity on existing Skyway routes.

2). Inaugurate service between city pairs too dense for its 19-seat B1900Ds, yet too thin for Midwest Express’s own 60-seat DC-9-14s.

3). Replace these DC-9s on short, low-density sectors

4). Add frequency to existing Midwest Express routes during off-peak times.

Featuring the same leather seats, carpets, and sidewall patterns as its parent’s DC-9s, it was able to offer identical service, with cocktails, hot towels, hot snacks, and freshly baked cookies from the aircraft’s dual-oven equipped galley.

Inaugural Do-328JET routes, from Milwaukee, included Grand Rapids, Pittsburgh, Nashville, and Toronto, with the number of daily, per-aircraft sectors, like those of its B1900Ds, nine, except the replacement type considerably reduced their block times-from two hours to 1.20 in the case of Nashville. Its only “inconvenience,” however, was its very speed: although it was higher than that of its turboprops, or about Mach 0.66, it was far lower than the Mach 0.8 of, say, the mainline 737s plying the same airways between VORs, forcing it to accept lower flight levels to avoid traffic conflicts.

Gandalf Airlines, of Bergamo, Italy, became the first European operator of the type, inaugurating service with the first two of 12 ordered aircraft in September of 1999 with three daily round-trips between Milan/Bergamo and Paris.

Atlantic Coast Airlines, like Skyway, was another regional operator aligned with a major US carrier through branding and code sharing agreements-in this case, United and it thus flew under the United Express banner.

Operating 19-passenger Jetstream 31s and 29-passenger 41s, mostly to United’s Washington-Dulles hub, it was able to substitute its 25 Do-328JETs according to demand, frequency, and time of departure.

8. Do-428JET:

Seeking to offer the crucially needed second member of its regional jet family, yet avoid the already-crowded 50-seat market, Fairchild-Dornier launched a stretched version on May 19, 1998 at the Berlin International Air Show, partially in response to often-requested capacity increases.

Having already experienced neck-and-neck competition with the ERJ-135, Fairchild-Dornier anticipated similar conflict with Embraer’s also recently launched, 40-passenger ERJ-140, which shared a 96-percent commonality rate with its smaller predecessor. Both the ERJ-140 and the Do-328JET’s larger brother, the Do-428JET, were aimed at operators that needed a step-up of about ten seats over the smaller-capacity model upon which they were based.

Although it was initially envisioned as a simple-stretch derivative, it quickly became apparent that to do so would have sacrificed its short-field performance, since it offered higher structural and gross weights and only a higher-capacity engine could remedy this deficiency.

According to Stanley Deal, Fairchild-Dornier’s Vice President for the Do-228, -328, -328JET, and -428JET regional airliners, “Our strategy is to add a member to the -328JET family, offering 44 seats… and giving us enough differential between the (-328JET).”

Incorporating forward and aft section insertions, the aircraft, with a new 83.4-foot overall length, introduced a repositioned Type III emergency exit and a second, aft Type I door, accommodating between 42 and 44 passengers at a 31-inch seat pitch in a “new look” cabin, which was 44.7 feet in length. The enlarged baggage compartment behind it had a 336-square-foot area.

A modified wing, with a 71.5-foot span and 516.7-square-foot area, introduced a 1.7-foot greater chord and rounded wingtips, while enlarged, inboard sections facilitated the installation of wider, 33.2-inch-diameter engines. Bleed air replaced its predecessor’s boot deicing system.

The engines themselves, 7,400 thrust-pound Pratt and Whitney Canada PW308Bs designed for the Hawker Horizon business jet, represented a 25-percent power increase over the PW306Bs of the -328JET and introduced thrust reversers.

With a 44,533-pound maximum take off weight, the type had a 425-knot cruise speed and a 900-nautical mile range, now provisioned with a 1,510-US gallon fuel capacity.

Production entailed wings built in and shipped from San Antonio, Texas; fuselage sections assembled by Aermacchi in Italy; final assembly by Israeli Aircraft Industries (IAI) in Israel and external painting and cabin fittings in Oberpfaffenhofen.

With the cockpit commonality between the -328 and -428JET, and common pilot type ratings, Fairchild-Dornier marketed them as the ideal pair of entry-level regional jets, envisioning them as 19- and 30-seat turboprop replacements, respectively, because of the market growth expected to be created as a result of their pure-jet appeal.

Launch customer Atlantic Coast, with an order for 30, foresaw considerable flexibility in operating both types, able to tailor capacity to demand.

Fairchild-Dornier’s own strategy, however, soon proved less than successful. A weaker than expected sales foundation created by the original Do-328JET and a dramatic increase in nonrecurring development costs-by some $100 million for its larger-capacity successor-began to cast doubts on its ultimate reality, with unanticipated design changes–including a 4.7-inch rearward wing repositioning, the addition of an aerodynamic fairing, the relocation of the undercarriage, and a reduction in weight-causing first deliveries to Atlantic Coast to be rescheduled from the last quarter of 2002 to the first of 2003.

Although a vitally needed cash infusion from investment firms Clayton, Dubilier, and Rice, and Allianz Capital Partners ultimately kept the company afloat, its much-needed pairing sank, changing market conditions and the paltry number of orders rendering the stretched version unfeasible and forcing its cancellation. Orders and options, totaling 113 from Atlantic Coast, Skyway Airlines, and Air Alps were worth $1 billion at the time.

With amended US pilot scope clauses now permitting an increasing number of 50-seat regional jet operations, and the consistent-and costly-redesign from the smaller baseline version, the Do-428JET had become less attractive, and the decision to cease its development came down to the lesser of two evils-namely, leave a hole in Fairchild-Dornier’s product line or one in its profits.

The company won out, but only until its cash ran out, and on April 2, 2002, now mired in $670 million of debt, it was forced to declare bankruptcy, ceasing to exist.

9. AvCraft Aviation:

Following the path of its former Fokker subsidiary, it only lay in waiting for a financial lifeline to resurrect it, and that was cast from Leesburg, Virginia-based AvCraft Aviation, itself founded in 1999 by pilot and now CEO Ben Bartel as an aircraft completion center then located in Akron, Ohio.

Having already been an approved maintenance facility for both the turboprop and turbofan versions of the Do-328, it was a logical step for it to purchase these and the Do-428JET programs, along with five aircraft still on the production line and 18 completed, but unsold ones; the name, type, and production certificates; and the tooling, spares, and parts, as it did on December 20, 2002.

Although it intended to restart the production line after it had sold these 18 aircraft and actually succeeded in placing a few of them with Hainan Airlines of China, it never realized its goal of targeting the type more to the corporate than airline market, following in Fairchild-Dornier’s footsteps and declaring its own bankruptcy in early 2005, thus ending a program full of promise, but short on profits.

[ad_2]

Source by Robert Waldvogel

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on The Fairchild-Dornier Do-328JET and the best private jet companies uk
Embraer LINEAGE 1000E Private Jet Charter EMBRAER LINEAGE 1000E PRIVATE JET HIRE EMBRAER PRIVATE CHARTER MLKJETS2 - Private Flight Transport Choices - Helicopter Hire Or Turboprop Hire?

[ad_1]

There are several different choices available if you are interested in taking private flight transport. Private flights can be used for business, medical and other purposes where it is essential that you get to your destination in a timely manner. Many large corporations own private jets so that their representatives can fly from country to country extremely quickly. If the need for private flight transportation is medical, helicopters are generally used to transport the sick or injured person to a hospital for immediate care. You can also turn to helicopter hire or turboprop hire if you need private transport temporarily.

What to Expect From Private Helicopter Hire

Private helicopter hire is the ideal way to surprise a loved one on a very special occasion. They can also be used to travel to your vacation home or take a weekend trip with friends. All you have to do is get in contact with a hire company that is nearby and let them know your destination. They will provide you with a quote so that you can compare rates with other companies in the area – this way, you can get the best deal possible. Flying by helicopter is an amazing way to see the world below and relax as you make some lasting memories that you will cherish for many years to come. It’s not as expensive as you may think to organise a trip by helicopter. Go online and do some quick research on hire rates today to see for yourself how affordable this exciting experience can be.

Why Choose Turboprop Hire?

Turboprop aircraft hire can provide you with an excellent quick travel resource that you and your guests are sure to enjoy. Once you climb aboard a turboprop aircraft you will soon learn why these modern machines are preferred by many travellers. Turboprops can provide you with a relaxing ride to your destination. They are an excellent choice for corporate air charter, group air charter or air taxi charter flights that will take you over short or medium distances. A Turboprop will normally contain extra safety measures and many great comfort features so that you and your guests will be able to travel in style. Enjoy the air-conditioned area with precise weather radar and anti-icing equipment that will help to ensure that you arrive at your intended destination safely and on time.

With all of these helpful particulars, it seems that no matter which type of flight transportation that you choose – helicopter or turboprop hire – you will have a great experience in a comfortable atmosphere, relaxing in the knowledge that you will arrive at your destination quickly and safely. If you would like to experience flying with someone special, a helicopter may be your best choice since it will provide you with an abundance of scenery. A Turboprop is a great choice for those who want to get from point A to point B in a timely fashion. Whether you choose turboprop or helicopter hire, you are sure to have a comfortable trip providing you with plenty of memories.

[ad_2]

Source by Beth J Whitley

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Private Flight Transport Choices – Helicopter Hire Or Turboprop Hire?
Mlkjets private charter helicopter1 - Adventures In The Trasnmitter - Rise Of The Robo Warriors

[ad_1]

Hello, I go by the name of Zeke and the first thing that you will need to know is what is a transmitter and secondly how I got stuck inside of one.

It’s the year 2046 but in the year 2035, the technology is perfected by the Yoodle Corporation to manipulate dreams to the point where they can begin them, end them, script them and extend them. To put it simpler, whatever one can imagine in real physical life, the Yoodle cooperation can manifest in a dream, and they do. All through a machine called a; reality transmitter. All you have to do is write out your script for whatever you dream you want, program it into the machine, step into the machine, and then experience the best of life in a SUPER VIVID dream.

Please don’t think it’s a dream like the one you had last night where you are barely lucid which you wake up and forget. These dreams are as vivid as real life and feel like real life because to most, they are even realer than life.

For a good while now, Yoodle has had access to information, images, activity and brainwaves of every single person, place or thing that ever came into existence. This is how they are able to represent anything in this program, that allows a user to be anywhere, be anyone, do anything, at any time for as long as they want. Like I said, all one has to do is enter Yoodle’s machine, press a few buttons, and you are off. The machine will then put you to sleep and there starts your journey into the world of your own choosing.

So here we are today in 2045 where most working people no longer take vacations to new physical land. Rather, they choose to spend a week renting a reality transmitter so they can vacation at the home of some celebrity, dead or alive. Or, they will relive time spent with old friends or family members who had left planet earth decades before the present time.

And you can forget about the retirement home, because more than half of retirement age people don’t retire anymore they just work their whole lives, buy a machine, go into this world and live a life where they become young again, until their real body expires, totally eluding the effects of the aging process.

In this world, nearly everybody is striving to accumulate wealth in order to buy one of these machines but these are very expensive machines. Brand new, they retail at 500,000$ dollars, and you may be able to buy one used for 150,000$ to 300,000$. However, most people rent time on them at a Reality Transmitter Center, for anywhere from 50 to 100 dollars per hour.

Anyhow, so that is what the transmitters are all about, and what we do here at Yoodle is to constantly seek to improve their functioning and usability. We create all the transmitters in the world and also have them running on our network.

You might not believe it but we also have a top secret transmitter that affects reality, it is called the main transmitter. If you step into this machine, with a script programmed in, whatever you experience in the machine happens in real life the moment that you experience it. This machine is very powerful and can initiate severe universal consequences, however, only one person in the world has authorization to use this machine, so it is never misused.

So, It was just a regular day at my job here at Yoodle except for the fact that I worked double time today because Ronin is on vacation this week. Also, for the same reason I was left with the task of closing up shop, which I dreaded. I just wanted to get home on time and be with my family.

The day went by fast but just as I was about to turn off the main transmitter, all the lights went out. I could not see a thing, but soon I began to hear what sounded like thousands of footsteps, of what seemed to be a complete army of soldiers entering the room. I stood still fearing for what would come next as I knew this wasn’t a friendly visit. Within a few moments my arms were wrestled behind my back as I was handcuffed and blindfolded. I still couldn’t say a word, but then I heard him speak in a loud booming voice, “get it out now, there is no time to delay!” I then began to hear what sounded like multiples sawing running at the same time. It was now clear what the purpose of their visit was, they were taking the main transmitter.

I stood there and pondered the horror of what these men would do with such a powerful weapon in their possession. They knew that Ronin would have stopped them and this is why they were here now.

Within no time, I heard a loud “clang” sound, which signaled to me that they had freed the main transmitter from its restraints. At that moment I was then dragged out the room, down the stairs and into a waiting vehicle. The vehicle began moving, and driving for what seemed like a day. At some point I fell asleep and seemed to have been carried into a building by these soldiers. I was only woken up by my head and my bottom hitting a cold cement floor. Then I suddenly became hyper-alert when I heard that loud, booming voice again, “so you know how to work this? Let’s get to work now!”, the man then removed the blindfold from before my eyes and what I saw was the manifestation of my worst nightmare.

Ronin was in Brazil with Mandy lying down on a sandy beach overlooking the crystal blue waters when his watch began to beep.Ronan’s Yoodle watch had never beeped before so this was definitely an emergency of the most serious kind.

Ronan sent a message to Zeke, but there was no response. He sent messages to other executives at Yoodle, but the messages all bounced back.

Ronan then turned to Mandy and said, “they got the main transmitter, somebody knew when I was going to be gone and they got the main transmitter.” said Ronan who was looking as though he had just seen a ghost.

“Calm down I’m sure you’ll figure it out,” said Mandy calmy.

“No, I’m not calming down, you don’t understand, we’ve got to get back now!” yelled Ronin as he began rolling up his sandy beach towel.

Once unblindfolded, I saw that I was in a vast one room building, with no windows and in the middle of the building was the main transmitter flanked with 500 U.S. soldiers on every side acting as guards.

“Get up,” said the man as he slapped me across my back.

I stood up. The men then dragged me towards the transmitter and held me before it.

“Here’s the deal Mr. Zeke, you help us accomplish our goals with this thing and you live to see your little family. If you refuse, then you know what will happen,” said the man sternly.

“OK, I will help, just as long as you let me see my family again,” I replied.

“We will run a little test here. I want you to cause an explosion in the Yankeee Stadium right now, during the baseball game,” said the man.

I began to get nervous, I can’t cause all of those lives to be lost. I didn’t know what to do. ” I can’t do that, too many lives will be lost, please don’t do this,” I begged.

“You will do as you are told,’ he said as he walloped me again on the back.

I really had no choice, so I programmed a script into the machine that an airplane would crash right in the middle of Yankee Stadium and sat in the machine.

“Just strap me up and then press that red button”, I said to the man. I sat down in the machine, the man then strapped me in and I was in Yankee Stadium watching the game. The pitcher pitched, it was a strike. The pitcher pitched, it was a ball. The pitcher pitched, then it was a base hit. Then out of nowhere a plane could be seen in the distance flying very low coming in our direction. The game stopped, suddenly everybody was in a frenzy, crazily trying to make their way out of the stadium. When I finally made it out, I heard a loud “crash” and saw smoke rising up and even out of the stadium, and then I woke up.

I stepped out of the machine to see three soldiers looking at their phones and not even paying any attention to me. The man then took out his phone and waited for a little while but nothing happened. “It didn’t work, do it again!” yelled the man towards me as he grabbed my arm.

“No sir, look, a plane crashed in the middle of Yankee stadium but there were no casualties,” said a soldier reading a news update from his phone.

‘NO CASUALTIES?!!” asked the man angrily.

“I’m sorry” I said, bowing my head, awaiting my consequence.

“Take him away, punish him, and bring him back just at the edge of death so we can begin to work our plan,” said the man.

“No problem Mr.C,” said a soldier as he and another dragged me away.

In the meanwhile Ronin was trying to rush back home but was facing the toughest of obstacles. He had made it out of the hotel but when he and Mandy reached the airport, it was another story. They made their way directly to the airport service center and asked to come back home but were denied.

“No, you don’t understand, I need to get back home, the world is in danger,” pleaded Ronin at the airport front desk.

“Danger? What are you? Superman?” laughed the agent.

He continued, “your flight home is not for another four days and you can buy a ticket but no flights are leaving here for another 14 hours.”

“And there’s no other options?” asked Ronin.

“No other options,” said the agent.

“OK,” said a disappointed but resolute Ronin.

Ronin then turned to Mandy and said “Wow, 14 hours, just enough time for whoever has the main transmitter to do God knows what to the world.”

“So what are you going to do?” asked Mandy

“I’ve got to find a way out of here now… ” replied a determined Ronin.

As Ronin and Mandy stood before the flight info display screen, he came up with a plan.

“Mandy, if we can get to Canada, we will be OK,” said Ronin.

“Huh?” asked Mandy.

“Just follow my lead,” said Ronin as he dropped all the luggage and grabbed Mandy’s hand.

‘But what about our luggage and souvenirs?” asked Mandy.

“I’d like to think that saving the world is more important than those things,” said Ronin as he began leading Mandy to gate 45 planning to ignore all calls from anybody who tried to stop him.

When they finally got to gate 45 a voice on the intercom said, “last call for flight 705a to Montreal”. One last elderly man got up to go through the gate but before he could, Mandy and Ronin Burst right through the gate, and into the tunnel and boarded the plane. They quickly found a pair of empty seats towards the back and ducked down low.

While Ronin was trying to make his way back home, I was being beaten. I was been held in a pitch black room, and two soldiers were hitting me up and down with what seemed to be some sort of bamboo stick. All I know is that I was dizzy, couldn’t feel my legs and I could barely see.

“The next time the boss asks something of you, you better deliver it to the last detail,” said one soldier.

“OK… OK,” I said barely being able to speak.

The door opened.

“Enough!” said Mr. C at the top of his lungs.

“Clean him up, and bring him back inside, and I don’t want one speck of blood on my machine,” continued Mr. C.

“Yessir,” said the soldiers in unison.

I thought about how Mr. C had claimed this machine as his own even though he had nothing to do with its creation, and I thought about how it will be all be over with when Ronin finds out about this situation. The latter gave me just a little shiver of hope that helped me to go on.

The soldiers wiped me off with some toilet paper and brought me back in the building and threw me on the floor in front of the main transmitter and Mr. C.

“You don’t look too good, I hope this will be a lesson to you,” said Mr. C sarcastically.

“Yessir,” I said humbly.

“Anyways, enough about you, I’ve got some work to do. I want you to program in me as the king of the world,” said Mr.C.

“I’m sorry, but that won’t work,” I said while looking down and avoiding eye contact.

“WHAT!!!WHY!!!” yelled Mr.C with his eyes bulging and raising his fist towards me.

I quickly responded, “No it’s not my fault, if the machine’s central intelligence system deems your request as something that is immoral or irrational, or unjust then it denies the request. I believe one person making themselves the king of the world would fall under the category of unjust.”

“And blowing up an entire baseball stadium is just?” replied one of the soldiers sarcastically.

“Yes, but no, there may be a reason to blow up an entire baseball stadium,” I said.

“Like what?” asked the soldier.

“Aliens,” I replied.

“And aliens are rational… ” said the soldier in sarcastic tone again.

Mr. C winced.

‘He’s lying sir, just make him write the script and program it,” said the soldier.

“You know you’re right. Get in there Zeke and do as you were told. So I get up off the ground and program in the script for Mr. C to be the king of the world. I then wave the solider to strap me in and send me off. He straps me in and then presses the button to send me off but then the machine makes a “beep” sound and shuts off.

“Try it again!” said Mr. C angrily.

The soldier then presses the button again but the machine makes a “beep” sound again and shuts off.

“Arrgh. If I can’t win the war in one day, I guess I’ll just have to win many small battles until the ultimate victory is mine, ” says Mr. C. angrily.

Mr.C continued, “and get somebody here who has half a brain, I need someone to get into this thing and override this intelligence system.” Mr.C then walked off.

Somehow Ronin and Mandy made it all the way to Montreal, Canada.Now all Ronin had to do was get off the plane and rent a car and then drive back to New York. However, after barging through everybody on their way to being first off the plane, they were met by six policemen in the tunnel.

“Parlez-vous Francais ou Anglais?’ asked one of the policemen to Ronin.

“Huh?” asked Ronin.

“You two are coming with us,” said the policeman.

“Why?” asked Ronin.

“C’mon sir, you know what you did was illegal, and you are now under arrest,” said the policeman.

After a few hours of thinking,Mr.C finally returned. He had come up with a plan.

“Listen up real good Zeke, I want you to put 2 billion dollars in my bank account” said Mr.C.

“Not going to work,” I said nonchalantly.

“You might want to steer away the self-fish motives and think more about the collective,” said one soldier jokingly.

“Shut up everybody! I am the one giving orders and suggestions around here not you! I don’t pay anybody here for advice!” yelled Mr.C.

“The collective,very insightful thoughtful,” said Mr. C quietly as he went and sat down in a corner of the room alone.

After another hour of thoughtful silence, Mr. C thought of another plan.

“OK, Zeke, here it is. Program in an army of robots built along the same lines of the fictional Robocop, who only listen to my command. Half man, half robot, but the highest artificial intelligence. They are to be neither good nor evil but they are here to protect mankind from all threats. Create 50 of them, to be here right now,” said Mr.C.

“OK,” I said,” as I began programming the script into the main transmitter. When I finished I then sat in the transmitter then motioned to the soldier to strap me in. The soldier then strapped me in, and sent me off, as everything in my visual perception went dark.

Then I was back in the chair, Mr. C was in one corner of the building instructing the robo warriors what their job for this evening was. One of the robo warriors then rushed over to my side and said, “look Zeke… “

Then I woke up, or so I thought I did for a moment. I looked to the side of the room and Mr.C was in one corner of the room instructing the robo warriors about what their job for the evening was. One of them then rushed over to my side and said “look Zeke”.

I replied “look at what?”

He then opened his hand and pointed it in the direction of about 250 American soldiers, pressed a button on his chest and suddenly a great wave of fire engulfed them all, leaving nothing but dust in their remains.

The remainng 250 soldiers stood terrified, and not a sound could be heard in the building.Mr. C then began to clap slowly, then a few robo warriors followed him, then a few more, and then within no time, all of the robo warriors were clapping in unision with Mr. C. Mr.C then began to laugh hysterically such a maddening laugh that can only manifest when one comes to the realization that he can no longer be hindered and what you want can ultimately no longer be withheld from your grasp. I sunk my head. What in heaven’s name did I just do?

Now that Mr.C had his Robo Warriors nearly prepared for battle, there was a spring in his step and a certain sparkle in his eye. He approached me while I was sitting in the transmitter, “I am so glad that I have you Zeke, you’ve really made all my dreams come true.” He then kissed me on the cheek.

He then turned to his head engineer who was working on updating the robots systems.

“Install mics and cameras on every one of them,” said Mr.C.

“But sir, that will put us behind another 28 hours. You said that you wanted them ready by today,” said the engineer.

“OK fine, just install them in the general and lieutenants,” said Mr.C compromising.

Two hours later, and after reinstalling and powering up all the robots the head engineer made the great proclamation,

“OK Mr.C we are about ready to hit the streets.”

Within 20 minutes Mr.C had all the robots lined up in single file,Mr.C then stood in front of all the robots and made a speech,

You are the works of my hands and my commands are simple. You are to petrify,terrorize and destroy everything you see until we have control of New York, then the U.S.A. and then the world. Topple every police station, every street gang and just any threat that stands in our way!

Within hours, the Robo Warriors began to light the city a fire, with more fireworks than the fourth of July. The Robo warriors began by taking everybody captive and storing them in abandoned warehouses. Also, every police station in their sight was blown to smithereens. They were now the long arm of the law, and Mr.C was watching on his robot lieutenant’s camera and enjoying every moment of it.

Meanwhile in Montreal, Ronan and Mandy were stuck in a holding cell when they were finally summoned to make a call.

Ronan got his chance first, so he called Zeke but got no answer.

“That’s it, you’re going back in,” said the warden.

“But nobody answered,” said Ronan.

“I don’t care, one call that’s all you get,” said the warden.

“OK, so can he use my call since were together?” asked Mandy.

The warden paused then said “OK fine, one more call, then nothing more from you two for the rest of the night.”

“OK,” said Ronan as he dialed again gingerly.

This time Ronan called the Yoodle emergency Security manager Paul McGwire.He was one of a handful of people who knew about the main transmitter. If there was anybody who could help them now, it was Paul.

“Ronan where are you?’ asked Paul.

“Me and Mandy are locked up in some jail here in Montreal, Canada,” said Ronan.

“Wait… what? How?” asked Paul.

“Well we were on vacation and learnt that the main transmitter was stolen… ” said Ronan nonchalantly.

“Wait… what? How????!!!!!!!” asked Paul now raising his voice.

“Yup, what have you been underneath a rock or something?” asked Ronan.

Paul paused for a moment, possibly looking at a news update then says, “I guess that would explain the appearance of these robots destroying New York city.

“Yup,” said Ronan.

“Hold on,” said Paul as he went away from the phone for a minute.

“I can’t get a hold of Zeke, I’m figuring that whoever got him, has also got the transmitter,” continued Paul.

“Just as I thought! The main transmitter wouldn’t create anything unless it was built to be good. The only way the mastermind behind this can win is by using the good to commit evil.Deep down, these robots know the good that they need to be doing, it’s just to draw it out of them.

“Well, there’s nobody better to do it than you Ronan,” said Paul.

“I’m gonna head over there the moment that I get out,” said Ronan.

“OK, we’ll get you two first class tickets home, just head to the Trudeau airport, let me talk to the warden,” said Paul.

“OK, thanks,” said Ronan motioning then handing the phone to the warden.

Paul spent about 30 seconds speaking to the warden before he hung up the phone. The warden then turned to Ronan and Mandy and said, “Why didn’t you say that you work for Yoodle.You two are free to go.”

At 2 a.m. the next morning (6 hours later), Ronan finally made his way to an area of Brooklyn New York where the robots were preparing to firebomb the whole burrough.

Luckily the police had intercepted them and were trying to intervene, but it was to no avail. It was now a standoff between a gang of the robots and a whole entire police station.

They were all standing across a busy highway with about 20 robots on one side, and 50 policemen lined up on the other side. All parties had their weapons drawn.

Ronan made his way to the police chief who was standing at one end of the line and offered up some friendly advice,

“I know something that can make our lives dealing with these robots easier,” said Ronan.

“Which is?” asked the intensly curious policeman.

“Well, you might not believe this but they aren’t evil at all. Deep down they have a heart that works just like ours. You just have to know how to communicate to their core,” said Ronan.

“Are you saying that you have to reason with these inhumane, merciless, terrorists?” asked the frustrated policeman.

“Yes,” said Ronan.

“OK, I’m definantly not the man for the job, they just blew up 100 plus of my coworkers without even winking an eye,” said the policeman.

“OK I’ll handle this,” said Ronan assuredly.

“As you wish,” said the policeman as he motioned to his men.

Ronan then crossed the barrier with his hands in the air. But the Robots didn’t lower any weapons.

“Who among you is the leader?” yelled Ronan as he inched closer to the robots.

“Mr.C is our master and leader, Mr.C is our master and leader” replied the robots in unison.

Ronin paused for a moment at the utterance of Mr.C’s name. The last he had heard of Mr.C, he was dead. Now he is the one commandeering these robotic soldiers? This must mean he has the main transmitter, or he is in league with somebody who has it. The mission was now simple, find Mr.C, find the main transmitter. The task of finding the head robot in charge, not so simple.

“OK, who among you is the general?” asked Ronan.

“Number 10000 cc is our general, number 10000 cc is our general,” said the robots in unison.

“Can you please call him for me!” yelled Ronan.

One of the robots pressed a button and within 30 seconds an 8 foot 3 inches tall robot enters the picture on a silver mechanical horse. He descends the horse and then walks and stands before Ronin. He then grabs Ronin’s neck roughly.

Ronan gasped then said, “it’s not my intent to engage in combat with you… I only want to know the reason you are doing what you are doing”

“We are loyal soldiers who are only doing the work of our master, Mr.C. He has tasked us with the moral cleansing of the nation, and this is exactly what we are doing,” said 10000 cc in a booming robotic voice as he let go of Ronan’s neck.

“But don’t you see that what you are doing is wrong?” asked Ronan.

“Wrong?”asked 10000 cc.

“You are traumatizing, imprisoning and killing innocent people. You are a destroying public and private property,” said Ronan.

“How?” asked 10000 cc really pondering Ronan’s statement.

At the same time Mr.C began looking and listening into 10000 cc’s video feed. “Who is that talking to my general? And why isn’t he killing him?” asked Mr.C frantically to his head engineer who was standing at a desk nearby. The engineer didn’t reply.

Mr.C looked closer into the camera. “Is that… Is that Ronan meddling in my business again?” continued Mr.C.

“All of the people you have victimized were innocent people, they did nothing wrong but you were so caught up Mr.C’s mission that you forgot to think for yourself,” said Ronan sincerely.

Mr.C could then be heard over 10000 cc”s internal mic, “Ronan shut up. 10000 cc don’t listen to him, blast him right now 10000 cc you useless piece of metal,” said Mr.C sternly.

“Yes sir,” said 10000 cc as he raised his Robotic right arm while allowing for the end of a 12 gage shotgun to replace his stiff metal fist.

10000 cc then paused.

Ronan asked again, “Do you not see that what you’re doing is wrong? Don’t you?”

“Yes, we do,” said 10000 cc. 10000 cc then pressed a grey button to the side of his heart.

“We will all now self-destruct. It is the right thing to do and we have already done so much wrong. We were created to do good and failed to do good. Thank you sir Ro-nan,” said 10000 cc. 10000 cc then stuck his robotic hand out to shake as Ronan shook his hand. All of the robots then began to dismantle themselves simultaneously, gradually leaving thousands of pieces of formless metal in their stead.

“WHAT IN THE… HAPPENED?” yelled Mr.C while watching his dream become a nightmare. “My precious robots… they are all gone,” he cried.

The head engineer then walked over to Mr.C and said, “Sir if I may interject you were the one who asked for them to have high ultra artificial intelligence. In the human mind, if one has high artificial intelligence, when confronted with a moral situation where they are required to choose the right or the wrong, they will always choose right, and these beings chose the right.”

Mr. C did not respond. He just peered into the distance angrily then he uttered, “If dominion over the world demands persistence, then persistence is what it will get.”

“Zekeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee,” yelled Mr.C at the top of his lungs.

[ad_2]

Source by Dale Pindling

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Adventures In The Trasnmitter – Rise Of The Robo Warriors
Embraer LINEAGE 1000E Private Jet Charter EMBRAER LINEAGE 1000E PRIVATE JET HIRE EMBRAER PRIVATE CHARTER MLKJETS12 - Perks of Helicopter Charter Services: Why It's Worth It

[ad_1]

Imagine your special occasion being more special when you turn up to your wedding or lunch on the helicopter. Stand out from others in terms of style by arriving in a helicopter and make an impact on your date, business partners, friends or classmates. When you touch down in a helicopter, it brings out mix feelings of happiness and adrenaline rush. It would be matchless to compare the thrill of helicopter flight with other modes of transport. The rotors thudding overhead and the unique feeling of lifting off vertically are an experience which you may never have and may never experience traveling by any other air based transport.

Helicopter Charter is Worth Every Penny

There can be many reasons to take helicopter charter service but the most prominent will be because it helicopter journey will make your travel a memorable experience. The helicopter flight is an adventure that most find to be thrilling. Making use of helicopter flights can be a great way to make an occasion special and create memories that will make a special day all the more special.

Sight-Seeing Paradise

Helicopters fly at a certain height which makes them so enchanting for sight-seeing tours. They are not permitted to fly above aeroplanes so from that height it gives a perfect view when looked out of the window and sees the world below.

Convenience that Matters

Helicopter helps in reducing the travelling time as it doesn’t have to make you go through the whole process of checking in and waiting for two hours of for flight. This can be a major benefit to any business because everyone knows that time equals money. It’s also a lot less stressful if you are going away for leisure because it leaves you with more time to actually enjoy your holiday. The greatest advantages of a helicopter charter regardless of whether you are using for business or leisure is the fact that it eliminates overnight stops. This not only creates inconvenience, but they also create high costs so anything making you get rid of these things is bound to be a good thing.

Private and Cosy

Travelling by helicopter charter gives you more privacy than flying with hundreds of other people on a normal aeroplane. This gives you a freedom of doing whatever you want; you can conduct a business meeting or simply sit there and relax. You can do this without any interruptions whatsoever. This level of privacy is impossible to get on a normal plane because there are always so many other people flying at the same time.

Reach Out to the Places Where You Cannot Go with Jet Planes

If you are planning to visit a hilly area or a place which do not have landing space for airplanes, the helicopter is a simple and convenient option. A trip to Vaishno Devi or other mountainous regions like Sikkim is better made with a helicopter.

The charter helicopters are intelligently designed and highly adaptable to address a range of individual requirements, their potential provide access to remote areas and city centres, with the ability to land at helipads, hotels and private properties, where the space allows, making them one of the most flexible and suitable aircraft types for travel to remote, crowded or otherwise difficult to reach destinations.

[ad_2]

Source by Shiv K Gupta

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Perks of Helicopter Charter Services: Why It’s Worth It
The best destinations of private jet charter for charter a jet on 20201 - Why Business Jets Beat Going Commercial

[ad_1]

Commercial travel has come a long way. One upon a time it meant getting into a stagecoach and making a long and arduous trek across the country. Trains soon took over and today they are faster than ever before. Thanks to the Wright Brothers way back when, air travel ‘took flight’ and we have never looked back.

At any given time there are thousands of people on thousands of airplanes going to destinations all over the globe. Airports are plentiful, screening and security are in place and baggage claims are buzzing each and every day as people make their way to and from places for work and pleasure alike. Flying to your destination on a commercial airline is great; you get where you are going fast and can work en route. What is even better for the work traveller? Chartering a business jet of your very own.

Some companies already have their own jets and the executive can come and go as they please. For others, charter is the way to go and once they have chartered, they may never go back to commercial.

One great thing about chartering a business jet is the fact you can make your own schedule. You don’t have to arrive at the airport for an international flight hours before takeoff, you simply have more time to prepare for your flight and your trip. Security doesn’t take as long when there aren’t thousands of people to process and there can never be the worry of lost baggage. Take it on board yourself, and stow it accordingly.

But perhaps the best perk of going private is the fact you can choose a jet specifically for your needs. The latest gadgets, information and entertainment systems are on board and many allow you to design the cabin in any way that you wish. If you want to work en route, you can switch the seating to a more work friendly look. Just want to relax? You can do that too, in oversized comfortable chairs that offer more head, shoulder and leg room than you’d ever enjoy on a commercial flight.

Large, small, prop or not, business jets are a great way to get to your next important out of town meeting. You arrive well rested, without having wasted a lot of time at an airport and have had your schedule adhered to your way. What more could you ask from your transportation?

[ad_2]

Source by Amanda J Hales

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Why Business Jets Beat Going Commercial
Embraer LEGACY 650E Private Jet Charter EMBRAER LEGACY 650E PRIVATE JET HIRE EMBRAER PRIVATE CHARTER MLKJETS5 - Hassle-Free Money-Saving Travel Tips

[ad_1]

Everyone knows that you can have a wonderful time with family and friends when you go on vacation or travel to a new and distant spot. However, sometimes disaster can arise when things don’t go quite as planned or anticipated. Here are some tips and hints that would help ensure that your getaway is affordable and trouble-free.

AIRFARES

Be flexible. When booking your flight, don’t tell the reservation agent your travel dates up-front. Instead, ask the agent to check every fare for the itinerary you want within a range of dates. Ask for the cheapest fares first. If you’re flexible, you may be able to cut ticket costs.

Buy tickets after midnight on Tuesday in the time zone where the airline is based. Generally, airlines start airfare sales late on Friday, and competing airlines match the lower fares. They stop matching lower fares usually on Monday. Customers who book low fares are given 24 hours to purchase the tickets. All low fares that were booked on Monday but not purchased by midnight Tuesday are available for sale at that time.

HOTELS

Make hotel reservation at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday. You’ll have a better chance of getting a low-rate from a front-desk clerk who understands that an unsold room is lost revenue. Call the hotel in the city you wish to visit directly. Don’t call the 800-number – you’re likely to reach a national reservation clerk.

Request weekend rates. At some hotels, weekend rates are one-third of the regular rates. If you plan to stay through the week, ask to have the cheaper weekend rate extended. Make sure that the price you are quoted reflects hidden costs, such as resort fees and taxes.

Consider alternative lodging. Many hostels now offer private rooms for $25.00 to $160.00 a night. For more information, log on to Hostelling International USA at [http://www.huisa.org]. Also, some colleges rent their dorm rooms at reasonable prices during vacation periods.

CRUISES

Book a cruise at the last minute. Frequently, vessels sail with empty berths. Many routes regularly have more berths than passengers. If you’re flexible, you could get great last-minute packages. Check with a travel agent or consolidator. Be aware that cruise lines now charge for extras that were previously included in packages, such as some recreational activities.

RENTAL CARS

Contact the local rental location. Local operators can offer deals to reduce a temporary surplus or base on the local market. If you call the national toll-free number to make a reservation, you may not get the best price or the best car.

Whenever possible, avoid renting at airport lots, which can be more expensive than in-city ones. Compare local and national rates at RentalCars.com. Make sure you pay only for what you want and need. Here are some things to keep in mind when renting a car.

Extra insurance –
Your personal auto insurance may include rentals and the credit card company may provide coverage for damage to rental cars, but these may still not be enough. To maximize your coverage:

– Make sure you have sufficient collision and comprehensive coverage on your auto policy.

– Pay for the rental car with a credit card that provides additional coverage.

– Check for rental car companies that have an agreement with your insurance carrier to provide additional coverage. For example, USAA offers additional coverage for Avis, Budget, and Hertz cars in most locations in the United States.

Spare drivers –

Most companies let another person drive the car for free. But some charge extra for every other person who drives the car, according to the Federal Trade Commission. Ask before you reserve. Breaking the rules could affect your insurance protection. If your spouse has an accident, you may have to pay for the repairs out of your pocket.

Gassing up –

When returning the car, you have the option of filling it up yourself, prepaying for a full tank at a fixed per-gallon rate, or paying a refueling fee when you return with less fuel than you started with. Refueling fees can be extremely high. You might get a better rate if you fill it up yourself.

Return policy
– If at all possible, return it where you picked it up, or be ready to pay more. Drop-off charge is based on the distance between pick up and drop-off point.

Late fees –
Return the car on time. Most rental agencies give you a one-hour grace period, but don’t test it. Returning it late can lead to high overtime charges.

AUTOMOBILE TRIPS

The AAA makes the “summer driving season” sound so compulsory, as if something horrible will happen to you if you don’t clock a certain number of interstate miles by Labor Day. If you love taking road trips, here are some tips to make your trip smoother.

Leave early, stay late. To avoid peak traffic, especially during holidays, leave a day earlier than other travelers, and return a day earlier or a day later.

Plan ahead.

Know your route and have an alternative plan in case of heavy traffic or road closure. Carry a vehicle safety/emergency kit. Make sure your car is in top condition. Long summer travel puts a lot of stress on a car. Get a pre-trip checkup.

Tires should have sufficient treads. If you don’t know what to look for, have a mechanic check the entire width of your tire including the rims.

Brakes should be checked, usually by having a mechanic take off all four wheels. Note the thickness of the brake linings and shoes. The calipers, devices that cause friction as you press the brake pad, and the rubber hydraulic lines should also be checked.

Steering components, such as the front end and steering-related parts, including the ball joints and bushings, should be examined.

Take your time.

“It’s better late than sorry.” Plan extra time and arrive safely. Take breaks for 15 to 20 minutes every few hours and stretch your legs. Don’t forget to drink plenty of fluids. Don’t eat and run. Take a walk after eating to get your blood flowing.

When traveling with children, pack toys, books, games and snacks within reach to keep them occupied. Try a recorded story or sing-along. Also try these two tips. Hang a bag over the back of the front passenger seat to hold toys, bottles, crayons and other favorite items. Give older children maps of the United States and pencils, markers or pens. Then as you drive, they can look

[ad_2]

Source by Syble James

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Hassle-Free Money-Saving Travel Tips
The best selection of private jet charter for charter a jet on 20204 - The History of BWIA British West Indian Airways

[ad_1]

Of the four pure-jet Caribbean carriers-Air Aruba, Air Jamaica, ALM Antillean Airlines, and BWIA among them-the latter was both the largest and the only one to operate the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar.

The airline’s roots stretched far-across the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, to New Zealand, at least in terms of the nationality of its founder, Lowell Yerex, a World War I fighter pilot who planted its seed in Trinidad in 1939 so that he could re-instate what had become suspended air service to Barbados. Links were re-established on November 27 of the following year with a single Lockheed L-18 Lodestar, registered VP-TAE. Tobago was also served thrice weekly.

Although the Second World War usually thwarted commercial airline operations, they expanded in the Caribbean. The 1942 acquisition of two Lockheed L-14 Electras enabled it to operate charter flights to American military bases there.

Transformed, the following year, into a public limited company, and infused with financial plasma from the British government, it purchased three, commercially converted Hudson bombers, while completion of many small Caribbean island air fields enabled it to spread its wings to Grenada and the Dominican Republic, as well as to Guyana in South America.

No longer hampered by war, it acquired four more suitably purposed Lodestars in 1945.

An ownership change two years later, to British South American Airways (BSAA), merited the temporary nomenclature of British International Airways, a BSAA subsidiary, although it reverted to its original British West Indian Airways title on June 24, 1948. In order to cater to increased demand, it acquired five 24-passenger Vickers Viking airliners, which featured twin piston airscrews and dual vertical tails and rested on tail wheels.

Another ownership change occurred the following year, when British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) amalgamated BSAA into it, transforming BWIA itself into a subsidiary. Ceded several routes north of Jamaica from parent BOAC, which monetarily supported its expansion, it replaced its L-18 Lodestars with three 28-seat Douglas Dakotas, but even these proved inadequate for its ambitious expansion plans.

Transitioning from piston to turboprop technology, it acquired four Vickers V.700 Viscounts, powered by Rolls Royce Dart engines,, able to offer passengers greater speed and comfort as of 1955.

Because these aircraft were too large to serve the Leeward Islands, BWIA, holding the controlling interest, formed Leeward Island Air Transport (LIAT), operating more short strip-suitable equipment.

Spreading its wings across the Atlantic in 1960 with leased, quad-engine Bristol Britannias, BWIA inaugurated service to Jamaica and Barbados from London with an intermediate stop in New York.

Yet a third ownership change, albeit after lengthy negotiations, occurred the following year, on November 1, 1961, when the government of Trinidad and Tobago purchased 90 percent of BWIA from BOAC.

“British West Indian Airways is conceived by the government of Trinidad and Tobago as a national carrier for the West Indian area as a whole, and steps are now being taken to implement this policy,” according to Dr. Eric Williams, then Premier of Barbados.

A Boeing 707, the carrier’s first pure-jet type, was chartered from BOAC that year to replace the Bristol Britannia on the transatlantic route, and by 1965, it had also substituted Boeing 727-100″Sunjets” for its Viscounts on US services to Miami and New York.

Canada factored into the route system on May 3, 1969, when BWIA had been granted a temporary license to operate a Trinidad-Barbados-Antigua-Toronto sector.

Standardizing on Boeing 707 aircraft in 1971, BWIA was able to offer a 45-percent increase in seat capacity.

“This was also a year of unprecedented growth in the charter market,” according to the “Corporate Timeline” (BWIA International Airways, Corporate Communication Department, October 1, 1996). “BWIA tripled the number of charters into the United Kingdom from eight to 24, and continued to improve on Miami services with the continuation of the trend of faster services, coupled with increased capacity.”

Flight schedules from the Eastern Caribbean to New York and Toronto were also improved.

A milestone occurred on April 5, 1974, when it inaugurated a weekly, scheduled service to London-Heathrow, a considerable improvement over the prior private charter flight to Gatwick.

An order for a single Douglas DC-9-30CF Convertible Freighter and four stretched fuselage DC-9-50s materialized four years later, on June 28, when it took delivery of the first aircraft.

A January 1, 1980 merger with Trinidad and Tobago Air Services, which had been formed six years earlier to operate high frequency shuttle flights between the two cities inherent in its designation, enabled it to transform itself into a single domestic, Caribbean, and intercontinental carrier.

The first of four L-1011-500s, delivered on January 29 of that year, enabled it to offer both a widebody type for the first time and a 31-percent capacity increase over the 707s it replaced on the London route two months later, on March 28. With delivery of the fourth aircraft in 1982, the 707s were altogether removed from the fleet and entirely replaced with TriStars to New York, Toronto, London, Manchester, Frankfurt, and Zurich.

Expansion continued to Martinique with Hawker Siddeley HS.748 turboprops and Baltimore with pure-jet aircraft.

1985 was marked with the delivery of the first of an eventual nine MD-83s, configured with 12 business and 108 coach seats, progressively replacing the DC-9-50s on some Miami sectors.

Employing 2,032 system-wide personnel by 1987, BWIA operated four DC-9-50s, three MD-83s, and four L-1011-500s.

Privatized, the Caribbean carrier, which was incorporated as BWIA International Airways, Limited, on February 15, 1995, was now listed on the Trinidad and Tobago Stock Exchange.

The 21st century brought significant changes and declines. A new light green and blue steel pin drum livery, for instance, symbolizing Tobago, was introduced in 2000, replacing the long-standing gold, yellow, and white one, while a fleet modernization program was implemented. Two quad-engine Airbus A-340-300s, intended as TriStar 500 replacements, were ordered, encompassing aircraft 9Y-JIL with 40 business and 215 coach and 9Y-TJN with 32 business and 252 coach seats.

Although it reversed its decision to replace its MD-83s with A-321-100s on Caribbean and North American routes, in the event it took delivery of two, registered 9Y-BWA and -BWB, before standardizing on Boeing 737-800s, which accommodated 16 business and 138 economy passengers.

Although, as occurs with any carrier, its route system varied throughout the years with the addition and removal of destinations, it served Antigua, Barbados, Jamaica, Grand Cayman, St. Lucia, St. Maarten, Trinidad, and Tobago in the Caribbean; Guyana, Suriname, and Venezuela in South America; New and Miami in the US; Toronto in Canada; and London, Manchester, and Frankfurt in Europe from primary Trinidad and secondary Barbados flight bases.

While it reached its peak of operating some 660 weekly flights and carrying 1.4 million passengers in 2003, profitability often failed to parallel these lofty figures, necessitating multiple Trinidad and Tobago government infusions to ensure its continued financial lift.

Three years later, however, the failure of unions to agree on new contract terms resulted in the bankruptcy of the national carrier of Trinidad and Tobago after 66 years of operation.

From its ashes rose state-owned, BWIA-replacing Caribbean Airlines on September 27, 2006 with a fleet of six 737-800s and a single A-340-300.

Sources:

“Corporate Timeline,” BWIA International Airways, Limited, Corporate Communications Department, October 1, 1996.

[ad_2]

Source by Robert Waldvogel

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on The History of BWIA British West Indian Airways
Embraer LINEAGE 1000E Private Jet Charter EMBRAER LINEAGE 1000E PRIVATE JET HIRE EMBRAER PRIVATE CHARTER MLKJETS - Aircraft Cleaning To Get Easier In The Future - Plane Washing And Debugging

[ad_1]

Let’s face it, it’s hard to get bugs off the leading edges of helicopter blades, corporate jet leading edges and aircraft tail sections. It’s the aircraft cleaner’s worst nightmare to see an aircraft sitting in the sun while all those crushed bug guts bake into the paint. Yes, in an aircraft cleaners dreams our nightmares are Bugs, Bugs and more Bugs, and yes, the occasional bird strike too, guts everywhere, that’s simply no fun. Now then, there is a new method and technology being developed which might be a god’s send for us plane washers. So, let’s discuss this shall we?

There was an interesting article in NASA Tech Briefs recently (September 2017 Issue) titled; “Aircraft Cleaning To Get Easier In The Future – Plane Washing And Debugging,” which noted:

“NASA Langley Research Center, in collaboration with ATK Space Systems, has developed a method to reduce insect adhesion on metallic substrates, polymeric materials, engineering plastics, and other surfaces. The method topographically modifies a surface using laser ablation patterning followed by chemical modification of the surface. This innovation was originally developed to enhance aircraft laminar flow by preventing insect residue buildup, but the method provides a permanent solution for any application requiring insect adhesion mitigation as well as adhesion prevention of other typical environmental contaminants.”

Although this new technology method helps the laminar airflow over the wings, blades, airfoils and control surfaces for better aircraft performance, lower stall speeds and overall safety, the benefits for the aircraft cleaning company employees is golden. It means we will use fewer chemicals to remove the bugs, thus, taking off less wax meaning no need to recoat so often. It also means less elbow grease spent debugging. Fewer man (woman) hours means more profit and less cost, all contributing to a more successful aviation services company.

When I discussed this with the researchers, they’d never considered the benefits to aircraft cleaning companies, which quite frankly surprised me, as it is a huge problem. Scraping bugs also means removing a little paint coating each time, eventually costing the aircraft owner in expensive repaints or touch ups on the leading edges of all surfaces. My questions to all this is how tough is this new method? The researchers assured me it is just as tough as the paint surfaces, if not better, than most aircraft use now, perhaps much longer lasting too.

What other applications would this technology be good for? How about Wind Turbine Blades, allowing less frequency of cleaning, or how about bullet trains allowing for better airflow lessening wind resistance which at the higher speeds really matters as the coefficient of drag curve starts to head vertical. Think on this, especially if cleaning off bug guts is something that really bugs you as much as it does me.

[ad_2]

Source by Lance Winslow

Categories : DESTINATIONS, EMBRAER, FALCON, GULFSTREAM, HAWKER, JET NEWS, LARGE SIZE BODY JETS, LIGHT SIZE BODY JETS, MEDIUM SIZE BODY JETS, PRIVATE JET AFRICA, PRIVATE JET ASIA, PRIVATE JET AUSTRALIA, PRIVATE JET AVIONICS, PRIVATE JET BUILDER, PRIVATE JET CHARTER, PRIVATE JET CHATER, PRIVATE JET EUROPE, PRIVATE JET MAINTENANCE, PRIVATE JET MIDDLE EAST, PRIVATE JET SOUTH AMERICA, PRIVATE JET TIPS, PRIVATE JET USA, PRIVATE JETS DEALS, TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSPACIFIC
Posted by narrapresley
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on Aircraft Cleaning To Get Easier In The Future – Plane Washing And Debugging

Merci de nous contacter pour cette Moto, nous vous répondrons dans les plus brefs delais.

[contact-form-7 id="118" title="Contacter nous Moto Page"]

Merci de nous contacter pour votre devis Moto, nous vous répondrons dans les plus brefs delais.

[contact-form-7 id="5" title="Devis-Pop-up"]
TOP