National Transportation Safety Board: Fatalities rose in 2008 for air taxi, tour flights

April 2, 2009 at 4:57 pm

(Source: Associated Press via Yahoo! Finance)

 

Safety board says fatal accidents were up sharply in 2008 for air taxi, medical, tour flights

WASHINGTON (AP) — There was a spike last year in deaths from crashes of air medical, air taxi and tour flights, federal safety officials said Thursday.

The National Transportation Safety Board said there were 56 so-called on-demand flight accidents in which 66 people were killed in 2008. That’s the highest number of fatalities for such flights in eight years and an increase of 13 deaths over 2007. The on-demand accident rate was 1.52 accidents per 100,000 flight hours, virtually unchanged from the previous year.

The board held a public hearing earlier this year examining the safety practices of the air medical helicopter industry. Fifteen people were killed in four medical helicopter crashes in 2008.

Major U.S. airlines, however, suffered no accident fatalities in 2008 for the second consecutive year despite carrying 753 million passengers on more than 10.8 million flights, the NTSB said. Major airlines experienced 28 accidents last year, the same as 2007.

 Commuter airlines, which typically fly smaller turboprop planes, also didn’t have any accident fatalities despite making 581,000 flights last year, the board said. However, there were seven commuter airline accidents in 2008, up three from the previous year.

There were 495 people killed — one fewer than the previous year — in general aviation accidents in 2008, the board said. General aviation includes private and corporate planes.

Acting NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker said the aviation safety record for 2008 was mixed.  Click here to access today’s press release and interesting statistical tables.

Table 1. Accidents, Fatalities, and Rates, 2008 Preliminary Statistics
U.S. Aviation
  Accidents Fatalities Flight Hours Departures Accidents per 100,000 Flight Hours Accidentsper 100,000 Departures
All Fatal Total Aboard All Fatal All Fatal
U.S. air carriers operating under 14 CFR 121
– Scheduled 20 0 0 0 18,730,000 10,597,000 0.107 0.189
– Nonscheduled 8 2 3 1 621,000 190,000 1.288 0.322 4.211 1.053
U.S. air carriers operating under 14 CFR 135
– Commuter 7 0 0 0 290,400 581,000 2.410 1.205
– On-Demand 56 19 66 66 3,673,000 1.52 0.52
U.S. general aviation 1,559 275 495 486 21,931,000 7.11 1.25
U.S. civil aviation 1,649 296 564 553
Other accidents in the U.S.
– Foreign registered aircraft 6 4 7 7
– Unregistered aircraft 7 1 1 1

British Virgin disappoints Indian customer! The world’s best passenger complaint letter lands on Richard Branson’s desk

March 30, 2009 at 11:17 am

(Source: Telegraph, UK)

A complaint letter sent to Sir Richard Branson is considered by many to be the world’s funniest passenger complaint letter.

Starter, complaint letter, Virgin

REF: Mumbai to Heathrow 7th December 2008

I love the Virgin brand, I really do which is why I continue to use it despite a series of unfortunate incidents over the last few years. This latest incident takes the biscuit.

Ironically, by the end of the flight I would have gladly paid over a thousand rupees for a single biscuit following the culinary journey of hell I was subjected to at thehands of your corporation.

Look at this Richard. Just look at it: [see image 1, above].

I imagine the same questions are racing through your brilliant mind as were racing through mine on that fateful day. What is this? Why have I been given it? What have I done to deserve this? And, which one is the starter, which one is the desert?

You don’t get to a position like yours Richard with anything less than a generous sprinkling of observational power so I KNOW you will have spotted the tomato next to the two yellow shafts of sponge on the left. Yes, it’s next to the sponge shaft without the green paste. That’s got to be the clue hasn’t it. No sane person would serve a desert with a tomato would they. Well answer me this Richard, what sort of animal would serve a desert with peas in: [see image 2, above].

I know it looks like a baaji but it’s in custard Richard, custard. It must be the pudding. Well you’ll be fascinated to hear that it wasn’t custard. It was a sour gel with a clear oil on top. It’s only redeeming feature was that it managed to be so alien to my palette that it took away the taste of the curry emanating from our miscellaneous central cuboid of beige matter. Perhaps the meal on the left might be the desert after all.

Anyway, this is all irrelevant at the moment. I was raised strictly but neatly by my parents and if they knew I had started desert before the main course, a sponge shaft would be the least of my worries. So lets peel back the tin-foil on the main dish and see what’s on offer.

I’ll try and explain how this felt. Imagine being a twelve year old boy Richard. Now imagine it’s Christmas morning and you’re sat their with your final present to open. It’s a big one, and you know what it is. It’s that Goodmans stereo you picked out the catalogue and wrote to Santa about.

Click here read the rest of this interesting letter and also to view the images cited in the letter. 

Flying low! Global airline passenger traffic fell 10 percent in Feb 2009

March 26, 2009 at 5:22 pm

(Source: Bloomberg & Livemint.com)

Global airline passenger traffic fell 10 percent last month, the steepest decline since the recession began, led by a plunge in long-haul travel.

The decline, gathering pace from a 5.6 percent fall in year-on-year traffic in January, included a 12.8 percent reduction in passengers flown by Asia-Pacific carriers and a 12 percent drop among North American airlines, the International Air Transport Association said today in a statement.

While passenger numbers continued to deteriorate, the pace of declines in the freight market leveled out. International freight volumes were down 22.1 percent from a year ago, compared with drops of 23.2 percent drop in January and 22.6 percent in December, IATA said.

:  “Freight traffic, which began its decline in June 2008 before passenger markets were hit, has now had three consecutive months in the minus 22 to minus 23% range,” IATA added, says the Livemint.com (WSJ) article.

Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s director general, said: “We may have found a bottom to the freight decline, but the magnitude of the drop means that it will take time to recover.”  But even as freight traffic stabilises, airlines are now feeling the squeeze in passenger traffic.
Click here or here to read the entire article.

Charles Darwin loses (again to a Brit)! Driver Gets charged with careless driving as BMW gets stuck on cliff edge following satellite navigation

March 25, 2009 at 6:56 pm

(Source: Jalopnik); Pictures: The Mirror)

The 43-year old Brit was heading for a friends home near Todmorden, West Yorks when the system took him down a steep and treacherous footpath. His mindless progress stopped as his car hit a fence planted at the edge of a 100 ft cliff which Jones would have probably happily driven off if his navi had told him to. On his He-Man scale feat of stupidity, Robert said, “I just trusted the satnav. It kept insisting that the path was a road even as it was getting narrower and steeper. I rely on my satnav, I couldn’t do without it for my job. I guess I’m lucky the car didn’t slip all the way over the edge. But it has been a bit of a nightmare.”

Locals gathered during the nine hours it took for a crew to pull the car from its predicament, no-doubt snickering at the idiot in the BMW the entire time.

Click here to read the entire Jalopnik article.

Note:  The source article on the British Daily, The Mirror, reports that it is not the first time our British drivers had many such disastrous affairs with Satellite Navigation. It has compiled the Top 10 Sat-Nav disasters on its website and it is worth reading it.

Mars Institute to drive HUMMER-based rover through Northwest Passage

March 20, 2009 at 6:56 pm

(Source: Autobloggreen; Scientific American)

It might seem a bit paradoxical to drive a HUMMER for 1,200 miles across the thin ice of the Northwest Passage with the goal of investigating climate change in the arctic circle, but that’s exactly what a crew from the Mars Institute is planning to do. The team will be charting the thickness of the ice as it moves at about 12 miles per hour over the surface, but the information gathered during the trek will really just be a bonus. The team’s first priority will be to see how the HUMMER-based rover fares in these harsh conditions. At some point, the Mars Institute hopes that this data will prove useful in helping NASA design human-toting vehicles that will be able to traverse the surface of Mars.
The Scientific American reports :  The trip using a modified armored Humvee vehicle will provide comprehensive data about the thickness of winter ice in the waterway through Canada’s high Arctic, said Pascal Lee, chairman of Mars Institute and leader of the expedition.  (Above Image on Right:  An ice-free Northwest Passage seen in this handout satellite photo from NASA taken in Sept. 2007. Photograph courtesy: Vancouver Sun via Terra Satellite/NASA, Reuters)

The scientists also hope to learn more about what happens to the microbes left behind by humans as they explore remote areas, amid concerns from some scientists about the detrimental impact of such journeys in space.

Click here to read the entire Autoblog article.

Booking your air tickets? Now, TSA wants to know your birth date and gender!

March 20, 2009 at 4:43 pm

(Source: Yahoo Travel;  Photo Coutesy: TSA)

 TSA Adds a New Twist to Passenger Screening

Just when you thought you had the Transportation Security Administration rules all figured out, here comes a new procedure. Starting sometime in the next few months, you’ll have to provide your birth date and gender whenever you buy an airplane ticket. The TSA is giving the airlines some time to change their websites and retrain their phone-reservations agents to be able to implement the agency’s new Secure Flight program. Expect the changes on domestic flights by this summer.

The change is supposed to help reduce the number of Americans who are misidentified as individuals on the agency’s no-fly and “selectee-for-further-inspection” watch lists. Up until now, airlines have done the work of vetting their passenger manifests for suspect names, but under the new program, the TSA assumes the job of monitoring watch lists full-time and implements “a uniform, efficient matching process.”

In a related move, the TSA is bringing back “gate checks,” the practice of pulling aside passengers for searches while they wait at airport gates to board planes even after they have already passed through security checkpoints!

Click here to read the entire article. 

Airline fare wars treat fliers to ‘ridiculously low’ prices

March 20, 2009 at 3:17 pm

(Source: USA Today)

Air travelers stand to be the beneficiaries of “ridiculously low” airfares as fare wars break out among U.S. airlines desperate to fill seats amid sagging demand. Even those hoping to travel during the peak-period summer months stand to benefit, according to the Los Angeles Times. The paper writes that “fares for summer trips are often among the highest of the year and start rising in the spring, but not this year. With business travel plummeting, airlines are pulling back and offering some of the lowest-priced plane tickets in recent memory.”

Those fare wars got a boost yesterday with the latest salvo fired by Southwest, which announced a new nationwide fare sale that covers travel for almost all of the busy summer travel period. “This is a whopper of an airfare sale,” Tom Parsons, CEO of air travel website Bestfares.com, tells the Times. “They are doing everything they can to make you fly.” The sale caps fares on most days at $99 each way and unusually broad — “a very good deal,” according to fare-tracking site AirFareWatchdog.

The Boston Globe writes “the move nearly immediately rippled through the industry on competing routes.” Indeed, the Times notes “major airlines including American, United and Delta matched the fares on most of the routes flown by Southwest.” As for the latest round of fare sales, the Airline Biz blog at The Dallas Morning News calls the current discounts “pretty meaty.” Airline Biz author Eric Torbenson adds that “one thing is abundantly clear: Demand is dropping a lot more than airlines guessed when they built their schedules last year because despite taking 10% to 15% of their capacity out of the system, bookings are pretty awful.”

Click here to read the entire article.

The future is here – Terrafugia “Flying Car” Makes First Flight

March 19, 2009 at 11:21 am

(Source:  Jalopnik)

This morning it’s official — the future is now. The Terrafugia Transition (R), the first plausible “flying car” (or more precisely, a “roadable aircraft”), took its first official flight earlier this month. 

 Terrafugia press conference at 9:30 AM this morning offered the following details:  The two-seat aircraft is able to fly 450 miles at over 115 MPH and is designed to transform from plane to car in less than 30 seconds.  Click here to read the entire press release.

The Transition, their first “roadable aircraft” (we’re going to go ahead and call it a Jetsons-like “flying car”), took its official first flight on March 5th, 2009 at Plattsburgh International Airport. It’s the first time we’ve seen an actually plausible“roadable aircraft” work in real life.

 Click here to view the full gallery of Terrafugia.  Also, Here is an awesome video from YouTube showing the vehicle in action.

In-flight Entertainment Re-defined – Russian Style: Getting “high” in the sky

March 11, 2009 at 7:12 pm

(Source: LiveLeek via  Gizmodo)

Pilot And Stewardess Smoke Hashish During Flight and record their feat.

 Gotta love our funny friend Jesus Diaz@ Gizmodo for this lovely Note he added to his post on Gizmodo:

 

Note to self:  Never ever book an Aeroflot flight. And with that I really mean “become a pilot and join Aeroflot.” 

No cats were harmed in the making of this video. (This link will take you to another video that shocked a lot of us Gizmodo fans when it became public).

GAO: As Fares Decline, FAA Trust Fund Projected to Shrink More

March 11, 2009 at 4:23 pm

AirlineTrustFund_E_20090310161108.jpg(Source:  Wall Street Journal)

Ok. Ok. So this might be a bit wonky, but we never let a good chart go to waste.

This one – which appeared in a GAO report released Tuesday – shows the declining uncommitted balance in the Airport and Airway Trust Fund, a pool of money used to help pay for services such as the Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Aviation Administration.

The trust fund grew over the years mostly from the 7.5% excise tax on tickets and the federal segment fee of $3.40 assessed on every flight. Fuel taxes and other federal fees, like the international arrivals and departure tax, go into the fund as well. As ticket prices decline and travel slows, those taxes don’t produce as much revenue, and the government has been drawing down the fund, which originally was set up to pay for future modernization of air travel. The GAO reported that the uncommitted balance in the Trust Fund has decreased since fiscal year 2001.

Click here to read the entire article.