PaulThomas
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2004
- Posts
- 154
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yes, we are looking at SYD. It is official being worked on now. Late 09 or early 10 is what they are aiming for.
The 207 minutes is for the Pacific flights we do with it - ATL to Shanghai, Seoul and Tokyo.
I'm not sure it's actually needed depending on the days routing, but that is why there is the 207. (trivia: it is 180 minutes plus 15%, Boeing got it all figured out so it covers most of the Pacific).
I would guess somewhere in the ballpark of 17:30- 18:00. About the same time for ATL-BOM. Any more and they will have to use three crews
Would this make it the longest non-stop route? If not does anybody know who holds the record?
Currently the longest flight by all US Flag Carriers is Mumbai to JFK by Delta Airlines with a 777-200LR at 16 hours.
The longest flight for any airline in the world is currently Newark to Singapore by Singapore Airlines with an Airbus A340-500 at 18 hours 40 minutes.
I expect longer flights to emerge in the coming 12 months.
GogglesPisano,
Big plans? Care to speculate?
I would guess somewhere in the ballpark of 17:30- 18:00. About the same time for ATL-BOM. Any more and they will have to use three crews
I am talking block. If it goes above 18 hrs of block they will need more than two crews to "fly" the route. Not duty time.
Little off topic, but when we do the Dubai-Houston on the -200, when you're the augment crew you show up, sit in the jumpseat for the climb through ten, then off to the bunk for 8+ hrs. Takes some getting used to!
Looking forward to doing Dubai-LA, SanFran...figure that will be 8-9 hrs bunk time, easy.
Apparently when DAL asked Boeing for aux tanks on the LR's (the longest-range commercial airliner in the world) Boeing's response was, "If you need aux tanks on this thing you're going the wrong way."
Big plans in the works.