Sunday, 19 May 2013

Couple Ends Up On Wrong Continent After Airline Error

Two US holidaymakers found themselves a long way from their intended destination after an airline confused two airport codes.
Sandy Valdiviseo and her husband Triet Vo were intending to fly from Los Angeles to Dakar in Senegal with Turkish Airlines. However, instead they ended up about 11,000km away – on an entirely different continent – in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, after the airport codes were mixed up, the Los Angeles Times reports.
The airport code for Dakar, the capital of Senegal, is DKR, while the code for the airport in Dhaka, which is the capital of Bangladesh, is DAC.
After arriving in Istanbul, the couple had boarded a connecting flight. It was only after seeing the route map of the flight’s progress, which showed the plane over the Middle East, that they realised the error.
“When the flight attendant said we were heading to Dhaka, we believed that this was how you pronounced ‘Dakar’ with a Turkish accent,” Ms Valdivieso said.
When they arrived in Bangladesh, the pair informed Turkish Airlines about the mistake, and tried to arrange a transfer to Senegal.
According to reports, the airline insisted on tracking down the recording of the initial booking before acknowledging the error and installing the couple on flights to West Africa, 12 hours after their arrival in Bangladesh. Their baggage arrived in Senegal two days after they did.
The incident happened in December last year, but has only just been reported after the couple’s long battle to obtain compensation.
“I have called them [Turkish Airlines] every Friday for the past four months,” said Ms Valdivieso. “They told me each time that they will review my case and get back to me. But they never do.”
“We are very, very sorry that this happened,” a Turkish Airlines spokeswoman said. The couple have since been offered two free economy-class tickets to anywhere on the airline’s flight network.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/travel/travel-news/couple-ends-up-on-wrong-continent-after-airline-error-20130520-2jvis.html#ixzz2ToPHMBxJ

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Rolls Royce Will Replace One Of The Engines Of A LOT Boeing 787 Dreamliner

Rolls Royce will replace one of the engines of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner operated by Polish carrier LOT and grounded in Chicago, LOT's spokesman said on Monday, citing a technical issue.

"One of the engines will be replaced by Rolls-Royce. We are running checks on all four engines in our (two) Dreamliners," the spokesman said.

"The engine will be replaced by Wednesday. We expect both our Dreamliners to be operational by the end of May and confirm that they will be reinstated in the fleet on June 5," the spokesman said.

LOT said it expected to resume normal 787 flights to Chicago and Toronto on June 5.

Airbus Hits 514 Aircraft Orders Jan-April 2013

Airbus won 514  aircraft orders in the first four months of the year, increased by an order for narrow-body A320 aircrafts from Turkish Airlines.

Airbus said it delivered 202 aircraft to customers during the period, including four A380.

Monday, 6 May 2013

WestJet To Reduce The Number Of Flight Attendants On Flights

Canada's aviation regulator will allow WestJet Airlines an exemption of an increased ratio of passenger to flight attendant ratio. Currently its a 40:1 and this will be increased to a 50:1 and the change will bring WestJet in line with US and other foreign airlines that fly to and from Canada that have a ratio of one F/A for every 50 passengers, Transport Canada said. 


WestJet is expected to report first-quarter results on Tuesday.

787s Grounding Costs Qatar Airways USD$200m

Qatar Airways had to forego USD$200 million in lost revenue up until April 2013 because of the grounding of its Boeing 787s, the airline's CEO Akbar Al Baker said on Monday.

The airline has said it will receive compensation from Boeing after US regulators ordered the grounding of the 787s on safety concerns.
Qatar Airways has now returned the aircraft to service after grounding for three months.