- Joined
- Oct 13, 2013
- Posts
- 16,625
Max is 485 for the QF A380I heard someone say 411 total passengers
Max is 485 for the QF A380I heard someone say 411 total passengers
485 is a full house. (for the plane)Premium cabins were full. I think I heard someone say 411 total passengers so not sure what that means for how full the economy cabin was.
Max is 485 for the QF A380
Depends on where the replacement crew is coming from and whether a replacement aircraft also coming.Ok so they have some capacity if they need to deadhead some crew
It sounds as thought they're just bringing in an engineer from London to complete the inspection component (hopefully nothing adverse comes up...).Depends on where the replacement crew is coming from and whether a replacement aircraft also coming.
We need to know exactly what the issue was to be able to resolve that.Once we landed in GYD the total hours had exceeded the maintenance threshold so the plane couldnt depart again without sign off.
Having to cross Iran would be the biggest one.I don’t know whether a diversion to DXB could have addressed that (ie whether they are allowed to have an EK engineer sign off) but there may be other reasons why a DXB diversion wasn’t possible.
You'll never get an engineering issue fixed in a hurry when offline, unless you just happen to jag the right engineer (as I once did in Amsterdam).There was also the issue of the crew being timed out which could also have precluded a resumption even if the engineering issue could have been resolved.
Baku is a good choice for many reasons. The medical people would possibly have suggested Dubai (as their choices are only related to medical facilities), but they would also have taken into account the timing. ATC, airfield, etc, issues are left to the crew.
Whilst I'd be happy enough to fly over Iran on a standard air route, on the normal flight plan, in amongst 100 other aircraft, I'd not be doing so as a one off, on a strange routing, arranged at the last minute. Recipe for a unfriendly meeting with a SAM.
Pakistan is an emergency only country. And by that I mean the aircraft is incapable of flying anywhere else.
Visas are not a consideration. Baku is a good airport; it has the needed facilities.
Guess what, this isn't the military, and they actually plan on getting their aircraft back. This is an extremely ignorant statement. And to whom would you be giving the reality check?
There already is such an extension. Slightly more than 10%. And guess what...they would have exceeded that too, and by quite some margin.
All of which come with requirements, both before and after. There is no emergency here. Once the sick person has been taken away, it's just another flight, with all of the normal rules.
There is no second crew as such. And even if there was, they have the same start time, and would have done half of the flying to get to Baku.
Quite a bit more. I used a flow chart to work it all out.
The airborne part of the diversion cost around 2 hours....IN EACH DIRECTION. So, now you have approximately 4 hours additional flight time, plus whatever ground time you end up with. Let's be generous and call it two hours. So there's a minimum of 6 hours total that you're adding to the duty period, making a total of at least 22 hours. Way beyond anything legal.
Sums it up pretty well.
More than likely something that has come up in flight, or something that has an MEL allowing one flight. MELs can come with all sorts of conditions, but they could allow a number of flights, or a time interval. Or, just one sector, provided you’re flying to a place at which it will be repaired. If, for instance, you’d had to disconnect a generator in flight, you’d be able to depart on an MEL, but, the engine would require inspection/work before the next departure to ensure that it was a clean disconnect. It gets messy, and the permutations are endless.
Oh, and if anyone is thinking "Sunrise", it's probably worth noting that they will have zero ability to restart after any diversion. A single continuous flight will be a condition of that operation.
I would like to apologise to all for my flippant comments on this matter - they were totally out of line.Baku is a good choice for many reasons. The medical people would possibly have suggested Dubai (as their choices are only related to medical facilities), but they would also have taken into account the timing. ATC, airfield, etc, issues are left to the crew.
Whilst I'd be happy enough to fly over Iran on a standard air route, on the normal flight plan, in amongst 100 other aircraft, I'd not be doing so as a one off, on a strange routing, arranged at the last minute. Recipe for a unfriendly meeting with a SAM.
Pakistan is an emergency only country. And by that I mean the aircraft is incapable of flying anywhere else.
Visas are not a consideration. Baku is a good airport; it has the needed facilities.
Guess what, this isn't the military, and they actually plan on getting their aircraft back. This is an extremely ignorant statement. And to whom would you be giving the reality check?
There already is such an extension. Slightly more than 10%. And guess what...they would have exceeded that too, and by quite some margin.
All of which come with requirements, both before and after. There is no emergency here. Once the sick person has been taken away, it's just another flight, with all of the normal rules.
There is no second crew as such. And even if there was, they have the same start time, and would have done half of the flying to get to Baku.
Quite a bit more. I used a flow chart to work it all out.
The airborne part of the diversion cost around 2 hours....IN EACH DIRECTION. So, now you have approximately 4 hours additional flight time, plus whatever ground time you end up with. Let's be generous and call it two hours. So there's a minimum of 6 hours total that you're adding to the duty period, making a total of at least 22 hours. Way beyond anything legal.
Sums it up pretty well.
More than likely something that has come up in flight, or something that has an MEL allowing one flight. MELs can come with all sorts of conditions, but they could allow a number of flights, or a time interval. Or, just one sector, provided you’re flying to a place at which it will be repaired. If, for instance, you’d had to disconnect a generator in flight, you’d be able to depart on an MEL, but, the engine would require inspection/work before the next departure to ensure that it was a clean disconnect. It gets messy, and the permutations are endless.
Oh, and if anyone is thinking "Sunrise", it's probably worth noting that they will have zero ability to restart after any diversion. A single continuous flight will be a condition of that operation.
True, but then they shifted the paradigm from the scoop and run to mica paramedics treating and doing whatever before running, so not sure it is quite that black and white either.Anything is possible
You can turn the A380 into an emergency department with 1 specialist emergency physician, 1 nurse, Xray machine, pathology processing machines, operating table, mechanical ventilator, all the emergency drugs, medical pumps, etc etc etc, blood bank
Thats why ambulances are not emergency departments on wheels
Thanks for the insight and inside details. While not surprised, I am disappointed that QF didn’t authorise the CSM to pay for the visa online or organise a team to do it from Australia (I have no doubt many credit cards will block any transaction if not previously notified about possible use in Azerbaijan, not a regular tourist destination) and thus many pax will be holding up others in the queue while they go through their collection of cards if they have any. After all QF would be not allowed to leave the pax on the plane, the tarmac or the transit part of Baku airport (if there is one)I’m in Baku waiting for the resumption of QF2 later today. Couple of observations:
Medical emergency was genuine and serious. No issues with the choice of Baku being made on medical grounds.
Qantas crew did as well as the could in difficult circumstances. Cellular connectivity was difficult on the tarmac but the crew hot spotted pax from iPads to enable some limited comms.
Visa process was painful. Online only, each person had to pay (and some struggled with blocked credit cards) and took 3-4 hours to process but no obvious alternative and nothing QF could do to accelerate.
Transfers to hotels time consuming but ultimately ok. There’s no quick way to disperse 400+ passengers without long queues.
Overall not ideal and would have been difficult for elderly passengers and those with young children.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
paramedics treating and doing whatever before running
Oh, and if anyone is thinking "Sunrise", it's probably worth noting that they will have zero ability to restart after any diversion. A single continuous flight will be a condition of that operation.
Premium cabins were full. I think I heard someone say 411 total passengers so not sure what that means for how full the economy cabin was.