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Delta Offers Seattle Customers More Options This Summer

  • New service to Dallas/Fort Worth and Columbus, Ohio, on fuel-efficient Airbus A220s.
  • Expanded service to 12 U.S. cities.
  • Delta will operate daily service to London-Heathrow, Europe’s top international market, in 2021.
  • 70% of flights on larger, mainline aircraft, enhancing customer comfort and experience with seat-back entertainment and WiFi.
  • Upgraded, next-generation aircraft in top business and leisure markets.

Delta is committed to offering Seattle customers more options for summer travel than ever before with the launch of new, three-times daily service to Dallas/Fort Worth, new nonstop service to Columbus, Ohio, and expanded service to 12 popular destinations: Anchorage; Atlanta; Austin; Boise, Idaho; Boston; Bozeman, Mont.; Kansas City; Las Vegas; Orlando; Spokane, Wash.; Tampa; and Washington-Dulles.

These additions mean Delta will offer 190 daily departures to 56 destinations this summer from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Dallas/Fort Worth marks Delta’s second Texas destination from Sea-Tac, building on the Austin service launched in 2017. 

As Seattle’s global carrier, Delta plans to launch nonstop service to London-Heathrow in 2021. The route expands the airline’s lead of offering the most global destinations from Seattle than any other airline, with London joining Delta’s existing nine international markets. The service also complements partner Virgin Atlantic’s twice-daily service and offers customers the choice of three daily flights.

“Our customers’ demand for new destinations, award-winning service, commitment to seat-back entertainment and superior reliability are what drives Delta’s continued growth in Seattle,” said Tony Gonchar, Delta’s Vice President — Seattle. “With our extensive partner service from Seattle on Virgin Atlantic, Air France, Korean Air and Aeromexico, customers can expect a seamless journey across the globe.”

New summer destinations and expanded service for Seattleites

Delta’s overall domestic summer service from Seattle includes top leisure and business destinations.

Starting June 8, Delta will launch:

  • Three daily flights to Dallas/Fort Worth 
  • New daily flight to Columbus, Ohio 
  • A second flight to Austin
  • A second flight to Orlando 

These flights to Dallas, Columbus and Austin will operate on Airbus A220 aircraft; the Orlando service will operate on a Boeing 737-900. The schedules will operate as follows:

FlightDepartsArrives
Dallas/Fort Worth-Seattle (new service)7:15 a.m.9:30 a.m.
Dallas/Fort Worth-Seattle (new service)2 p.m.4:15 p.m.
Dallas/Fort Worth-Seattle (new service)5:30 p.m.7:45 p.m.
Seattle-Dallas/Fort Worth (new service)7:30 a.m.1:30 p.m.
Seattle-Dallas/Fort Worth (new service)10:45 a.m.4:45 p.m.
Seattle-Dallas/Fort Worth (new service)5:30 p.m.11:30 p.m.
 
Columbus-Seattle (new service)7:15 a.m.9:25 a.m.
Seattle-Columbus (new service)10:30 p.m.6 a.m.
   
Austin-Seattle (existing flight)6:30 a.m.8:57 a.m.
Austin-Seattle (added frequency)3:20 p.m.5:45 p.m.
Seattle-Austin (added frequency)8:30 a.m.2:40 p.m.
Seattle-Austin (existing flight)6:20 p.m.0:24 a.m.
 
Orlando-Seattle (existing flight)7 a.m.10:27 a.m.
Orlando-Seattle (added frequency)7 p.m.10:10 p.m.
Seattle-Orlando (existing flight)9:30 a.m.5:49 p.m.
Seattle-Orlando (added frequency)10:30 p.m.6:55 a.m.

These new offerings join more service expansions previously announced, including:

  • Tampa service beginning in March
  • A fourth daily flight to Boston
  • A second flight to Kansas City and Washington, D.C. (IAD) beginning this summer
  • Twice daily flights to Bozeman, Mont.
  • More flights and seats to Anchorage, Atlanta, Boise, Las Vegas, and Spokane, Wash., including a convenient evening service for Atlanta business travelers

Dozens of Airbus A380’s Face Urgent Checks

LONDON, Aug 21 (Reuters) – Investigators probing an engine explosion on an Air France A380 in 2017 are studying a possible manufacturing flaw in a recently salvaged cracked part in a move likely to trigger urgent checks on dozens of Airbus superjumbos, people familiar with the matter said.

The focus of a two-year-old investigation into the mid-air explosion over Greenland, which left the plane carrying more than 500 passengers with the front of one engine missing, has switched to the recently recovered “fan hub,” the people said.

The titanium alloy part is the centrepiece of a 3-metre-wide fan on engines built for the world’s largest airliner by U.S.-based Engine Alliance, co-owned by General Electric and United Technologies unit Pratt & Whitney.

It had sat buried in Greenland’s ice sheet since September 2017 when one of four engines on Air France flight 66 abruptly disintegrated en route from Paris to Los Angeles. It was prised from the ice in June after a high-tech aerial radar search.

Confirming the focus of the probe after Reuters reported the plans for inspections, France’s BEA air accident agency said it had discovered a “sub-surface fatigue crack” on the recovered part and the engine maker was preparing checks.

The people familiar with the matter linked the crack to a suspected manufacturing flaw and said the checks – to be carried out urgently on engines that have conducted a certain number of flights – would affect dozens of the double-decker jets.

The people said the suspect part was fabricated on behalf of consortium member Pratt & Whitney, which declined to comment.

Engine Alliance is one of two engine suppliers for the Airbus A380 in competition with Britain’s Rolls-Royce.

Its engines power a total of 152 aircraft or just over 60 percent of the 237 A380s in service.

Besides Air France, other airlines operating the A380 with Engine Alliance powerplants include Dubai’s Emirates, Qatar Airways, Abu Dhabi-based Etihad and Korean Air.

The checks will involve taking some planes out of service outside their usual maintenance schedules, one source said.

Investigations are not complete and are likely to tackle other features such as the loads or physical forces at play. Experts say air accidents are rarely caused by isolated factors.

Europe’s Airbus declined to comment.

SIOUX CITY REMEMBERED

Nobody was hurt in the September 2017 incident, in which the Air France superjumbo diverted safely to Goose Bay in Canada.

Although rare, uncontained engine failures, in which shrapnel capable of puncturing the fuselage exits an engine at extremely high speeds, automatically raise alarm.

The checks come weeks after relatives marked 30 years since an engine failure left a United Airlines DC-10 with almost no control, culminating in the death of 111 out of the 296 people on board during an attempted landing at Sioux City, Iowa.

U.S. investigators cited a defective titanium alloy part and weak inspection procedures, although they also praised the “highly commendable” performance of the crew of flight 232.

The July 1989 crash sped up improvements in manufacturing methods for titanium alloy. Experts say hidden internal defects in such parts are unusual but remain difficult to detect.

Titanium alloy is used widely in aerospace, which is the metal’s biggest customer due to its strength compared to the weight of each part and its ability to handle high temperatures.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Elaine Hardcastle)

Delta, Virgin Atlantic to Boost Summer Flying in 2020

Delta introduces its first daylight trans-Atlantic flight, and airlines join forces at London’s Gatwick Airport for first time.

  • Three new flights will see Delta increase capacity between the U.S. and U.K. by 15 percent
  • New 767-400 and A350 aircraft flying on key JFK, Boston and Los Angeles routes

Delta is boosting its transatlantic schedule between London-Heathrow and its coastal hubs in Boston and New York-JFK next summer, adding 15 percent capacity compared to 2019. Alongside joint venture partner Virgin Atlantic, the two airlines will increase capacity across the Atlantic by nearly 10,000 seats per week compared to this year, offering customers unrivalled customer experience and more choice than ever before.

“Delta and its partners offer an unmatched global network that’s capable of taking Boston and New York customers to more worldwide destinations than ever before,” said Joe Esposito, Delta’s Senior Vice President – Network Planning. “Our investment at these airports and in these communities continues to deepen as we grow our flight offerings and live up to our commitment to connect the world better than any other airline.”

More flights to Heathrow

Beginning March 28, 2020, Delta will increase its JFK-Heathrow services to three daily year-round frequencies, with Virgin Atlantic operating five, maintaining a convenient eight-flights-daily schedule. The new Delta frequency will mark the airline’s first-ever daylight trans-Atlantic flight and will complement the existing daylight service offered by Virgin Atlantic.

Click the link for the full story! https://news.delta.com/delta-virgin-atlantic-boost-summer-flying-between-us-and-uk-2020

Boeing 777 engine catches fire again

Boeing 777 engine catches on fire again. For the second time in less than 9 months, a Boeing 777 engine caught on fire during the start of the planes takeoff roll. There were 302 passengers and 17 crew members on board the Korean Air 777, and they were all successfully evacuated from the airplane. The incident occurred at the Tokyo Haneda Airport on Friday, May 27, when the number one engine caught on fire. The twin engine plane was headed for Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, South Korea. Smoke was reportedly seen coming from the planes left engine just as it was about to takeoff. There are 19 people that were reportedly injured during the aircraft evacuation.

Boeing 777 engine warning had been issued by FAA

On September 8th, 2015, a British Airways 777 aircraft had an engine catch fire on takeoff from the McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada. It came to light following that incident that the FAA had warned Boeing four years earlier that the GE90-85B engine had an unsafe condition. They had discovered that the compressor could possibly disintegrate and cause an explosion. This type of explosion could potentially propel debris at a high enough rate of speed to endanger the entire aircraft. General Electric released a statement that the British Airways 777 in Las Vegas had a different version of its GE90-8FB engine than the one mentioned in the warning. The National Transportation Safety Board investigating the British Airways engine fire stated that that incident occurred in the same way as that previously mentioned in its warning. Boeing and General Electric both objected to that warning that was issued by the FAA, but were unsuccessfully to get it removed from the record. As to this date, I have not ever flown on a Boeing 777 aircraft. I have always thought since the first time I saw the aircraft that its engines were just way too big for my comfort level.

boeing 777 engine

Image from www.dailymail.co.uk