fredag 5. januar 2018

Worst airports and safest airlines - Curt Lewis


These Are the Worst Airports, According to Pilots


LaGuardia Airport New York City

If you spend a lot of time traveling, you've probably developed a list of your most and least favorite airports. It's probably based on the food, the lounges, or maybe even the crowds, but there's one type of frequent flier that cares more about what's on the outside of the airport than what's on the inside: a pilot.

In a recent thread on Reddit, users asked pilots what their least favorite airports are - and the answers are eye opening. It seems the type of terrain surrounding an airport's runway is what pilots care about most. We can't say we blame them, after all, it is their job to safely deliver passengers from one destination to the next.


LaGuardia, New York
"LaGuardia. Hands down. Just a complete pain from 18,000 feet until you're at the gate. Unfortunately, it doesn't stop there.

"The airport is packed. The food sucks and it's insanely expensive. There's people everywhere. It's old."

Jiggalong Mission Airport, Jiggalong Western Austrailia
"Too many rocks."

Georgetown Airport, California
"This is why I dislike it so much: 1. it's on a mountain 2. one end of the runway ends on a cliff 3. the other ends 10 ft from some trees 4. the runway has an incline 5. the runway is narrow, bumpy, and a bit short 6. it's in the middle of nowhere, and almost completely deserted if you fuck up 7. it's not the worst airport in the world, but it's not great either."

Yeager Airport, Charleston, West Virginia
"The end is on a mountain, so you get to do a 180 on the edge ... I can emotionally accept a Crash Landing, I have real trouble with a Crash after Landing."

Los Angeles International Airport, California
"Even though it's my home airport, LAX is a pain in the ass. The whole airport has been a construction zone for as long as I can remember, with no end in sight."

Charlotte Douglas International Airport, North Carolina
"ATP here. I'm surprised no one has said Charlotte NC. Congested and massive taxi delays for no reason other than a shitty layout and incompetence on the part of ramp controllers."

Toronto Pearson International Airport, Ontario, Canada
"Actual pilot:

"Toronto Pearson international. Yes this airport is massive... but the second it gets windy or they get a mm of snow, the whole place goes to sh*t. Cancellations and delays everywhere. 2 days ago, 200 flights cancelled for a bit of wind. Last week we landed 5 hours late because of some snow. When we landed, I counted at least 20 planes sitting around waiting for gates, apparently some had been waiting for 2+ hours.

"Not to mention the landing fees are insane."

 
 

 

These are the world's safest airlines 2018

Qantas Airways
Attention nervous flyers: A new report has identified the world's safest airlines for 2018, with Qantas Airways getting a special mention.

In the newest edition of Airlineratings.com's annual safest airlines list, analysts identified the top 20 airlines with the best safety records, taking into consideration audits from governing aviation bodies and governments; airline crash and serious incident records; and fleet age.

Among the top performers are British Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways, Emirates, Japan Airlines, KLM, Virgin Atlantic and Qantas, which received a special nod for an exceptional performance over a 97-year history.

"Australia's Qantas has continued its remarkable safety record of no fatalities -- or hull losses -- in the jet era," analysts point out.

Added Airlineratings.com editor-in-chief Geoffrey Thomas in a statement: "It is extraordinary that Qantas has been the lead airline in virtually every major operational safety advancement over the past 60 years and has not had a fatality in the jet era."

The list follows on the heels of a pair of reports out of the Netherlands which declared 2017 to be the safest year in aviation history: According to the Aviation Safety Network, last year saw just 10 fatal accidents, which resulted in 44 deaths.

Framed another way: The chances of dying in a plane crash are now one in 16 million, added aviation consultancy group To70.

At the other end of the spectrum, the airlines with the worst safety records include Air Koryo, Bluewing Airlines, Buddha Air, Nepal Airlines, Tara Air, Trigana Air Service and Yeti Airlines.

Here are the top 20 airlines with the best safety records, listed in alphabetical order:

Air New Zealand, Alaska Airlines, All Nippon Airways, British Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways, Emirates, Etihad Airways, EVA Air, Finnair, Hawaiian Airlines, Japan Airlines, KLM, Lufthansa, Qantas, Royal Jordanian Airlines, Scandinavian Airline System, Singapore Airlines, Swiss, Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Australia

Top 10 safest low-cost airlines 2018 in alphabetical order:

Aer Lingus, Flybe, Frontier, HK Express, Jetblue, Jetstar Australia, Thomas Cook, Virgin America, Vueling, Westjet

 
 

 

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