fredag 24. juli 2020

B747 fra Qantas på nest siste flyging - Ikke uten humor - Australian Aviation

QANTAS’ LAST 747 PREPARES FOR FINAL FLIGHT TO MOJAVE

written by Adam Thorn July 24, 2020
VH-OEJ departs Sydney for 747s last ever flight (Qantas)
The last of Qantas’ 747s, VH-OEJ, departs Sydney on 24 July for LAX, where it will then fly onto the Mojave Desert boneyard days later (Qantas)
Qantas’ last remaining 747, VH-OEJ, is preparing for its very last flight.
The 17-year-old Boeing 747-438 will depart LAX at 2:30am (AEST) on Saturday morning to head to its final resting place at the notorious Mojave Desert boneyard.
The aircraft is due to land half an hour later at 10am local time on 24 July where it will join a reported 4,500 other aircraft being stored due to the coronavirus pandemic.
You can track the final trip here on Flightradar24.

Qantas Retires 747 With Humor

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Leave it to Qantas to have a sense of humor. The last flight of a Boeing 747 in the Australian carrier’s livery departed Sydney and flew a flight path creating a massive kangaroo. The 15-hour flight was scheduled to land in Los Angeles. The 747, the last of two remaining in Qantas’ fleet, will be flown to Victorville and parked in the sand, in what has become an ever-growing boneyard of retired and outdated airliners. Qantas opened 2020 with just six 747s still in operation and had already announced that the four-engine “Queen of the Skies” would be phased out in favor of the Boeing 787. But the dramatic drop in travel demand due to COVID-19 pushed that timeline, as it did for many other airlines. Qantas has stopped flying its Airbus A380s for at least the next three years and has announced plans to cut 20 percent of its workforce. Qantas has been using the 747 since 1971.

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