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American Airlines 772 has electrical burning odour and haze on Flight Deck

September 24, 2015 By bernard.montrel@gmail.com

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An American Airlines Boeing 777-200, registration N786AN performing flight AA-954 (dep Sep 22nd) from Buenos Aires,BA (Argentina) to New York JFK,NY (USA), was enroute at FL410 about 210nm eastnortheast of Orlando,FL (USA) when the crew reported a burning electrical odour in the cockpit followed by haze/light smoke. The crew decided to divert to Orlando where the aircraft landed safely about 40 minutes later. The aircraft was checked by emergency services before taxiing to the apron.
A replacement Boeing 777-200 registration N787AL reached New York with a delay of 8 hours.
Maintenance identified a seized equipment cooling fan as cause of the odour and haze.
The Aviation Herald

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 777, 777-200, 777-200ER, 777-223(ER), American Airlines, Boeing, Eletrical Burning Odour, Flight Deck, Haze

Unruly passenger diverts American Airlines flight

September 15, 2015 By bernard.montrel@gmail.com

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An American Airlines flight to Chicago made an emergency landing Monday because of an allegedly unruly passenger, authorities said.
American Airlines Flight 1284, which departed from Miami, ended up landing in Indianapolis.
The passenger has been identified as Daniela Velez-Reyes by the Indianapolis Airport Authority.
“She was disoriented through the entire flight,” passenger Marian Frendt told ABC station WLS-TV in Chicago. “She started kicking the seat of the passenger in front of her, and he apparently turned around to complain … and she hit him.”
When a flight attendant intervened, Velez-Reyes allegedly grabbed the attendant’s face and kissed her, then punched her in the face, said a different passenger who told WLS that he witnessed the interaction.
Authorities said Velez-Reyes also kicked a police officer while being arrested.
Velez-Reyes was escorted off the plane in flex-cuffs. Passengers filmed the scene as officers helped her into the back of a patrol car.
She was charged with battery with injury, battery without injury, battery of a public safety officer, criminal recklessness, disorderly conduct and disruption of the operation of an aircraft, authorities said.
The arrest report lists that one woman, listed as one of the two victims, suffered an “apparent minor injury” though no further details about the injury were included.
The disruption caused the flight to arrive in Chicago about 90 minutes late.
ABC News

Filed Under: News Tagged With: American Airlines, Chicago, Diversion, Unruly Passenger

American Airlines create special pet area in F

September 13, 2015 By bernard.montrel@gmail.com

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People fly first class, so why not pampered pets?
That’s the idea behind the specially designed travel compartments designed for small dogs and cats on select transcontinental American Airlines flights popular with business travelers and entertainment industry VIPs.
The pet cabins—two per plane—are at the front of the first-class section of the 17 Airbus 321 aircraft the carrier uses on flights between New York’s JFK International and both San Francisco and Los Angeles International Airports.
The planes’ full lie-flat seats in first class don’t allow for under-the-seat storage of a pet carrier during takeoff and landing. Still, “we knew the clientele on these flights would love the ability to travel with small pets in that cabin,” said American spokeswoman Barb Delollis. “So during the design process, our team created a ventilated compartment certified for a pet carrier.”
For $125 each way, passengers booking first-class tickets may reserve a pet compartment for their furry companion. While pets traveling first class on these flights won’t get an amenity kit, Champagne or an oxygen mask in case of emergency, their tickets cost the same as those pets traveling under the seat in coach.
“Obviously, the airline understands the needs of their [first-class] passengers and has compromised by allowing a special space for their pets,” said Susan Smith of PetTravel.com. “I think it’s great.”
It’s not just first-class passengers who want to travel with their pets. Eighty million U.S. households now have pets, and a growing number of those animal lovers now take their pets along when they fly.
None of the domestic airlines contacted by CNBC would divulge how many pets they ticket as carry-on passengers each year. However, each has a formal program and detailed policies for how to get a pet on a plane, at prices that can top $125 per pet, each way for a domestic trip.
For each animal allowed, the airlines list charges, size and weight restrictions for pets and pet carriers, and required travel certificates.
Frontier Airlines, for example, charges $75 per pet carrier each way and allows cats, dogs, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters and small household birds on board. Although each passenger may only bring aboard one pet carrier, there is no limit placed on the number of pet carriers allowed on each flight.
Southwest Airlines only allows dogs and cats as carry-on passengers, charges a $95 pet fare each way and allows up to six pet carriers on each flight.
“We began offering this service in 2009, and passengers really appreciate this service. We find that the numbers go up around the holidays and during the summer travel season,” said Southwest spokeswoman Michelle Agnew. Southwest also sells its own carry-on compliant pet carrier ($58) online and at the airport counters.
The charge for in-cabin pets on United Airlines—cats, small dogs, rabbits and birds—is $125 each way, with an additional $125 charge for each stopover of more than four hours on domestic flights.
While some passengers take their pets out of the carriers during a flight, Barbara DeBry of PuppyTravel.com urges her clients to follow airline rules that require pets to remain in their carriers the entire flight. Otherwise, it could make for a rather unpleasant experience.
“There was a recent incident where a woman refused to put her dog in the carrier and ended up being removed from the flight in handcuffs,” said DeBry, “She may have ruined it for everyone else.”
For those whose pets are too big, too unruly or otherwise unsuitable to travel with you as in-cabin passengers, there are other options. Pets can travel as checked baggage or as cargo, with an escort or courier service. If your budget allows, you can also fly by private jet.
“We work with charter services, which are quite expensive,” said Susan Smith of PetTravel.com, “but we’re aiming toward shared charters to bring the cost down.”
An option in the future might be transporting an animal on its own via an airline that only carries pets.
Pet Airways flew about 9,000 pets on small Beechcraft 1900 twin turbo-prop planes between 2009 and 2011, but ceased operations, “because of the Great Recession,” company founder and CEO Dan Wiesel told CNBC. “We were not able to tap into enough capital to survive. We were close, but not close enough.”
Wiesel says he’s working on resurrecting the airline now. “The economy is good, and pet parents still want an alternative to flying their pets in cargo. The only thing missing is the money to restart the service.”
CNBC

Filed Under: News Tagged With: American Airlines, Pets

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