Priority boarding - lessons from AirAsia to IndiGo and SpiceJet and for airports from temples

AirAsia Airbus A320 9M-AHS Penang Bayan Lepas Airport MalaysiaAbout two months ago, I flew AirAsia, rather Thai AirAsia for the first time. I could help but compare their services with those of Indian low fare carriers IndiGo and SpiceJet.

There is a marked difference between AirAsia and the Indians. In some cases the Indians can learn, and some where AirAsia can learn.

In the air, the crew friendliness and overall no-nonsense, smooth, and, efficient operations, are common to all the three carriers. With ticket prices almost the same for similar distance flights, one can draw satisfaction that Indian low cost carriers are keeping up with AirAsia and doing in a very similar manner all the right things to keep bringing in and retaining the customers.

IndiGo airlines India Airbus A320-232 VT-INK Bengaluru International Airport print quality photo
But on the ground, especially at check-in, the Indians make a passenger feel far more welcome and valuable than AirAsia. It brings back the question -- in air travel what percentage is a transport business and how much is hospitality? Air Asia can learn from its Indian cousins -- you never get a second chance to make a first impression.

At both Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, and on the return at Hat Yai airport, the check-in staff insisted on weighing the hand-carry baggage to ensure it is below the weight limit of 7kgs. The actions of the check-in staff made me wonder what would be the case, if my cabin bag crossed the 7kg mark, since I had pre-paid for 15kg check-in baggage and my check-in bag weighed a mere 9kg.

SpiceJet latest Boeing 737-800 VT-SGG
One area which both the Indian carriers can learn from AirAsia, is the concept of priority boarding. All three carrier charge for for a seat in the front or exit rows. AirAsia and IndiGo charge about $7~$8 (THB250 or INR300), SpiceJet is a bit lower.

AirAsia incentivises the sale of these seats by offering priority boarding to passengers who purchase these seats, something, neither SpiceJet or IndiGo offer. In case of bus boarding when the aircraft in a remote bay, the priority boarding passengers are loaded in the first bus and sent ahead. The priority boarding adds only about three minutes to the entire boarding process but the impact on the customer is tremendous. Passengers who purchase these seats benefit from no boarding queues and empty overhead bins, and therefore look to repeat the experience in future trips. Those passengers who do not purchase these seats, look on those who do, with envy, and strongly consider buying these seats on their next trip. A double benefit for AirAsia seat selection sales.

Along with priority boarding, I started thinking what other "speed" benefits would passengers be willing to pay for? I wouldn't quite call it a divine inspiration, but what if airports in India would take an inspiration from the temples of India for their serpentine and often treacly slow security check queues.

Most major temples in India like Tirupathi Thirumala Lord Venkateswara, Vaishno Devi, and others offer a priority queue system for which hundreds of thousands of tickets are sold every year. The pilgrims who do not pay also get their darshan, it just takes a little while longer.

Could airports provision one or two "express security lanes" and sell tickets to these for Rs.250~Rs.500 a trip? I am sure it will be a hit with the frequent travellers. Many airports across the world already offer similar services.

In plutocratic airports where even government provides services only after payment of a fee (the Rs. 225 passenger service fee of which about Rs. 130 is paid to CISF for security), surely this is an idea whose time has come?  What is your opinion?

After all we experience preference due to cronyism, nepotism, gerontocracy, oligarchy, and aristocracy almost daily.
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Flight disruptions at Kolkata expected due to 24 hour bandh

Bandhs are the bane of Indian politics. Forcing entire states to shut-down it is a drag on the Indian economy. Nowhere is the effect of a bandh stronger than the communist stronghold of the state of West Bengal and its capital Kolkata (IATA: CCU).

A 24 hour bandh has been called for starting 06:00 September 7th, and ending September 8th. The bandh will cause disruption of daily activities including no transport to and from Kolkata's Netaji Subhash airport, and naturally, there will be significant flight disruptions.

Kingfisher Airlines has already announced a cancellation of 29 flights and re-scheduling of two flights.

The cancelled flights for September 7, 2010
1. IT 511 Mumbai – Kolkata
2. IT 512 Kolkata – Mumbai
3. IT 607 New Delhi – Kolkata
4. IT 608 Kolkata – New Delhi
5. IT 603 New Delhi – Kolkata
6. IT 604 Kolkata – New Delhi
7. IT 4573 Kolkata – Ranchi
8. IT 4574 Ranchi – Kolkata
9. IT 2192 Kolkata – Aizwal
10. IT 2193 Aizwal - Kolkata
11. IT 4541 Kolkata – Agartala
12. IT 4542 Agartala – Kolkata
13. IT 2804 Kolkata – Raipur
14. IT 2803 Raipur – Kolkata
15. IT 2501 Kolkata – Bhubaneswar
16. IT 2502 Bhubaneswar – Kolkata
17. IT 2502 Kolkata – Guwahati
18. IT 2812 Guwahati – Kolkata
19. IT 2531 Kolkata – Bagdogra
20. IT 2532 Bagdogra – Kolkata
21. IT 2503 Kolkata – Bhubaneswar
22. IT 2504 Bhubaneswar – Kolkata
23. IT 4577 Kolkata – Ranchi
24. IT 4578 Ranchi – Kolkata
25. IT 073 Kolkata – Dhaka
26. IT 074 Dhaka – Kolkata
27. IT 4805 Kolkata – Imphal
28. IT 4805 Imphal – Silchar
29. IT 4805 Silchar – Kolkata

IT 3434 Kolkata – Hyderabad which usually departs Kolkata at 06:50 will now depart Kolkata on September 7, 2010 at an EARLIER TIME of 05:35 and will arrive at Hyderabad at 07:30.

IT 3416 Bangalore – Kolkata originally scheduled to depart Bangalore on September 7 at 20:40 will now depart Bangalore at 04:00 on September 8,and arrive at Kolkata at 06:15 September 8th.

Jet Airways, Konnect and JetLite have also announced a disruption to their schedules for September 7th.

The cancelled Jet Airways flights are as follows:

9W-065/066 Bangkok-Kolkata-Bangkok
9W-615/616 Mumbai-Kolkata-Mumbai
9W-2278/2279 Kolkata-Delhi-Kolkata
9W-2480/2481 Kolkata-Bagdogra-Kolkata
9W-913/914 Kolkata–Delhi-Kolkata
9W-2451/2452 Kolkata–Bengaluru- Kolkata
9W-2153/2154 Mumbai-Kolkata–Guwahati- Kokata
9W-2157 Kolkata-Mumbai
9W-2401/2019 Kolkata–Mumbai-Kolkata
9W-2482/2483 Kolkata–Guwahati-Kolkata
9W-2852/2853 Kolkata–Patna-Kolkata
9W-2850/2851 Kolkata–Bhubaneshwar-Kolkata
9W-2856/2857 Kolkata–Ranchi-Kolkata
9W-2854/2855 Kolkata–Patna-Kolkata
9W 2151/2152 Mumbai-Kolkata-Mumbai
9W 2454/2455 Chennai-Kolkata-Chennai
9W 217/218 Mumbai- Kolkata-Mumbai
9W 2282/2283 Delhi-Kolkata-Delhi
9W 2289/2290 Delhi-Kolkata-Delhi
9W 2450/2453 Chennai-Kolkata-Chennai

The re-scheduled Jet Airways flights are as follows:

9W-2285 Delhi-Bagdogra-Guwahati-Delhi will operate as Delhi-Guwahati-Delhi as per the following schedule:
9W-2285 will depart Delhi at 1115 hrs, arriving in Guwahati at 1345 hrs
9W-2285 Guwahati-Delhi will depart as per schedule.

9W-274 Kolkata-Dhaka has been pre-poned and will now depart Kolkata at 0530 hrs, arriving in Dhaka at 0645 hrs. (local time).

9W-273 Dhaka-Kolkata of September 7, 2010 stands postponed and will now operate on September 8, 2010 as per the following schedule:
9W 273 will depart Dhaka at 0530 hrs, arriving in Kolkata at 0545 hrs. (local time).

Similarly, JetLite flights have also been cancelled as follows:

S2-371/372 Kolkata-Agartala-Kolkata
S2-363/364 Kolkata-Guwahati-Imphal-Guwahati-Kolkata
S2-364/402 Kolkata-Bengaluru-Kolkata
S2-361/702 Kolkata-Guwahati-Kolkata-Mumbai
S2-703/704/705 Mumbai-Kolkata-Mumbai-Kolkata
S2-319/320 Delhi-Kolkata-Port Blair-Kolkata-Delhi
S2-6411/6252 Kolkata-Vishakhapatnam-Chennai
S2-6251/6218 Chennai-Vishakhapatnam-Delhi
S2-6217/6412 Delhi-Vishakhapatnam-Kolkata
S2-6367/6368 Kolkata-Bhubaneshwar-Kolkata

Passengers can expect similar disruptions on other airlines like Air India, IndiGo, SpiceJet, GoAir and others. Please check with your airline.
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UAE GCAA releases preliminary information in UPS Boeing 747-400F N571UP crash at Dubai

The General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has released preliminary information on the crash of UPS Airlines Boeing 747-400F freighter registration N571UP at Dubai on September 3, 2010. In parallel UPS has released a statement identifying the two crew who perished in this crash.
GCAA Announces the Preliminary Report on the ACCIDENT INVOLVING UPS6 Boeing 747 – 400 on 3rd September, 2010

Category : GCAA, Date : Sep, 05 2010

The UAE General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA), announced today the preliminary report on the fatal accident of Boeing 747 - 400 Cargo airplane on 3rd September 2010.

The UPS6 B744 had departed from Dubai International Airport at 14:53 UTC (6:53pm local time) headed to Koln-Bonn (Cologne) - Germany. At 15:15 UTC (7:15pm local time) information was received from Bahrain that the aircraft was returning to Dubai Airport with a smoke in the cockpit, unable to maintain altitude and requested the airport for landing.

The UAE ATC Centre issued a clearance when aircraft was approximately 40 kilometer from touchdown. The aircraft was high on the approach and was at 8500ft at 24 kilometer from touchdown. It passed the overhead the airfield very high and made a right turn. Position reports were passed the tower as well as advising that all runways were available for the aircraft to land on. The aircraft tracked south west and rapidly lost altitude. At approximately 15:42 UTC (7:42pm local time), radar contact was lost. The B744 crashed in in an unpopulated area between the Emirates Road and Al Ain Highway after 50 minutes from departure and after returning back from Bahrain FIR (Flight Information Region).

The GCAA responded by launching an immediate investigation team who are currently on site collecting evidence, analyzing the initial onsite evidence, coordinating with all of the emergency services to secure the accident site, liaising with the aircraft manufacturer technical specialists and international accident investigation bodies who have invited to assist the GCAA onsite in the UAE under the provisions of ICAO Annex 13.

The investigation team recovered the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) approximately 6 hours after the accident; the onsite GCAA investigation team is continuing the recovery effort to locate the Digital Flight Data Recorder (DFDR), while investigating the aircraft structure, systems, engines and flight controls as part of the forensic evidence collecting and data capturing activities associated with major air accident investigation.

A team from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) will arrive to UAE today to assist the GCAA team in the crash investigation.

Coordination activities with the regional (ANS) is also continuing in the retrieval of important communications and flight planning material crucial to the successful conclusion of this investigation.
The UPS statement identifies the two dead crew members and provides technical details on the airframe.
Atlanta, September 04, 2010

A UPS cargo plane has been involved in an accident in Dubai.

Updated 4:15 PM EDT (20:15 UTC)

At the request of the families, UPS can now confirm that two of our crewmembers, Captain Doug Lampe of Louisville, Kentucky, and First Officer Matthew Bell of Sanford, Florida, lost their lives in the crash of Flight 6 yesterday, Sept. 3, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

The two pilots were flying a 747-400 en route to Cologne, Germany, when it crashed near Dubai International Airport shortly after takeoff.

"This is a terrible tragedy, and all of us at UPS extend our deepest sympathies to the families and friends of both of these crewmembers," said UPS CEO Scott Davis. "Our thoughts and prayers will continue to be with them during this difficult time."
The UPS Family Assistance Team is working with the victims' families to help them in their time of need.

Captain Lampe, 48, has been with UPS since 1995. First Officer Bell, 38, has been with UPS since 2006. Both crewmembers flew out of UPS's Anchorage, Alaska domicile, or pilot base.

The aircraft, tail number N571UP, was just three years old, entering UPS service off the Boeing production line in September 2007. The airframe had flown 9977 hours, completing 1764 takeoffs and landings. It was up to date on all maintenance, having just completed a major inspection in June 2010.

UPS owns 12 747-400s, eight of which are new, and four of which have been purchased from other carriers and adapted for UPS use. The aircraft, which has a payload capacity of nearly 258,600 pounds, is used on long-range international routes, such as the regular Dubai-Cologne routing.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is dispatching an aviation investigation team to assist the General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) of the United Arab Emirates in the crash investigation. The GCAA will take the lead on the investigation and release all information on the progress of the investigation.

NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman has designated senior air safety investigator Bill English as the U.S. accredited representative. His team will include NTSB specialists in the areas of human performance, fire, operations and systems. The team will also include technical advisors from the FAA, Boeing, UPS, GE and the Independent Pilots Association.

A UPS team has arrived in Dubai at this time and will cooperate with authorities in the investigation.

"We established an internal command center within minutes of learning of this tragedy. It will be staffed around the clock with experts from every part of our operation," said UPS Airlines President Bob Lekites. "Safe, secure operations are our top priorities for our employees, our customers, and our public stakeholders."

Blue skies forever Captain Lampe and First Officer Bell, 38. RIP.
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UPS Boeing 744F N571UP crashes at Dubai, crew perish

News reports are coming in of a UPS Boeing 747-400 Freighter registration N571UP crashing at Dubai. UPS flight 5X-6 from Dubai, United Arab Emirates to Cologne, Germany crashed at Dubai around 20:00 local (16:00Z). The company has released a statement (read below the fold).

As per Avherald,
A UPS Boeing 747-400, registration N571UP, was on approach to Dubai's runway 30L, declared emergency and veered off course crashing onto a free space west of Dubai Silicon Oasis and Al-Ain Highway (E66), about half way between Emirates Road (E311) and road E611. Both crew perished in the crash.
I just spotted the next serial registration Boeing 747-400 Freighter N572UP at Mumbai earlier this morning, before returning to Bangalore.

UPS has released this statement
Atlanta, September 03, 2010

A UPS cargo plane has been involved in an accident in Dubai.

At approximately 12 p.m. EST, UPS Flight 6 from Dubai, UAE, to Cologne, DE, a 747-400 with two crew-members on board crashed on take-off. At this time, we have not confirmed any casualties.

"Safety is a key priority for UPS," said Airline & International Operations Manager Bob Lekites. "This incident is very unfortunate and we will do everything we can to find the cause," said Lekites. "Our thoughts go out to the crewmembers involved in the incident and their families."

"We will also release more information as it becomes available, in cooperation with government authorities. We will not speculate about the cause. Until then, we ask for your patience in this difficult time."
Reuters is confirming recovery of the two bodies from the crash site.

N571UP was a relatively new aircraft. A Boeing 747-44AF (4A is UPS's customer code with Boeing), it's construction number is 35668. It was delivered to UPS less than three years ago this month on September 27, 2007.
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Photos of historic flights and events from NASA

What a great way to end the week.

NASA has moved about 180 images on to its new Commons page. They're arranged in three photo sets, including "Building NASA," "Launch/Takeoff," and "NASA Center Namesakes." NASA has also displayed many of its historic photos on the Internet Archive.

Some of the gems are re-produced here. All photos, titles, and captions are courtesy of NASA. Hover the cursor on the image for the title, click on the image to visit the specific photo page with its titles, captions, and history.

First space shuttle STS-1 LaunchGemini-Titan 11 LaunchXB-70A #1 liftoff with TB-58A chase aircraftSR-71B - Mach 3 Trainer in Flight at SunsetApollo 11 Launched Via Saturn V RocketSolar-powered Gossamer Penguin in flight
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Image: Attention Jet Airways co-pilot - please keep your eyes on the runway not the spotters

Today on the day of Janmashthami celebrating the birthday of Lord Krishna, the post is very tongue in cheek, much in the spirit of lord Krishna, who was known for his mischief, practical jokes and innuendos, and being written from the home city of Jet Airways, Mumbai.

The zeal of celebration in Mumbai is uniquely demonstrated by teams of youths who go around the city forming human pyramids and towers up to nine floors high to break the pots of buttermilk (dahi-handi). This year the prize money on many of the pots around the city exceeds Rs. 1.1 million.

Coming back to the tongue in cheek.....sorry Jet Airways......

During a recent a spotting trip at Bangalore on August 10th, I took this photo of a Jet Airways ATR-72-500 VT-JCP which had just landed on runway 27.
Jet Airways ATR 72 500 VT-JCPWhile processing the photo, I was rather surprised, almost shocked, to observe the first officer (sitting in the right seat) was busy staring at me instead of looking down the runway the plane was landing on.
All driving schools instruct their students not to take their eyes off the road. "That's how accidents happen" they pontificate. Does this instruction apply to pilots as well?
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