Shakey Alliances for Virgin Blue

John Borghetti at Virgin Blue is getting some bad news lately with both the Department of Transport and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission raising objections to proposed alliances. The DoT have said they don’t like the look of the alliance with Delta (aka Delta-V) while the ACCC have said the same about the proposed alliance with Air New Zealand. The ACCC have also said they’re going to expedite their review of the recently announced alliance with Etihad so hopefully that one doesn’t get blocked too.

While I wouldn’t necessarily say that these alliance plans are in tatters,they are certainly taking some body blows and aren’t looking too healthy. Unless Virgin Blue,Delta &Air New Zealand can put up some good responses to the various objections,the proposed linkages aren’t going to happen for a while.

So the big question from this is what will Borghetti do if the Delta &Air New Zealand alliances are blocked? He’s already shown he is not adverse to culling failing operations or routes as he has removed Pacific Blue’s domestic operations in New Zealand and pulled the V Australia 777s out of Johannesburg,Fiji &Phuket.

If he can’t get cosy with Delta across the Pacific,will he ramp up V Australia’s presence in the market or pull out entirely and settle for a code-share with Delta,channeling Virgin Blue’s domestic passengers onto Delta and taking their passengers around Australia. If he leaves the Pacific to a linkage with Delta,will he redirect the 777s to routes into Abu Dhabi to supplement flights from Etihad? Could he decide to drop the long haul 777s all together to focus on the Australian domestic market and short international flights to the Pacific and South East Asia with 737s and A330s?

It’s always an . . . →

Read More:Shakey Alliances for Virgin Blue

Even with flight computers,you can over stress an Airbus tail

Remember the American Airlines A300 that crashed in the US after the vertical stabiliser broke off? The co-pilot over stressed the tail by pumping the rudders in an attempt to get out of wake-turbulence.

In a similar situation in 2008,an Air Canada A319 encountered wake turbulence and the pilot’s rudder &side stick inputs put the aircraft into a slip,stressing the vertical stabiliser beyond certified limits. The pilot wasn’t aware that they were encountering wake turbulence and thought it was a problem with the flight control computers (perhaps similar to the Qantas A330 problems off the coast of West Australia).

. . . →

Read More:Even with flight computers,you can over stress an Airbus tail

Freaky ADIRU Behaviour Near Perth

As some of you may be aware,on October 7th 2008 a QANTAS A330 traveling from Singapore to Perth was about 154km west of Learmouth,West Australia when it entered a rapid descent,causing unsecured items &people to float up in the cabin,leading to injuries on board. The aircraft declared an emergency and diverted to Learmouth.

The ATSB has released a preliminary finding that states that a fault in one of the Air Data Inertial Reference Units (ADIRU #1) led to the incident. Investigations are continuing and QANTAS have instigated changes in their procedures should the symptoms appear again.

. . . →

Read More:Freaky ADIRU Behaviour Near Perth