I did fly into Luckla(voted No1) in March and believe me its scary.
The runway appears from nowhere and looks so short..and it is.
The programme was a couple of years old and didnt mention that 18 people died in August attempting to land!
Worlds Most Extreme Airports
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I have flown in on both type of aircraft and on each occasion they have flown over the airport and turned to come in from the other end.
Not sure what these restrictions are you speak of, or which airline/aircraft they refer to?
Any Boeing pilots on here (Thomson only operate them, the Airbus' are all still under First Choice) who can confirm this? I thought Thomson only had modern 737-800s and 757s where this issue would not arise. Or do they still operate the last few 737-300s where the older spec may be an issue?
I do not think the operator would specify a lower spec aircraft IMO.
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Started by Admin in Ski Chatter 14-Oct-2010 - 12 Replies
Bisto
reply to 'Worlds Most Extreme Airports' posted Oct-2010
Tony_H
reply to 'Worlds Most Extreme Airports' posted Oct-2010
I seem to remember having this discussion with you before Dave. The airlines belonging to a major TO can only be Thomas Cook and First Choice/Thomson, and both of these tend to fly in their 757s, although both also use Airbus aircraft as well - none of which have landing equipment restrictions.Dave Mac wrote:Innsbruck is exciting to land in. There is an issue that if required, some airlines can do a turn within the valley walls, and some cannot. One of those that can not do a valley turn is a major TO. The same TO has landing equipment restrictions, so when visibility is impaired........
I have flown in on both type of aircraft and on each occasion they have flown over the airport and turned to come in from the other end.
Not sure what these restrictions are you speak of, or which airline/aircraft they refer to?
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Dave Mac
reply to 'Worlds Most Extreme Airports' posted Oct-2010
Last March, only Thomson Flight could not land at Innsbruck, although the other TOs such as Inghams were also affected since they flight share. Thomson were diverted to Verona, you may remember commenting that a diversion to Munich would have been nearer. The outgoing passengers had to undertake a 4 hour transfer to Verona.
Edited 1 time. Last update at 16-Oct-2010
Dave Mac
reply to 'Worlds Most Extreme Airports' posted Oct-2010
Also, it is the owner/operator that determines the aircraft specification, therefore you cannot assume that a particular craft is a particular spec.
Most unusually, the pilot spelt out, very critically, the reason for the delay/diversion.
Most unusually, the pilot spelt out, very critically, the reason for the delay/diversion.
Tony_H
reply to 'Worlds Most Extreme Airports' posted Oct-2010
Dave Mac wrote:Last March, only Thomson Flight could not land at Innsbruck
Any Boeing pilots on here (Thomson only operate them, the Airbus' are all still under First Choice) who can confirm this? I thought Thomson only had modern 737-800s and 757s where this issue would not arise. Or do they still operate the last few 737-300s where the older spec may be an issue?
I do not think the operator would specify a lower spec aircraft IMO.
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New and improved me
Topic last updated on 16-October-2010 at 22:02