I'm setting up the 'flight deck'; doing an 'acceptance inspection' testing individual systems on the aircraft while my Captain is outside checking the exterior. He comes in from the walkaround and says "Hey- come check out this tire". Hmmm.. I'm thinking there might be a small defect, and he wants my opinion on whether I think we should continue or try to get a new tire. Approaching the left main gear from over 20 feet away I can see the damage. "Holy crap. How did they not notice this last night?!" Ok. Maybe if the spot in question was resting on the bottom, it would have been hard to notice this during a postflight walkaround at night. Who knows? I don't.
Alright, we need a new tire. Too bad we're one of the only operators to fly this type aircraft into Newark, so the chances of them having a tire are slim to none! Sure enough, there isn't a tire on the field, so our company is putting one on the next flight up from Charlotte. It's going to be awhile, so we decide to go relax at the hotel intead of the airport. Our flight eventually canceled (sorry passengers, and gate agents!) and the plane was finally ready to be ferried back to Charlotte at 3:00pm. We missed our deadhead, and the PHX flying we were supposed to do the next day. But, we got to spend another night at home - so it wasn't all that bad!
A Jet Airways (carrier from India) 777-300ER being prepped for it's flight from Newark to Delhi. It's biiiig.
A Lufthansa 747 landing with the Manhattan skyline in the background.
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Just finished a 4 day trip yesterday with some interesting occurences. Our second night we overnighted in Memphis. The hotel van driver said things were crazy at the hotel and that they were completely sold out. Not really thinking, I asked why. "A lot of people are coming to Memphis to evacuate the Gulf Coast for Hurricane Gustav". Ohhhh yeah. Duh. That would explain all of the Mississippi and Louisiana license plates I see. This isn't the last we would see of Gustav on this trip.
Day 4 of 4. After leaving Harrisburg, PA I check in with New York center as 'Lifeguard' Air Shuttle 2663. NY: "Lifeguard Air Shuttle 2663, cleared direct Charlotte" Well that never happens. But today we're given priority handling, as we're operating as a Lifeguard flight. Medevac flights or flights carrying time sensitive transplant organs attach 'Lifeguard' to their callsign and are given priority handling. We've got a heart valve onboard, going for a transplant in Charlotte. Cool.
After dropping the heart valve and passengers off in Charlotte, we continue on to San Antonio before finishing the trip with a return to the Queen City. The weather in San Antonio is fine, but it's what remains between CLT and SAT that could be a problem.
The Captain expected our dispatcher to file our flight plan to the north of the storm thru Memphis towards Oklahoma, and then down into Texas. But that isn't the case; the paperwork shows us filed to Atlanta, then pretty much direct to San Antonio, a route that looks like it goes right through the meat of the remnants. I check the radar summary before we leave, and it's showing a line of storms through Mississippi with tops in the mid-30's, with some cells reaching above 50,000'. We should be able to top the storms that reach into the 30's, and we've got some extra fuel to go around those that reach higher.
We cruise west at 36,000' and are just at the tops of the clouds, getting a fairly smooth ride. No deviations on the way, and only a couple of zig-zag's on the way back at 37,000'. Not too bad at all.
Home for a couple of days, then back for another 4-day on Friday when Tropical Storm Hanna is predicted to make landfall in in the Southeast before tracking up into the Carolinas. My trip remains on the east coast till Saturday morning when it transitions to PHX. Hm. Convenient....
Day 4 of 4. After leaving Harrisburg, PA I check in with New York center as 'Lifeguard' Air Shuttle 2663. NY: "Lifeguard Air Shuttle 2663, cleared direct Charlotte" Well that never happens. But today we're given priority handling, as we're operating as a Lifeguard flight. Medevac flights or flights carrying time sensitive transplant organs attach 'Lifeguard' to their callsign and are given priority handling. We've got a heart valve onboard, going for a transplant in Charlotte. Cool.
After dropping the heart valve and passengers off in Charlotte, we continue on to San Antonio before finishing the trip with a return to the Queen City. The weather in San Antonio is fine, but it's what remains between CLT and SAT that could be a problem.
The Captain expected our dispatcher to file our flight plan to the north of the storm thru Memphis towards Oklahoma, and then down into Texas. But that isn't the case; the paperwork shows us filed to Atlanta, then pretty much direct to San Antonio, a route that looks like it goes right through the meat of the remnants. I check the radar summary before we leave, and it's showing a line of storms through Mississippi with tops in the mid-30's, with some cells reaching above 50,000'. We should be able to top the storms that reach into the 30's, and we've got some extra fuel to go around those that reach higher.
We cruise west at 36,000' and are just at the tops of the clouds, getting a fairly smooth ride. No deviations on the way, and only a couple of zig-zag's on the way back at 37,000'. Not too bad at all.
Home for a couple of days, then back for another 4-day on Friday when Tropical Storm Hanna is predicted to make landfall in in the Southeast before tracking up into the Carolinas. My trip remains on the east coast till Saturday morning when it transitions to PHX. Hm. Convenient....
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