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British Airways A380 captain reveals what it’s like to fly the biggest passenger aircraft in the world
The 48-year-old has been flying the A380 for two years now and has kindly agreed to tell MailOnline Travel just what it's like to be in control of one. And it turns out that the low levels of noise it makes is one of the most surprising aspects of flying it. (www.dailymail.co.uk) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Yes, that cannot be factually correct. There has to be diversion airports along the planned routes and there are at least 30 if not more A380 routes. Having only 20 runways does not seem right.
One diversion airport being here in Bangor. We had an Etihad A380 land here a year or so ago.
I'm thinking the A380 can land at many airports but only at the expense of the normal ground traffic flow. Land one at San Diego (KSAN)? You could land it and get it on the parallel taxiway but no one else could use the runway, too closely spaced from the taxiway. I don't know this for sure, just a possible example.
Even at LAX, the '380 cannot land on 24R and hold short of the left. If this should happen, the north side of the airport is now shut down. The local controller and Ground need to coordinate so the 380 doesn't have to stop between the runways.
Even at LAX, the '380 cannot land on 24R and hold short of the left. If this should happen, the north side of the airport is now shut down. The local controller and Ground need to coordinate so the 380 doesn't have to stop between the runways.
I don't know who downvoted me, but check out the blog "View From the Tower" dated August 17th, 2017. It explains things quite well, regarding LAX at least.
"The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on"
You lacked slavish praise for AB, over which some can take umbrage.
You lacked slavish praise for AB, over which some can take umbrage.
Obvious conspiracy. Let’s tell Alex Jones.
What a ridiculous statement. The A380 can easily land on runways that are 150 ft (45 m) wide, which is the standard for runways at major airports worldwide. From a 2007 article in Flight Global..."Airbus points out that the A380 has already flown into and out of more than 45 airports, and says that by 2011 more than 70 airports will be ready for A380 operations, including having compatible gates and passenger handling capacity."
Also, except for the superfluous BTV, I don't see anything in the A380 cockpit that isn't standard on all new aircraft models from Boeing and Airbus.