Story and audio:    http://www.wwno.org
Record-high fuel prices 
have hammered airlines, forcing executives to eliminate flights, cut 
back on unprofitable routes and make passengers pay for many perks that 
used to be free.
Now the airlines are looking at other ways to save money. That means a new opportunity for a plane from the past.
On
 a typical day at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, 
the "Plane Train" ferries some 200,000 travelers a day between 
terminals. One of those passengers, Rebecca Hamilton, is on her way home
 to Florida.
"If I can do it economically, I fly out of Gainesville," she says.
Often,
 she finds that affordable ticket on Delta Air Lines. Hamilton knows 
that always means two things: a connection through Atlanta, and at least
 part of her trip will be on a smaller, regional jet. But that's 
changing.
Tonight, she's a bit surprised to board a plane branded
 "Silver Airways." And it's not a regional jet. It has propellers — 
something she has not seen in decades.
"Mostly I remember what 
other people say: that it's bouncier and that it's more turbulent and 
your stomach whooshes into your, you know, a little more often. But 
quite frankly, it takes a lot to make me feel scared and I just don't 
really mind it," Hamilton says.
Outside, the propeller blades 
create a rhythmic ruckus as they chop through the air. Inside, it's only
 a faint drone. Ninety minutes later, Hamilton is on the ground in 
Gainesville, ready for her short drive home. The airplane she came in on
 is also home.
These 34-seat Saab turboprops make up the entire 
Silver fleet. And each night at its 60,000-square-foot maintenance 
hangar at Gainesville's airport, crews check tires, landing gear and 
dozens of other components. Night maintenance supervisor Justin 
Hernandez is about to sign off on what looks like a new plane.
"Right
 now, to the left, Aircraft 352, that's our latest. Its aircraft name is
 Limitless. It just got here from conformity check," Hernandez says.
That's
 the last step before rotating into the Silver fleet. Regional carrier 
Mesaba once flew this plane, first with Northwest Airlines' colors, and 
more recently, Delta's.
Matthew Holiday, a vice president at 
Silver, says the carrier doesn't try to hide its turboprop fleet. 
Rather, it embraces it — right down to the logo, which mimics a spinning
 propeller.
"We want to be clear in our messaging to consumers that this is a turboprop. But it's not a bad thing," Holiday says.
Through
 the 1990s and 2000s, airlines replaced turboprops with faster regional 
jets. Jet fuel was about 87 cents per gallon. Now it's four times that 
much. Since turboprops use less fuel, flying one instead of a jet often 
means a profit instead of a loss. So expect to see more, says Regional 
Airline Association President Roger Cohen.
"After a steady 
decline in the ratio of turboprops to jets in the regional fleet, we've 
just seen here over the last year, year and a half, the first time that 
line started to move in the other direction," Cohen says.
The 
Federal Aviation Administration forecasts regional jets with fewer than 
40 seats will disappear from fleets by 2015. This comes as reliance on 
larger turboprop aircraft doubles in the next decade. And with new 
technology that cancels most noise and vibration, they won't be your 
grandfather's turboprop.
Story and audio:    http://www.wwno.org
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment