Possibly a stupid question
I know I might well be ridiculed and laughed at but I will take the risk.
Do you good freight people ever take passengers? What has prompted me to ask is because I recently saw an advert offering to take a small number of passengers on a cargo ship. Apparently it is a very popular way to travel as it is a much different experience to that of a normal passenger ship. I am sure some people would like to try flying in a freighter just to be different. |
Basically, no.
Cargo Operators are generally not licensed to carry "passengers". There will follow, of course, a huge thread growth now, discussing the carriage of cargo attendants, horse grooms, airline staff, etc. Also, since 9/11, most aviation authorities now forbid it on security grounds. |
Basically yes.
But you have to be connected, it is not open for general public. |
Basically yes. But you have to be connected, it is not open for general public. |
Seem to recall that cargolux used to take fare paying pax when they operated B747-200s not sure if they still do though.
|
Wow, MatKat, you have a long memory! :E
|
I know I might well be ridiculed and laughed at but I will take the risk. It is not a safety issue or a ticketing issue but an INSURANCE and LIABILITY issue. Horse and gorilla attendants are covered in the premium but any general publicants are not. Hence if a freight mob accepted a bloke off the street for carriage he will have to sign an Indemnity form before flight, which will free a Company and its Insurer of any rights to claims by said bloke for any injury and death. Much safer to fly pax aircraft and be done with it esp if you have dependents. Then again if your girlfriend resembles a gorilla and you bring her along you're likely to be automatically covered! http://cdnimg.visualizeus.com/thumbs...897a48b4_m.jpg |
Thanks for the post Nervous SLF.
I'd love to try this, by Ship of course. I'm just having a 'trawl' on Google and it has 'wetted' my appetite :) coldair |
Some cargo ships are allowed to take up to 12 passengers in what they call 'owners' cabins. Above that number the licensing requirements become more onerous, for example they need to carry a qualified doctor.
There are a couple of companies that specialising in this type of travel, here's one I used : The Cruise People Ltd The Cruise People Ltd [Europe] 88 York Street, London W1H 1QT For the best in Small Ships, Expeditions and Freighter Travel Tel: 020 7723 2450, 0800 526 313. Fax: 020 7723 2486 E.mail: [email protected] |
Originally Posted by Nervous SLF
(Post 7138698)
I know I might well be ridiculed and laughed at but I will take the risk.
Do you good freight people ever take passengers? What has prompted me to ask is because I recently saw an advert offering to take a small number of passengers on a cargo ship. Apparently it is a very popular way to travel as it is a much different experience to that of a normal passenger ship. I am sure some people would like to try flying in a freighter just to be different. |
Long, long time ago we carried <=12 pax on banana boats. Ladies of fornicable age (flexible classification) were guaranteed a satisfactory voyage.
In one case, hubby would have been less satisfied had he known what the second mate was up to whilst said hubby was enjoying an extended tour of the machinery spaces. Unfortunately, a couple of comely lasses could wreak havoc with the usual harmonious relations of the young officers :rolleyes: Anyhoo; we never carried pax on our B747 freighters, not even crew wives. |
Oh Lord..This has awakened memories..
Back a decade or 3 ago, this old-stager used to ride on Royal Mail sacks on 748 freighter flights into CastleDon... did it 12 consecutive weeks to avoid a tedious road journey...
On week 13 I missed the flight (after "my" S61 suffered a gen. failure).. that flight ended as a burning hole in the ground near Kegworth after the door detatched and wrapped around the elevator/horizontal stabiliser. All 3 souls on-board lost. |
Didn't Hansie Cronje (SA cricket captain) not live to regret hitching a lift in a freighter?
|
Flew a freighter to a South American country, was asked to carry a pax on two occasions, one was a hooker being deported from said country and another was a politician who missed our scheduled passenger flight. Things were a lot more casual back then. Was a 748, Dart powered, not the new one.
|
I seem to recall that UPS had advertised a program many, many years ago that would utilize their freighters for pax operations on weekends. . . . . They were to use windowless pax pods with FA's (UPS possibly aimed such flights at positioning vacationing pax for cruise ship lines).
Anyone recall such a program? I think that the experiment had only lasted a week or two if at all. |
UPS
I do remember, they bought B727's with windows in the late 90's. The aircraft were specially fitted for a quick change. As opposed to a CF, I believe the seats rolled in on pallets locking and connecting electrically. They actually operated for several years.
|
I seem to recall that UPS had advertised a program many, many years ago that would utilize their freighters for pax operations on weekends. . . . . They were to use windowless pax pods with FA's (UPS possibly aimed such flights at positioning vacationing pax for cruise ship lines).
Anyone recall such a program? I think that the experiment had only lasted a week or two if at all. Yes, I remember that. It was a long time ago, but it is true. I am not sure about the pax pod part though. |
Originally Posted by Tableview
(Post 7141276)
Some cargo ships are allowed to take up to 12 passengers in what they call 'owners' cabins. Above that number the licensing requirements become more onerous, for example they need to carry a qualified doctor.
This not long after WWII and said GA had spent many years working in the slums of Glasgow, mainly fighting TB, so she seriously earned the R&R time onboard! |
Not anymore - as much as some cargo operators would love to earn a few extra bucks/quid/euro/whatever to defray the exploding fuel costs by selling off these available seats, 9/11 changed all that. Unlike passenger planes, main deck cargo hold and cockpit are accessible during flight. So, for security reasons, no more passengers, only folk who need to be there for a good reason, like additional pilots, engineers, loadmasters, grooms. One of the setbacks of freighter aircraft - no pretty flight attendants serving coffee to the crew. If the two guys in the front seats get very lucky, they might cajole a grumpy mechanic into getting them a cup, which he probably spat into before bringing it up front cuz they gave 'im grief bout them DMI stickers ;)
|
What type of arrangement, I wonder, was used for extraordinary rendition of terror suspects? seem to remember stories about these individuals being more or less tied down in aircraft with very little passenger accomodation.....
And along these lines, was there not, years ago, an airline called Air America that used to have peculiar manifests... |
All times are GMT. The time now is 23:12. |
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.