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Titan Airways........

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Old 16th Sep 2011, 17:44
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Titan Airways........

BAe 146-300 to Operate for UK Ministry of Defence under Titan Airways Contract | Shephard Group

Titan wins Falklands air bridge contract | Shephard Group

If we are contracting out a lot of the routine work to Titan Airways, why are we spending £10.5B on the FSTA PFI? And if these guys are the company of choice to provide airbridge capabilities, why did they not figure in the Cyprus Trooper contract?

Just asking??
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Old 16th Sep 2011, 18:12
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Didn't Titan have the shuttle up and down the Gulf (Ali al Salem and points south) with an ATP a few years ago?
 
Old 16th Sep 2011, 18:13
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Errr, no KC30s in service yet and the article doesn't say how long Titan has the contract for. Probably worth saving the feigned outrage until you know the facts.
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Old 16th Sep 2011, 20:05
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Titan's whole (main?) business is short notice and short term contracting - substituting for u/s aircraft rather than cancelling flights or running F1 teams/drivers about for their short NW Europe season. It makes good Bucks.

I'm only surprised they got their B767 into business news so late?
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Old 16th Sep 2011, 20:56
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Damn, if only the RAF - once upon a time - had a larger fleet of 146s at Northolt, with trained crews etc...

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Old 16th Sep 2011, 21:28
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Jamesdevice:

A couple of months ago BAE Systems sold the whole of its Asset Management Organisation, including around 150 white-tail 146s and Jetstreams. They now have no assests left to manage.
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Old 16th Sep 2011, 21:47
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just noticed the date on that first press release. Ever been had? Post deleted
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Old 17th Sep 2011, 06:40
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Business Class to Stanley!

MoD has requested the fitment of life-port stretchers and business class seats which will reduce capacity to 200.

There's posh for you!
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Old 17th Sep 2011, 07:54
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Hello1,

RTFQ - 'Just Asking'
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Old 17th Sep 2011, 11:50
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Having been out of the RAF since 1977 and having no access to JSPs I don't know what the rules are. How anybody could be "Required" to travel business class on a predominantly trooping flight isn't quite clear to me! Will the peasant class get upgrades if the posh seats are vacant?
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Old 17th Sep 2011, 22:08
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As far as I remember (admittedly when a 747 was on the route) there was hardly ever a major shortage of pax seats. But the freight capacity was fully used... So it presumably makes no sense to have a high-density seating configuration that you don't need (or couldn't use because fuel plus max freight leaves less weight for pax). I'm sure a mover can correct that if it's rubbish...

I don't know how the seating allocation is done - I went cattle class down, and six months later got a bigger seat at the front for the trip back (which was the only advantage - not exactly 'business' class!)
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 07:11
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Having been out of the RAF since 1977 and having no access to JSPs I don't know what the rules are. How anybody could be "Required" to travel business class on a predominantly trooping flight isn't quite clear to me! Will the peasant class get upgrades if the posh seats are vacant?
I'm led to believe the larger legroom seats are partly there for minor leg injuries. Gives folk more room without using the aeromedical rig. They may also available be available to "sell" on to other govt departments, organisations and civilians. Thus defraying some of the cost of the airbridge.
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 09:05
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Many thanks! That is a very clear and logical explanation.
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 09:30
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Sensible posts above that have described the seat fit correctly. The FI airbridge is low density and outside of RIC changeover the non-buisness seats are usually more popular as the low number of pax can routinely stretch across a number of them.

Priority for the 'business' seats goes to aeromed (if not stretcher bound), aeromed escorts/medics then fare paying civilian passengers then compassionate cases. The 'Senior Passenger' then gets his comfy seat allotted (although I, like many, offered my 'Senior Passenger' seat to the most junior chap on the manifest) before the rest are churned out.

The 747 proved very popular due to the freight space offered which was then bulked out with fresh product. For those who only remember the scurvy days fresh fruit and veg can now be found in abundance in all the messes (rather than just the WO & SNCO mess!).
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 11:25
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In my experience, the posher seats always seemed to go to the 'Ruperts' with their cravats and red/green/brown corduroy trousers.
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 12:52
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Pass your AIB/AOSB/OASC and you too can have dodgy clothing choices and comfy seats. There are more than enough Ratings/Other Ranks who've made that decision to make your comment sound extremely chippy....
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Old 18th Sep 2011, 19:28
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Every time I travelled to the sun-soaked island paradise of the Malvinas, I either flew myself or was allocated one of the comfy seats - although on one occasion we were shunted into the back for take-off and landing as one of the male trolley tarts was ill, so they'd closed off the front to comply with the RAF regulations....

Some of the worst in-flight catering known to man though (Italian lamb...) - and I lost count of the number of times the only available video was Pitch Black .

However, a good slug of scotch and water in the pig pen at ASI helped one sleep soundly on the leg to MPA - hopefully to be collected by the off-going QRA crew to escape 'ordeal by brief' about Argie mines etc. for the umpteenth time.

How come you got the cheap seats, MrB? Normally aircrew travelled up front - and it was always amusing playing 'spot Woopert of the Wedgiment' as you say.
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Old 19th Sep 2011, 09:44
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cheap seats

The way the bean counters are going these days it could become webbing seats in the back of a C130 for everyone !?
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Old 19th Sep 2011, 11:36
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Giving the "ordeal by brief" was the best way of picking the incoming FIONA or checking out the dancing tarts when the shows came in
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Old 19th Sep 2011, 13:06
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I was lucky enough to do my FI detachment when the 747 was the airbridge, why the RAF just don't buy a few of them to operate as troopers I don't know, wonderful aircraft, huge capacity & easy to maintain.. But then again that would make sense!
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