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-   -   One for the sites Spelling Police (https://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/613522-one-sites-spelling-police.html)

NutLoose 19th Sep 2018 15:50

One for the sites Spelling Police
 
Ahhh good old quality contol

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-45572275

https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....b686b3f8a4.jpg

And yes, contol was intentional.

Some of the comments read well, "no one gives an F anymore" :)

MichaelKPIT 19th Sep 2018 15:55

D'you mean "site's" and not "sites?" :ok:

212man 19th Sep 2018 16:08


Originally Posted by MichaelKPIT (Post 10252930)
D'you mean "site's" and not "sites?" :ok:

Beat me to it!

Davidsoffice 19th Sep 2018 16:10

Navigational query.....

Where's the f in Pacific?

Hong Kong Dave 19th Sep 2018 16:14

All that cost-cutting catches up with you in the end.

gearlever 19th Sep 2018 16:25

Airplane too short?

NutLoose 19th Sep 2018 16:41

I never put apostrophes in thread titles as some site's do not allow them, so I sadly tend apply the rule carte blanche. I could have said it was another go at the spelling police, but it isn't.

jolihokistix 19th Sep 2018 16:43

Reminds me of the web address for britis hairways.

JW411 19th Sep 2018 16:51

You mean "some sites" (as in the plural) do not allow them?

MichaelKPIT 19th Sep 2018 17:10


Originally Posted by JW411 (Post 10252984)
You mean "some sites" (as in the plural) do not allow them?

Aaaand you beat me! ;-)

AviatorDave 19th Sep 2018 17:17

Seriously - how could work like this ever leave the paint shop?
I have no clue what technology is used to paint aircraft nowadays, maybe its all done by robots that don‘t check their work and someone made a typo during programming. Or the plane was painted by illiterates.
To me, it seems somewhat too obvious to be a genuine mistake.
Maybe a little marketing gimmick?

boaclhryul 19th Sep 2018 18:10

Simple explanation - someone said to the painter, "F off". And Bob's yer uncle.

spannersatcx 19th Sep 2018 18:25

The problem started earlier I think, the gap between the Y and P is too large!
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....31a281ce04.jpg

wideman 19th Sep 2018 18:51

Only business class and economy, so no F.

tremblerman 19th Sep 2018 19:05

Remember when Dan Air paid a rather expensive sign writer when one of there own staff could have done it for half the cost.
Ended up with Dan Air Lodon on the 1-11.

jack11111 19th Sep 2018 19:27

From the photos in the BBC story, the airline's first instinct is to cover-up the mistake, just as is done with accident aircraft.

ozziekiwi 19th Sep 2018 20:04


Originally Posted by tremblerman (Post 10253107)
Remember when Dan Air paid a rather expensive sign writer when one of there own staff could have done it for half the cost.
Ended up with Dan Air Lodon on the 1-11.

Seeing that we are talking spelling police it's ''their'' and not 'there' in that context

clareprop 19th Sep 2018 20:32


Seeing that we are talking spelling police it's ''their'' and not 'there' in that context
I think it should be 'when one of its own staff...'.

SysDude 19th Sep 2018 21:01

"Simple explanation - someone said to the painter, "F off". And Bob's yer uncle."

Best one!

Smalahove 19th Sep 2018 21:18


Originally Posted by clareprop (Post 10253183)
I think it should be 'when one of its own staff...'.

You are correct, it's its, not it's. As Frank Zappa said, the crux of the biscuit is the apostrophe.

golfyankeesierra 19th Sep 2018 21:18

What was that livery that had a letter on one of the doors. So that when the door was opened the brand got a whole different meaning?

pilotmike 19th Sep 2018 21:34


Originally Posted by NutLoose (Post 10252976)
... so I sadly tend apply the rule carte blanche.

Sadly that doesn't make any sense.

nevillestyke 19th Sep 2018 21:38

Perhaps they thought that they could burn less fuel and cut down on airframe hours, if there was no F in Pacific?

Chu Chu 19th Sep 2018 22:16


Originally Posted by nevillestyke (Post 10253237)
Perhaps they thought that they could burn less fuel and cut down on airframe hours, if there was no F in Pacific?

That would certainly bring Hong Kong and LA closer ;)

T21 19th Sep 2018 23:34

The quality control was too lose. That is how they managed to loose the "F" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Capn Bloggs 20th Sep 2018 01:17


The quality control was too lose.
Maybe it was the French...

AnotherRedWineThanks 20th Sep 2018 01:23


What was that livery that had a letter on one of the doors. So that when the door was opened the brand got a whole different meaning?
An Australian TV show called 'A Current Affair' had that problem, according to a photo I've seen.

McHover 20th Sep 2018 01:29

Seems like they're not the only department at Cathay that resembles the Muppet Show these days. This is on the Fragrant Harbour (Hong Kong) page...


Originally Posted by unitedabx (Post 10251239)
The companys new route to Washington DC has created a political nightmare.
The US agency tasked with marketing the new route has used pictures of Shanghai instead of Hong Kong in their adverts.
The Commercial Department in HKG is back peddling as quickly as possible. But what a f***k up.


chuboy 20th Sep 2018 05:26


Originally Posted by spannersatcx (Post 10253062)
The problem started earlier I think, the gap between the Y and P is too large!
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....31a281ce04.jpg

It looks like the words Cathay and Pacific were stencilled independently, with "Pacific" being stencilled from C backwards. If the painters forgot the F that would explain the misspelling and the large space between the two words.

Bull at a Gate 20th Sep 2018 05:30

That should be “company’s” unitedabx.

What happens when you criticise spelling? Everyone starts checking your spelling, along with your grammar and punctuation.

And “peddling” is wrong too.

paulc 20th Sep 2018 06:01

golfyankeesierra, I think it was the old airbus multi-coloured strip house colour scheme which when a rear door was left open made a different word

clareprop 20th Sep 2018 08:36


You are correct, it's its, not it's.
I know. I was being polite and it was 'its' not 'their' rather than 'its' not 'it's'. :p

aloominumtoob 20th Sep 2018 08:40

Spelling.....
 

Originally Posted by gearlever (Post 10252960)
Airplane too short?

Now if it was an aeroplane it wouldn't be too short!

NutLoose 20th Sep 2018 09:23

The first RAF VC10 to be repainted by an outside contractor, ( Luton I think ) had the fin flash reversed so it was in effect the French Airfarce one. It took a while for everyone to realise, as people could see something was wrong with the scheme, but couldn't quite figure out what it was. It was back at Brize for a while before it was noticed.

meleagertoo 20th Sep 2018 11:21

It's probably easy enough for a painter immersed in the job to simply call for the next stencil and get on with it without paying attention to what is actually being applied. And if the airframe is due in service hours later there is no time to fix it.

I am intrigued though that one is deemed spelling "police" to flag up such a blatant error. In the first instance it is clearly a mere typo, not a spelling error at all and even if it were spelling it is hardly "police" action to point out something so ridiculously blatant?

DaveReidUK 20th Sep 2018 12:41


Originally Posted by NutLoose (Post 10253574)
The first RAF VC10 to be repainted by an outside contractor, ( Luton I think ) had the fin flash reversed so it was in effect the French Airfarce one.

BA (may even have been BEA in those days) painted a few RAF VC-10s (in a rather attractive orange-peel finish, IIRC). :O

TylerMonkey 20th Sep 2018 14:25


Originally Posted by T21 (Post 10253301)
The quality control was too lose. That is how they managed to loose the "F" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

control was too LOOSE . They managed to LOSE the F ....... methinks.

tdracer 20th Sep 2018 17:52


Originally Posted by golfyankeesierra (Post 10253218)
What was that livery that had a letter on one of the doors. So that when the door was opened the brand got a whole different meaning?

Probably not what you're think of, but back in the late 1970's (when I was a fresh faced new-hire at Boeing), Braniff had ordered up a bunch of 727s. The had an interesting paint scheme known as "Flying Colors". The aircraft was painted one uniform color - although each aircraft was a different color (some of them rather garish) - and along the side of the center inlet it said in rather large letters "Flying Colors".
There was an access panel which matched up with the 'l' in colors - which was routinely left off so the had a bunch of "Flying Coors" 727s on the Renton flight line (Coors being a popular brand of beer in the US - sometimes compared with making love in a canoe).

MichaelKPIT 20th Sep 2018 18:17


Originally Posted by golfyankeesierra (Post 10253218)
What was that livery that had a letter on one of the doors. So that when the door was opened the brand got a whole different meaning?

It was Starbucks. But if you Google "starbucks van with door open" and click on the "images" link you'll find a whole bunch of others too!

https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....3b4d409bcf.jpg

chuboy 20th Sep 2018 22:31


Originally Posted by golfyankeesierra (Post 10253218)
What was that livery that had a letter on one of the doors. So that when the door was opened the brand got a whole different meaning?

The old Airbus livery on the A340!

https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....61d63d4f8a.jpg


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