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Airline safety question

Reply from: F&C
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 02:36
Airline safety question

After the recent crash, Garuda domestic flights have been declared
unsafe. But they are still flying internationally.

How can there be a difference between intl and domestic standards?

I mean, at the maintenence facility, do they actually give preferential
treatment to planes used for international flights?

Reply from: Mxsmanic
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 04:36
Re: Airline safety question

F&C writes:

> How can there be a difference between intl and domestic standards?

Different jurisdictions have different regulations. The aircraft or flights
are no more or less safe between jurisdictions, but the legal definition of
"safe" may vary.

> I mean, at the maintenence facility, do they actually give preferential
> treatment to planes used for international flights?

If the maintenance facility is maintaining all aircraft correctly, no
preferential treatment is necessary. If preferential treatment is necessary,
then all the correct maintenance is not being done.

--
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Reply from: F&C
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 04:44
Re: Airline safety question

Mxsmanic wrote:
> F&C writes:
>
>
>>How can there be a difference between intl and domestic standards?
>
>
> Different jurisdictions have different regulations. The aircraft or flights
> are no more or less safe between jurisdictions, but the legal definition of
> "safe" may vary.

International standards are higher than domestic Indonesian standards,
so how could an airline be declared unsafe within Indonesia but safe
under the international standards?

Reply from: Mxsmanic
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 05:01
Re: Airline safety question

F&C writes:

> International standards are higher than domestic Indonesian standards,
> so how could an airline be declared unsafe within Indonesia but safe
> under the international standards?

I don't know. You'd have to ask the party making the declaration. Perhaps it
is politically expedient to make the declaration, irrespective of any of the
realities of air safety.

--
Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail.

Reply from: d.g.s.
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 05:19
Re: Airline safety question

On 4/8/2007 5:36 PM F&C jumped down, turned around, and wrote:

> After the recent crash, Garuda domestic flights have been declared
> unsafe. But they are still flying internationally.
>
> How can there be a difference between intl and domestic standards?
>
> I mean, at the maintenence facility, do they actually give preferential
> treatment to planes used for international flights?

Note this:

http :// news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6418891.stm

Perhaps it's just a matter of time before Garuda experiences a similar
situation. Perhaps.
--
dgs

Reply from: Tchiowa
Date: 09 Apr 2007, 09:14
Re: Airline safety question

On Apr 9, 7:36 am, F&C <n...@hottmail,com > wrote:
> After the recent crash, Garuda domestic flights have been declared
> unsafe. But they are still flying internationally.
>
> How can there be a difference between intl and domestic standards?
>
> I mean, at the maintenence facility, do they actually give preferential
> treatment to planes used for international flights?

Yes. For example one Indonesian airline has its maintenance for
international aircraft performed in Singapore in order to meet the
international specifications while it does its own maintenance on
domestic Indonesia planes. TAAG in Angola has its international planes
serviced in Paris.


Reply from: Jim Davis
Date: 10 Apr 2007, 02:23
Re: Airline safety question

X-No-Archive: Yes

On Apr 9, 2:14 am, "Tchiowa" <tchio...@hotmail,com > wrote:
> On Apr 9, 7:36 am, F&C <n...@hottmail,com > wrote:
> > I mean, at the maintenence facility, do they actually give preferential
> > treatment to planes used for international flights?
>
> Yes. For example one Indonesian airline has its maintenance for
> international aircraft performed in Singapore in order to meet the
> international specifications while it does its own maintenance on
> domestic Indonesia planes. TAAG in Angola has its international planes
> serviced in Paris.

International flights have stricter maintenance rules because Duct
Tape deteriorates faster over salt water.






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Thread:
   F&C
    Mxsmanic
  d.g.s.
   Jim Davis