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- Canada - Toronto & Southern Ont.
-- Porter Air Ftw
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I'll start by saying that the plane is perfectly safe. A dash-8 Q400 would be fairly comparable to anything else if all other factors were the same. In this case the factors aren't the same, or even close to the same.
Air Canada/WestJet/Jazz, etc operate out of Pearson which has 6 massively long runways. Porter operates onto the island which only has one runway which is usable for them. In normal weather conditions this is a moot point. However in conditions with reduced runway friction it drastically reduces the safety margin both on landing and take off. Porter also flies a steeper approach profile into the island. This just makes the problem worse on landing due to energy management issues.
The average crew at Air Canada or WestJet has a much greater experience base than the average porter crew. Again, on a normal day, this will be moot point. Air Canada and WestJet for the most part have the first pick of the pilot pool. Porter couldn't find pilots of the experience level that they wanted before, so to keep the hiring going they simply lowered their minimum safe requirements.
So all of that out of the way. Porter obviously is providing a service that the people of downtown want. They've had great success with trying to bring some of the nostalgia and class back to flying. I can only hope that others will try and follow suit rather than always strive pinch every last penny.
I'm sure I'll get flamed as usual by people who have no real clue about aviation or flying transport category props or jets in North America. I'm just trying to clarify some of the misunderstandings posted here, and perhaps bring to light a few issues some might not have considered.
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| Originally posted by failsafe |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by failsafe I'll start by saying that the plane is perfectly safe. A dash-8 Q400 would be fairly comparable to anything else if all other factors were the same. In this case the factors aren't the same, or even close to the same. Air Canada/WestJet/Jazz, etc operate out of Pearson which has 6 massively long runways. Porter operates onto the island which only has one runway which is usable for them. In normal weather conditions this is a moot point. However in conditions with reduced runway friction it drastically reduces the safety margin both on landing and take off. Porter also flies a steeper approach profile into the island. This just makes the problem worse on landing due to energy management issues. The average crew at Air Canada or WestJet has a much greater experience base than the average porter crew. Again, on a normal day, this will be moot point. Air Canada and WestJet for the most part have the first pick of the pilot pool. Porter couldn't find pilots of the experience level that they wanted before, so to keep the hiring going they simply lowered their minimum safe requirements. So all of that out of the way. Porter obviously is providing a service that the people of downtown want. They've had great success with trying to bring some of the nostalgia and class back to flying. I can only hope that others will try and follow suit rather than always strive pinch every last penny. I'm sure I'll get flamed as usual by people who have no real clue about aviation or flying transport category props or jets in North America. I'm just trying to clarify some of the misunderstandings posted here, and perhaps bring to light a few issues some might not have considered. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by failsafe I'll start by saying that the plane is perfectly safe. A dash-8 Q400 would be fairly comparable to anything else if all other factors were the same. In this case the factors aren't the same, or even close to the same. Air Canada/WestJet/Jazz, etc operate out of Pearson which has 6 massively long runways. Porter operates onto the island which only has one runway which is usable for them. In normal weather conditions this is a moot point. However in conditions with reduced runway friction it drastically reduces the safety margin both on landing and take off. Porter also flies a steeper approach profile into the island. This just makes the problem worse on landing due to energy management issues. The average crew at Air Canada or WestJet has a much greater experience base than the average porter crew. Again, on a normal day, this will be moot point. Air Canada and WestJet for the most part have the first pick of the pilot pool. Porter couldn't find pilots of the experience level that they wanted before, so to keep the hiring going they simply lowered their minimum safe requirements. So all of that out of the way. Porter obviously is providing a service that the people of downtown want. They've had great success with trying to bring some of the nostalgia and class back to flying. I can only hope that others will try and follow suit rather than always strive pinch every last penny. I'm sure I'll get flamed as usual by people who have no real clue about aviation or flying transport category props or jets in North America. I'm just trying to clarify some of the misunderstandings posted here, and perhaps bring to light a few issues some might not have considered. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by failsafe I'll start by saying that the plane is perfectly safe. A dash-8 Q400 would be fairly comparable to anything else if all other factors were the same. In this case the factors aren't the same, or even close to the same. Air Canada/WestJet/Jazz, etc operate out of Pearson which has 6 massively long runways. Porter operates onto the island which only has one runway which is usable for them. In normal weather conditions this is a moot point. However in conditions with reduced runway friction it drastically reduces the safety margin both on landing and take off. Porter also flies a steeper approach profile into the island. This just makes the problem worse on landing due to energy management issues. The average crew at Air Canada or WestJet has a much greater experience base than the average porter crew. Again, on a normal day, this will be moot point. Air Canada and WestJet for the most part have the first pick of the pilot pool. Porter couldn't find pilots of the experience level that they wanted before, so to keep the hiring going they simply lowered their minimum safe requirements. So all of that out of the way. Porter obviously is providing a service that the people of downtown want. They've had great success with trying to bring some of the nostalgia and class back to flying. I can only hope that others will try and follow suit rather than always strive pinch every last penny. I'm sure I'll get flamed as usual by people who have no real clue about aviation or flying transport category props or jets in North America. I'm just trying to clarify some of the misunderstandings posted here, and perhaps bring to light a few issues some might not have considered. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by musicsnob_NOT Everything you say is very true (a friend works for Air Canada and says the same thing). Too bad they won't let Air Canada fly out of the island. From what I have read Porter's Q400 have smaller fuel tanks to make up for the shorter runway which is why they can't fly to Halifax non stop. The perfect compromise would be to allow others to fly out of the island while keeping it unique, fast and convienant. |
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| Originally posted by failsafe During testing of jet engines they feed birds through them to make sure that the fan blades and engine can handle the loads. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by musicsnob_NOT Everything you say is very true (a friend works for Air Canada and says the same thing). Too bad they won't let Air Canada fly out of the island. From what I have read Porter's Q400 have smaller fuel tanks to make up for the shorter runway which is why they can't fly to Halifax non stop. The perfect compromise would be to allow others to fly out of the island while keeping it unique, fast and convienant. |
with the purchase of new planes, they are also going to start flying to chicago very soon.
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| Originally posted by failsafe |
^^ lol. I can't say I've ever seen anyone say "sick post!" before.
^ how old are you again?

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| Originally posted by Skipper ^^ lol. I can't say I've ever seen anyone say "sick post!" before. |
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