Dear All Friends,
An Expatriate living in Jakarta wrote this message in his web blog.
FYI.

Source: 
http://bialoglowy.blogspot.com/2006/02/fear-factor-flying-in-indonesia.html

Fear Factor: Flying in Indonesia

Recently on the way back from my holidays in Bali I took a flight from 
Denpasar to Jakarta with Adam Air. I’ve heard about this relatively new 
airlines from several friends who all mentioned that they have a brand 
new aircrafts and are authorised to fly to Singapore. IT sounded 
extremely good especially considering the one way tickets price of 
Rp295.000, which was just a bit higher than offer from the cheapest 
“metromini” style none-budget carrier Lion Air. The offer seem to be so 
good that base on my experience of living in Indonesia for several 
years, I immediately started thinking that this is just too good and 
there must be something wrong. Anyway, I decided to try my luck and fly 
with Adam Air and apparently many other passengers thought the same, as 
the flight was totally booked – comparable to Garuda flight which had 
almost no passengers.

When boarding I immediately noticed that the Boeing 737-400 aircraft had 
engine cover scratched everywhere, wings were all dirty and had broken 
paint in several places, door also looked very old and far from my 
expectations of the brand new airplane. Nevertheless, I decided to test 
the level of my fear of flying and get on the plane. Just for the record 
I noted the airplane registration code PK-KKI.

When arrived in Jakarta I looked up the airplane code in the database 
and the “brand new” aircraft that I was flying apparently had its first 
flight on 10-12-1988, thus being 17 years old age aircraft, which if 
compared humans, the airplane would be in its late forties. In its long 
life the mentioned airplane also travelled a lot as it was previously 
used by Sahara India Airlines, Sierra National Airlines and Air Belgium 
(first owner), thus having pretty much interesting life as an aircraft.

Now a question arises if I had a bad lack to fly with the only old 
airplane in Adam Air's fleet or actually the fleet is not as new as I’ve 
expected. Following my curiosity I prepared a table of Adam Air owned 
aircrafts providing the age of each aircraft:

Registration Aircraft First flight date Aircraft Age
PK-KKF 737-200 12-2-1980 26
PK-KKN 737-200 21-3-1980 25
PK-KKQ 737-200 16-1-1981 25
PK-KKJ 737-200 3-2-1982 24
PK-KKL 737-200 12-4-1984 21
PK-KKE 737-300 31-8-1987 18
PK-KKP 737-200 31-5-1988 17
PK-KKH 737-400 11-7-1988 17
PK-KKU 737-300 4-8-1988 17
PK-KKI 737-400 10-12-1988 17
PK-KKD 737-400 22-12-1988 17
PK-KKR 737-300 9-1-1989 17
PK-KKS 737-400 28-1-1989 17
PK-KKT 737-400 5-9-1989 16
PK-KKG 737-400 7-1-1991 15
PK-KKC 737-400 9-1-1992 14
PK-KKA 737-500 10-6-1997 8

Looking at that I feel I was actually lucky as the 17 years old aircraft 
I had a pleasure to fly with is actually very new if compared to another 
Aircraft used by Adam Air registered as PK-KKN (KKN is actually one of 
the most popular acronyms in Indonesia originated from 
Korupsi-Kolusi-Nepotisme) which at a current date is 25 years old. 
Comparable to human age this aircraft would be in its late seventies and 
probably already having one spot booked at the graveyard.

Base on the table above we can also calculate an average age of the Adam 
Air's fleet, which is 18 years. Actually, there was only one airplane 
that was less than 10 years old and if I’m not mistaken that must be the 
Adam Air aircraft authorised to land in Singapore.

Clearly, many passengers chose Adam Air airlines thinking about the new 
airplanes, when actually the fleet is full of refurbished aircrafts with 
only one relatively new aircraft which is used by Adam Air marketing 
team to create an image or rather mirage, of having fleet of new aircrafts.

Maybe Adam’s Air definition of “new” is somehow local Indonesian 
definition, thus I might have wrong perspective. To verify that I 
compared age of major Indonesian airlines and came up with the following 
statistics of indonesian aircraft carriers average age of the fleet:

Garuda Indonesia - Age 10 years
Lion Air - Age 17.2 years
Adam Air - Age 18.1 years
Awair - Age 18.8 years
Merpati - 21.8 years
Batavia - Age 23.4 years
Sriwijaya Air - Age 23.5 years
Mandala Airlines - Age 23.9 years
Bouraq Indonesia Airlines - Age 25.1 years


Shocking! With 18 years old fleet of elderly aircrafts Adam Air comes on 
the third position of the newest aircraft fleet in Indonesia. Garuda 
Indonesia leads with 10 years old fleet. Another great surprise is that 
none-budget carried Lion Air comes second with just a little over 17 
years old fleet – that is almost half older fleet than Garuda Indonesia. 
The list is closed by Bouraq Indnonesia Airlines which with 25 years old 
fleet gives me an idea of a Fear Factor stunt “Flight with Bouraq” for 
test of flying phobia. Mandala Airlines comes second from the end.

Having Mandala Airlines so low in the list reminds me about the 
Mandala’s Boeing 737-200 crash on 05/09/2005 which resulted in total 
body count almost 150. At the date of incident the PK-RIM aircraft was 
almost 24 years in service. For comparison the Lion Air's 
McDonnell-Douglas MD-82 airplane that crashed in Solo Airport on 
30/11/2004 at the date of incident that resulted in 25 fatalities was 20 
years in service. At last report, it had accumulated 56,674 flight hours 
and 43,940 landings!

I somehow think that it’s not just a coincidence that the aircraft that 
crashed were at least 20 years old.

To compare that to the foreign airlines, I checked the average age of 
fleet of pervious owners of the Adam Air’s PK-KKI aircraft I was flying 
with.

Blue Panorama Airlines: Age of the fleet - 11.6 years
Sahara India Airlines: Age of the fleet - 10.5 years
Interesting, 11.6 years and 10.5 years which I think proves that both 
airlines found this plane too old to operate, while Adam Air management 
thinks operating 17 years old aircraft is perfectly fine.

Browsing through recent newspapers I’ve found several articles that will 
be a good conclusion for this post.

The first one comes from The Jakarta Post (dated 11 February 2006):

An Adam Air Boeing 737-300 plane serving the Jakarta-Makassar route was 
forced to make an emergency landing Saturday at the small Tambulaka 
Airport in Sumba, East Nusa Tenggara, a spokesperson for Adam Air said.

The plane took off from Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta International Airport 
at 6:20 a.m. with 145 passengers on board. It was scheduled to land at 
Hasanuddin Airport in Makassar at 9:25 a.m. local time, Suwandi, Adam 
Air supervisor for Makassar, said. There is a one hour time difference 
between Jakarta and Makassar.

However, navigational problems caused pilot Tri Tuniogo to lose contact 
with the destination airport, he said. The plane was later found to have 
landed at Tambolaka at 9:45 a.m. local time.

"No one was hurt in the incident," Didik, Adam Air's public relations 
officer for Jakarta, said, adding that the emergency landing was made 
due to bad weather. "As to whether it was a storm or heavy rain that 
forced the pilot to land -- we remain uninformed," he said.
Ok, so there was a bad weather and airplane had to land. Nothing 
unusual, right? Until you read the follow-up published on the 
Valentine’s day.
The ministry of transportation considers that Adam Air committed a 
serious violation when operating a plane still required for "evidence" 
following a serious incident affecting the navigation system of the 
plane. "That is a serious violation and the first ever committed by an 
airline in Indonesia. The Adam Air management needs to be examined in 
connection with it," the ministry's director general of air 
transportation, Iksan Tatang, said replying a reporter's question here 
on Monday.

Adam Air's Boeing 737-300 aircraft with flight number DHI728 had made an 
emergency landing at Tambolaka airstrip in West Sumba, East Nusa 
Tenggara, after wandering for three hours due to a navigation system 
failure on its way from Jakarta to East Nusa Tenggar with

The director general said the plane should not have been flown pending 
an examination by the National Committee of Transportation Safety (KNKT) 
and the Directorate of Airworthiness Certification.
That’s interesting. Previously it was a bad weather and now it is a 
navigation system failure. Huh? I think the real story came up only 
because of the serious violation committed by Adam Air. FYI two of my 
friends flight with Lion Air from Manado and airplane had serious 
malfunction to the extent that stewardess ordered everyone to wear a 
life vest. Fortunately flight finished without fatalities and nothing 
appeared in news - probably thanks to the KKN acronym I’ve mentioned 
before.

You probably wonder how old was that Boeing 737-300 which got navigation 
system failure acka landed because of bad weather? Looking at the age of 
Adam Air’s 737-300 fleet the plane must be at least 17 years in service. 
That is probably 3 years too short to have this small incident resulting 
in fatalities and adding another Indonesian airplane crash to the list. 
Looking at the whole picture, I predict there will be at least one 
Indonesian aircraft crash before the end of this year. Thus, have a nice 
flight everyone!



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Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia
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