Flying coffin is always cheap.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Muhkito Afiff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, April 13, 2006 5:33 PM
Subject: [ppiindia] Fear Factor: Flying in Indonesia


> 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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> yg Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. 
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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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