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Thread: Would you still fly Qantas?

  1. #31
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    I fly Qantas regularly, the crew are excellent, the service is good, the planes appear to be in good order. The crew are also calm professionals who are well trained. Scared crew are not calm and professional. (Nobody knows their situation better than the crew of an aircraft or vessel)

    If she's nervous, I would put her under the care of well trained Australians representing a brand that is second to none.

    Have a good trip.

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bulldog View Post
    My wife is a nervous flyer (her favourite show is Air Crash Investigations ), ....
    OK cut out watching Air Crash Investigations NOW.. Seriously I flew the morning after watching two episode of ACI and I was sure I was going to die each time there was a slight bump or noise.
    06 SE V6 Discovery 3

  3. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by mox View Post
    I recall seeing a report that Qantas, founded in 1922 is the second oldest airline in the world after KLM and its record of fatalities from plane crashes is one passenger in New Guinea in 1951 and a pilot and two passengers in Western Queensland in 1927. Maybe someone could verify this.

    Qantas operating standards seem to have been consistantly better than most other airlines. Probably an element of good luck too with no serious accidents due to factors beyond their control, eg like the Concorde that crashed after being damaged on the takeoff run by something that fell off another plane. Or in the Canary Islands when a KLM 747 on takeoff run that went through a Pan American 747 in the wrong place - apparently the worst ever aviation accident.
    There was also another in WA in the 1950's that killed 5 I believe. But in general we are talking smaller unreliable aircraft, decades ago.
    Qantas safety record is second to none and all have hiccups. As far as safety goes I would fly with them in a minute, it is just their service from time to time.
    There is a lot that goes unreported to the media and general public. Bits come of planes more than we realise. This does not make them inherrently unsafe. I saw a jet in Perth upon landing last year being towed across the runway with Fire Trucks on standby with a badly burnt engine. Never made any media reports. No it was not Qantas.
    Also remember flying is actually safer than walking or driving.
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  4. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by CraigE View Post
    There was also another in WA in the 1950's that killed 5 I believe. But in general we are talking smaller unreliable aircraft, decades ago.
    Qantas safety record is second to none and all have hiccups. As far as safety goes I would fly with them in a minute, it is just their service from time to time.
    There is a lot that goes unreported to the media and general public. Bits come of planes more than we realise. This does not make them inherrently unsafe. I saw a jet in Perth upon landing last year being towed across the runway with Fire Trucks on standby with a badly burnt engine. Never made any media reports. No it was not Qantas.
    Also remember flying is actually safer than walking
    or driving.
    walking would be much safer if it wasn'y for all those killer bullbars in VIC
    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




  5. #35
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    Quote Originally Posted by dullbird View Post
    walking would be much safer if it wasn'y for all those killer bullbars in VIC
    Its the Rovers and Bullbars in NSW we have to watch out for. Damn pedestrian killers.
    2011 Discovery 4 TDV6
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  6. #36
    DiscoMick Guest
    If she's that worried, why don't you drive instead? Just ship the Landy to Singapore and point it north through Malaysia, Thailand, Laos (avoid Burma) into China and then turn left...

  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by CraigE View Post
    Its the Rovers and Bullbars in NSW we have to watch out for. Damn pedestrian killers.
    mate my bullbar is plastic i'm allowed to hit things
    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




  8. #38
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    Thanks

    Thanks everyone for your advice, i was actually crying with laughter at some of the comments

    And yes i should stop watching air crash investigation but at least if something does go wrong with the plane i can tell the staff what to do

    Thanks again

    Mrs Bulldog

    PS. I am very excited, i have never writen anything on this site before...

  9. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by DiscoMick View Post
    If she's that worried, why don't you drive instead? Just ship the Landy to Singapore and point it north through Malaysia, Thailand, Laos (avoid Burma) into China and then turn left...
    I would, but it struggles to make it on an overnight trip sometimes

    My boss did that trip, but in reverse. Drove from Europe to Singapore in the 1960s. He has some great stories about it...

  10. #40
    DiscoMick Guest
    It's one of the trips I'd love to do in the future.
    ASEAN has adopted a plan to create an "Asian Highway' by linking and upgrading existing routes to go Singapore-Malaysia-Thailand-Laos-China (Burma is closed, of course).
    Its mainly aimed at boosting trade by creating a suitable road route and by simplifying visa and vehicle access rules, so you get approval at one end and just show the papers all the way thru to the other end.
    The Malaysian and Thai bits already exist and Laos is getting World Bank and other funding to pay for its bit, because Laos is so poor.
    It should also be great for motorised tourism, which is a growth industry in Asia as the middle class buys cars.
    I read about a French couple who drove a little 1.5 litre Citroen from Paris to Bangkok last year, so it is already doable.
    I reckon the Disco would be the perfect vehicle for it.

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