ABX Air Latest
#411
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Apr 2016
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#412
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 3,489
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#413
New Hire
Joined: Jul 2021
Posts: 1
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So on the question of new tails, I saw this in American Shipper today in an article discussing Maersk's deal with Amerijet to run some 763 factory-Fs that Maersk just bought from Boeing (that had been destined for a Chinese operator and not taken up).
"In November [Maersk] engaged Wilmington, Ohio-based Air Transport Services Group (NASDAQ: ATSG) to provide and operate three 767-300 freighters under a long-term lease. An ATSG subsidiary is expected to begin carrying out dedicated transport for Maersk on key U.S.-China routes in the second half of this year."
I haven't heard anything about which carrier will be operating these tails; sounds like some fun work if ABX can get them.
"In November [Maersk] engaged Wilmington, Ohio-based Air Transport Services Group (NASDAQ: ATSG) to provide and operate three 767-300 freighters under a long-term lease. An ATSG subsidiary is expected to begin carrying out dedicated transport for Maersk on key U.S.-China routes in the second half of this year."
I haven't heard anything about which carrier will be operating these tails; sounds like some fun work if ABX can get them.
#415
Line Holder
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 920
Likes: 3
From: Left, right & center
I don't think the 767 has the endurance to reliably do anything requiring a double crew (i.e. > 12 hours), and I don't know that Maersk would want to give up the space necessary to add a class 1 rest facility as required by our CBA if it does. I'd bet that it would be done by going through Anchorage. Anchorage - Shanghai clocks in at around 9 hours, so it could be done with a three-pilot crew just as we're currently doing with our European flying. And maybe Maersk has other ideas involving mid-Pacific hops.
#416
In a land of unicorns
Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 7,070
Likes: 102
From: Whale FO
I don't think the 767 has the endurance to reliably do anything requiring a double crew (i.e. > 12 hours), and I don't know that Maersk would want to give up the space necessary to add a class 1 rest facility as required by our CBA if it does. I'd bet that it would be done by going through Anchorage. Anchorage - Shanghai clocks in at around 9 hours, so it could be done with a three-pilot crew just as we're currently doing with our European flying. And maybe Maersk has other ideas involving mid-Pacific hops.
#417
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Apr 2016
Posts: 887
Likes: 0
I don't think the 767 has the endurance to reliably do anything requiring a double crew (i.e. > 12 hours), and I don't know that Maersk would want to give up the space necessary to add a class 1 rest facility as required by our CBA if it does. I'd bet that it would be done by going through Anchorage. Anchorage - Shanghai clocks in at around 9 hours, so it could be done with a three-pilot crew just as we're currently doing with our European flying. And maybe Maersk has other ideas involving mid-Pacific hops.
#418
I don't think the 767 has the endurance to reliably do anything requiring a double crew (i.e. > 12 hours), and I don't know that Maersk would want to give up the space necessary to add a class 1 rest facility as required by our CBA if it does. I'd bet that it would be done by going through Anchorage. Anchorage - Shanghai clocks in at around 9 hours, so it could be done with a three-pilot crew just as we're currently doing with our European flying. And maybe Maersk has other ideas involving mid-Pacific hops.
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