The latest Boeing 777-300 to join Emirates’
fast-growing fleet touched down at Dubai International Airport on Wednesday
3rd July 2002, after flying 13,000 kilometres (7,000 nautical miles)
non-stop from Boeing’s Everett Field on the US West Coast near Seattle.
The aircraft, registered as A6-EMS, reached a height of 41,000 feet, flying
at up to 900 kilometres an hour, and is the larger version of Boeing’s
fast-selling twinjet. Emirates has six in service, and nine of the smaller
777-200s.
The 777's maiden voyage over the North Pole achieved a “double first” -
Emirates' first flight from the US West Coast to Dubai, and the first-ever
777-300 to take the Polar route.
It was commanded by Captain Ahmed Al Shamsi, Emirates’ Manager Flight
Technical Projects, assisted by Captains Fali Vajifdar, Graeme Mowbray and
Peter Pont, the so-called four-man “heavy crew” needed for ultra long-range
missions like Dubai/Los Angeles. Emirates will soon serve this route with
very long-range Airbus A340-500s.
Bob Everest, Manager Flight Dispatch & Air Traffic Management, Operations
Engineer Ed Bigus and Cabin Crew Sami Khalil, Lorraine Nash and Narreda Hope
also joined the 14 hour 10 minute flight from Boeing’s Paine Field, Seattle,
north via Canada to the Pole, then down over Greenland, Norway, Finland,
Estonia, Latvia, Belarus, Ukraine, Turkey and Iran for a perfect landing in
Dubai.
Also on board were representatives from Boeing, Honeywell and the UAE's
General Civil Aviation Authority, whose cooperation was vital to the success
of the flight, which burned 34,000 US gallons of fuel and carried just 17
people.
The two-in-one mission was not merely another routine delivery, but a dress
rehearsal for the launch of services to and from North America.
Flights via the Arctic offer a ‘short cut’ through little-used airspace,
saving fuel, cutting flying times and helping Emirates transform itself into
a global airline.
Capt Al Shamsi said: “This delivery allowed us a first-hand look at many
technical aspects of Polar missions, for example fuel freezing temperatures
and en route diversion airports.
“We also used it to check out our communications systems and aircraft
instruments in Arctic latitudes, and gather data on long-range flight
planning, aeromedical issues, and new navigational procedures and systems.”
Emirates, launched in 1985, is one of the world’s fastest-growing airlines,
with 40 ultra-modern aircraft serving 58 cities in 41 countries. By 2010,
its fleet will have tripled to 100 jets carrying 25 million people a year.
It has won 200-plus awards for service. |