I feel like 100 incidents out of however many flights they flew in those 22 some odd months is still a ridiculously small number, am I wrong about that?
Are ya feeling lucky?
I feel like 100 incidents out of however many flights they flew in those 22 some odd months is still a ridiculously small number, am I wrong about that?
I think the issue is the percentage of airplanes with incidents out of a fleet of 99 planes; however, the story didn't really provide comparable numbers. Just said 3.5 x more likely to have an incident.
I took my whole family on a Vegas trip for Christmas several years ago flying Allegiant. On the return to Des Moines we lost an engine just past Denver and had to make an emergency landing in Colorado Springs. When I say lost an engine there was a big "bang" noise and a metal grinding sound all the way back to Colorado Springs. They landed us on the furthest out runway available and the runway was flanked by fire fighting equipment.
Of course with Allegiant you have to wait several hours before they can round up a plane to send to take you on. I did have the opportunity (while waiting for another Allegiant plane) to visit with a mechanic that had looked at our plane and asked if he had any idea what may have happened. He told me "it could have been a meteor that hit the engine." Unfortunately he was serious.
I have flown Southwest ever since. No more Allegiant for me.
It was as much damming on the FAA as it was on Allegiant. Morale of the story you get what you pay for. I hate their practices but am I or anyone else going to pay damn near double to fly a mainline carrier to get to Vegas/Florida especially when you consider the other options are pretty much guaranteed to have multiple legs compared to direct.
I standby the fact that it is an absolute miracle nothing has happened thus far. This incident in which the in which the Chief Pilot flew Vegas to Fargo only to arrive to find out the airport was closed for a Blue Angel practice ahead of that weekends airshow so what does he do? Declares an emergency requiring the Blue Angels to stop practicing so he can have the airport. So much is wrong with that since both the pilots and the flight dispatcher should have seen the TFR in place closing the airfield for that period of time. Not to mention he claimed he was low on fuel requiring on emergency landing which if true would have meant they were not carrying the required extra fuel.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/allegiant-air-pilot-pleads-atc-make-emergency-landing-closed-airport/
Is it really cheaper when they nickel-and-dime you on practically everything?
The quality of service and straightforwardness of pricing is so much better on even the major legacy carriers, and particularly Southwest.
Yes, Southwest is basically a legacy at this point.
Yup. I just did a sample flight for our family of four from CID-Tampa/St Pete. Mainline vs Allegiant. The mainlines are all right at $1500 round trip with one checked back. Even with selecting three seats one carry on and one checked bag round trip with Allegiant is at least $550 cheaper round trip.
That is why they are popular and that is why people will still fly them especially when you consider it is a direct flight which especially with kids is the chosen option.
The firing of the pilot who evacuated the plane because of the fire is rediculous but the FAA didn't even look into it.
Yeah, wow, not a pleasing story. I was more bothered by the FAA guy deflecting every question and refusing to answer anything straight out.
He shouldn't have been out anything at any point in that interview by saying "hold up, you found what stats or discovered what? I need to make a call and get my investigators going, thanks for the heads up. We will fix this"