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Thread: Trip Report: JFK-SAN-JFK

  1. #1
    Moderator Matt Molnar's Avatar
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    Trip Report: JFK-SAN-JFK

    As posted before, I flew to San Diego for a brief weekend getaway. Here's a rundown of my air-related experiences...

    Route: JFK-SAN
    Airline: American Airlines
    Flight: 127
    Aircraft: Boeing 757-223
    Registration: N628AA (Delivered 1990)
    Departure: Scheduled 6:25pm/Actual 7:15pm
    Arrival: Scheduled 9:29pm/Actual 9:41pm


    Left my office in Union Square around 3:30, arrived terminal 8 around 4:30 via Q train > LIRR > AirTrain. I had printed my boarding pass online, had 2 carry-ons and nothing to check, and passed through Terminal 8 security without any lines are hassle.

    Terminal 8 is a real disaster. I know it's under renovation now, but it's still really grimy. Areas that are not being worked on are a mess so that's not an excuse. Very little to do past security in the way of food or shopping. Bathroom was in shambles, the wooden fixture beneath the sinks was busted open and none of the three stalls had operational locks.

    Flight 127 was set to leave from Gate 4. Oddly there is a Gate "4X" which uses the same waiting area but the door is on the opposite side of the corridor. The 5:30 flight to Santo Domingo was using this weird gate so I sat near gate 6 where a pretty Malev 762 was preparing for its evening flight to Budapest.


    Working on the flight deck.


    With US Helicopter arriving from Wall Street.

    We started boarding on schedule at 5:55. I had reserved a seat in row 12, unfortunately only a middle seat was available when I checked in online. Luckily, the flight was only about 85% full and I was able to move to an aisle seat in the row ahead of me with no one in the middle, and an extremely attractive lady in the window seat. It was immediately clear this was an older jet, as it had ashtrays in the armrests and the bathroom, even though they were sealed in place. Some of the plastic mouldings on the wall near my seat seemed like they had been displaced for repairs and then replaced incorrectly. The seats were worn but clean, the floor was clean other than a few weird food stains.

    We pushed back about 10 minutes late, only to wait on line for about an hour before takeoff. The captain seemed somewhat amazed by how long the queue was, though the weather was fine so I think it's probably like that every day around that time. He told us we could use our cell phones and other banned devices until we were 4th or 5th for takeoff, which is when I pulled out my Treo and made this post. Saw lots of heavies waiting to take off for Europe. Air France 777, Turkish A340, Austrian 777, PIA 742 and others.

    We took off strong from runway 13R and out over the Atlantic, then made a hard right U-turn to take us west over Staten Island and New Jersey. The captain said our cruising altitude would be 33,000 feet, and we would follow a route which would take us over Pittsburgh, St Louis, Topeka and some other cities out west which I can't remember...since I didn't have a window it didn't really matter.

    The IFE consisted of the small monitors above the aisles broadcasting some clips from miscellaneous CBS shows followed by a movie. The movie was Take The Lead, an atrocious thing starring Antonio Banderas as a ballroom dance fiend who decides he needs to teach Harlem kids to waltz and tango. The earphone jacks were compatible with regular earphones, or you could buy some to keep from the F/A for $2.

    The food was "Food for Purchase" which I always thought meant sandwiches and decently hearty stuff. On this flight the only options were "Snack Box" for $4 or "Asian Salad with Chicken" for $9. I went for the snack box thinking I might be pleasantly surprised. I was disappointed to find it was exactly the same as the old snack boxes you would get for free, with crackers, spreadable cheese, raisins, Lorna Doones. The only difference: A SLIM JIM! It wasn't a real Slim Jim, but it tasted pretty much the same and I quickly felt my blood pressure spike as the salt poured into my bloodstream.

    The flight was pretty uneventful. Hot window seat girl was nice and we tried talking but my Spanish isn't that great and her English is non-existent so we kinda gave up. She asked one of the F/A's for a blanket in Spanish and he didn't understand, so I interpreted for him...and even though I obviously spoke English, he apparently thought I was with her and addressed me in Spanish for the rest of the flight which I thought was pretty funny.

    Saw some lightning below and in the distance out over the plains. My notions that liquid containers were banned from carryons were somewhat upset when I saw a guy in first whip a giant bottle of Curvoisier out of the overhead. WTF?

    I couldn't really see the approach too well due to my lack of a window, but it seemed like we circled out over the Pacific and came back. Thankfully I was able to see out the left side and the view on final was amazing...the downtown skyscrapers are maybe a mile to the left and at eye level and above as you're descending.

    For whatever reason they use door "2L", the door just ahead of the left wing, for 757s at SAN, as seen here on this Delta with paint issues...


    It was a bit of a long walk from the gate to the doors to get out, but the terminal was very nice and renovated-looking, clean and well lit and the signs were pretty good. My friend was waiting for me at the escalator, we walked out a door and there was the bus stop, and the bus came right away. Plane door to the door of her apartment right downtown was only about 25 minutes and $2!

    Route: SAN-JFK
    Airline: Delta Air Lines
    Flight: 1870
    Aircraft: Boeing 737-832
    Registration: N397DA(Delivered 2000)
    Departure: Scheduled 10:10pm/Actual 10:12pm
    Arrival: Scheduled 6:15am/Actual 6:20am


    After a great weekend in beautiful San Diego, I headed back to "the nation's busiest single-runway airport." Took the bus again. SAN consists of three terminals...the Commuter Terminal, Terminal 1 which is mainly Southwest, and Terminal 2 which is American, Delta, US, jetBlue, Hawaiian, and others.

    The registration of the aircraft I was on is in question. On the front gear doors it says 3727, but there's no active registration containing 3727. Also, the ACARS search thing says it was N3766 that did flight 1870 and flight 1871 (which 1870 arrived as from ATL) that day.



    This was my first time on a 738, and the cabin was clean and modern as you would expect from a 5 year old jet. I took my reserved seat 14A, window seat on the left side next to the engine. This flight was also only moderately full and while most rows were full, I had mine to myself! This made me very happy because I was going straight to work from the airport and wanted to get at least a couple hours of sleep.


    The view from my "bed".

    What I didn't understand were the several people who brought young children on a redeye. The kids were getting pretty loud, and I got really concerned as I needed to sleep. Eventually they quieted down, and to insure that they stayed out of my ears, I put in my Shure soft-foam earplug-style earbuds and turned on some music.

    We rolled to the opposite end of the airport to take off. There was a short wait while a plane landed then we taxiied into position. The engines were much quieter than the 757 at takeoff power and cruise. We took off to the southwest and circled back toward the northeast. There was a beautiful view of the city through a break in the clouds which would have made an amazing photo had I been able to set up in time.

    The entertainment was provided on several small drop down LCD monitors. When we first took off there was a GPS map rotating between different views of us on the map, our speed, distance travelled, etc. Later they put on a movie, Ice Age 2. Unlike American, you had to purchase their headphones to hear the movie.

    I stayed awake for the "refreshments" portion of the flight, which was essentially a smaller version of the American snack box, then I closed the shade and went to sleep using a Delta blanket as a pillow on the wall.

    I woke up with the sunrise around 5:30 over north central Pennsylvania. We began our descent over the Poconos but couldn't see anything because of the thick haze. We crossed over northern NJ, upper Manhattan, northern Queens right over LGA, just south of Phil's house, over my house, then made a right down over the Atlantic and another right to head west toward JFK. Thought we were heading for the 31s, but we went around for 13R visual which was pretty frikkin cool.

    That's about it. Fun weekend. Comfortable flights. The end.
    Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem.
    All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them under control.
    I trust you are not in too much distress. —Captain Eric Moody, British Airways Flight 9

  2. #2
    Moderator USAF Pilot 07's Avatar
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    Hope you enjoyed SAN. I was there for 4 days earlier this Spring, and it was so much fun!

    As far as 2L being used, they use it at many airports. Like whenever I fly from DEN-LGA we always board/deplane using 2L on the 757, and it's happened on 757s and 767s at many other airports...

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    That's a great write up! Glad to see you had a good time. Nice pictures too.

    Steve

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    Nice report and photos. I will check my JP fleet guide when I get home and get you the DL 738 reg. I also flew out of Terminal 8 at JFK on AA on Sunday, and I agree with your comments. My flight to SDQ was not as punctual as yours, due to a long MTC delay followed by a change of aircraft after sitting on the first one for 90 mins. We only arrived 2hrs 34 mins late, not so bad. At least there was a full hot meal service, with your choice according to the flight attendant of chicken or pollo, served with rice, veggies, a salad, roll, and brownie, not bad for a 3 and a half hour flight in coach these days !

    Cheers

    LGA777

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    door 2L is a very common thing on 757s...to keep the unruly E pax from F Good report

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    Good report Matt. Its ashame that AA hasn't spent the money and upgraded their 757s. They really are the worst planes in AA's fleet.

  7. #7
    Moderator Matt Molnar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LGA777
    At least there was a full hot meal service, with your choice according to the flight attendant of chicken or pollo...
    Chicken IS pollo. Unless you mistyped. :)

    Quote Originally Posted by USAF Pilot 07
    Hope you enjoyed SAN. I was there for 4 days earlier this Spring, and it was so much fun.
    I loved it. It's the first US city I've been in (outside NYC) that I actually thought I might enjoy living in. And then I reminded myself that SoCal is liable to sink into the Pacific at any moment. (Sure, NYC could get nuked at any moment, but I would be prouder dying as a NY'er killed standing up to extremists rather than an ignorant Californian trying to fight Mother Nature.)

    Quote Originally Posted by TBird76
    Its ashame that AA hasn't spent the money and upgraded their 757s. They really are the worst planes in AA's fleet.
    It is a shame, but it reallly wasn't that bad. I was expecting the worst after hearing some friends talk about trips on American being terrible since the F/A's took pay cuts and all of that. Those on this flight were very courteous and seemed happy to be there.
    Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem.
    All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them under control.
    I trust you are not in too much distress. —Captain Eric Moody, British Airways Flight 9

  8. #8
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    Gotham, as promised I checked the JP Fleet Guide and DL Ship 3727 is former DL Shuttle N397DA, delivered in Aug 2000. N3766 is ship 3766 so I am guessing the acars search is wrong.

    http://www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=245305

    And you are correct about Chicken and Pollo being one in the same, I was just repeating the AA flight attendants sarcastic attempt at getting a laugh from his passengers, it worked on me !

    Cheers

    LGA777

  9. #9
    Moderator Matt Molnar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LGA777
    Gotham, as promised I checked the JP Fleet Guide and DL Ship 3727 is former DL Shuttle N397DA, delivered in Aug 2000. N3766 is ship 3766 so I am guessing the acars search is wrong.
    Ahh, thanks. Why wouldn't they register it as N3727DA?
    Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem.
    All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them under control.
    I trust you are not in too much distress. —Captain Eric Moody, British Airways Flight 9

  10. #10
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    Gotham, its becoming more and more common among larger carries to use 4 digit ship numbers and 3 digit N numbers or registration numbers. Do you remember if the 738 was two class or one ? cloth or leather shuttle seats ?

    Regards

    LGA777l

  11. #11
    Moderator Matt Molnar's Avatar
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    Two class, leather seats.
    Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem.
    All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them under control.
    I trust you are not in too much distress. —Captain Eric Moody, British Airways Flight 9

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