Delta Virtual Airlines Water Cooler | Airline Operations |
Historical DC-6 Flight Added: 1956 The Rocket |
 |
|
Like this Image |
DVA2887
Senior Captain, A320
OLP, 737-ATP, VFRADV E-MAIL
Joined on January 30 2006
50 State Club
Globetrotter
Tri-Jet Triumph
US Coastal Club
Millennium Club
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
US Mountaineer Club
Toulouse 250 Club
Online Eight Century
Charlotte, NC
1,283 legs, 1,792.7 hours
837 legs,
1,044.3 hours online 1,265 legs,
1,770.7 hours ACARS 31 legs,
49.6 hours event 3 legs dispatched, 2.5
hours
|
Posted onPost created on
November 20 2018 12:19 ET by Andrew Vane
|
Interesting flight from Delta's 1956 schedule. They named long hauls back then and this one was called The Rocket.
DVH5831 Legs 1 - 6
KSFO - KPHX - KTUS - KELP - KDAL - KMSY - KATL
DC-6
These flights start at 2135 Local time and end at 1149 Atlanta time so enjoy the night time scenery. DVA will get you to Atlanta in time for lunch!
Enjoy!
DVA Operations

|
DVA2887
Senior Captain, A320
OLP, 737-ATP, VFRADV E-MAIL
Joined on January 30 2006
50 State Club
Globetrotter
Tri-Jet Triumph
US Coastal Club
Millennium Club
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
US Mountaineer Club
Toulouse 250 Club
Online Eight Century
Charlotte, NC
1,283 legs, 1,792.7 hours
837 legs,
1,044.3 hours online 1,265 legs,
1,770.7 hours ACARS 31 legs,
49.6 hours event 3 legs dispatched, 2.5
hours
|
Posted onPost created on
November 20 2018 12:45 ET by Andrew Vane
|
Here are some non-RNAV routes for you hard core propliner pilots:
KSFO KPHX
SFO9 SFO OAK V107 PXN V230 CZQ V23 EHF V197 PMD V137 PSP T306 BLH blh5
KPHX KTUS
MOBIE4 TFD DNGO5
KTUS KELP
TUS JOKIM T306 CUS T306 ELP
KELP KDAL
ELP V222 SFL V94 INK KNEAD7
KDAL KMSY
BACH7 SWB AEX V114 LSU AWDAD1
KMSY KATL
PCU V70 GCV LGC4

|
DVA12104
Senior Captain, B727-200
Joined on January 24 2013
50 State Club
Globetrotter
Tri-Jet Triumph
US Coastal Club
US Mountaineer Club
Everett Bi-Millennium Club
Two Million Mile Club
Tri-Millennium Club
DVA Ten-Year Anniversary
""The white zone has always been for loading or unloading.."" Las Cruces, NM
3,338 legs, 6,583.0 hours
3,269 legs,
6,426.5 hours ACARS
|
Posted onPost created on
November 21 2018 10:03 ET by Brian Donaldson
|
Whoohoo!
Brian DonaldsonSenior Captain, B727-200
|
|
DVA1562
Senior Captain, DC-6
OLP
Joined on March 06 2004
50 State Club
Globetrotter
Everett 500 Club
DVA Fleet Master
US Mountaineer Club
US Coastal Club
Bi-Millennium Club
DVA Twenty-Year Anniversary
Three Million Mile Club
"Semper Paratus" Yellowstone National Park, WY
2,870 legs, 7,935.5 hours
81 legs,
119.2 hours online 2,653 legs,
7,047.7 hours ACARS
|
Posted onPost created on
November 21 2018 13:39 ET by Tim Knight
|
Alrighty! Low and slow!
Tim KnightSenior Captain, DC-6
|
|
DVA5643
Senior Captain, DC-6
Joined on February 08 2008
Piston Prop Professional
50 State Club
US Coastal Club
Globetrotter
US Mountaineer Club
Flying Colonel
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
Long Beach 500 Club
"I'd rather be lucky than good" Hampton, GA USA
1,909 legs, 2,878.8 hours
5 legs,
3.8 hours online 1,902 legs,
2,868.8 hours ACARS
|
Posted onPost created on
November 21 2018 23:28 ET by Jim Daigneau
|
Having special names for specific flights dates to pre-WW2 for a few airlines. For example, American used names like "The Niagra" and 'The Night Owl" as early as 1935 when they got those spiffy DSTs, and still flying the Condors. Pan Am, predictably, got into the act early too with the Clippers and the "The Orient Express". Delta started naming flights after the war with "The Meteor", "The Comet" and "The Rocket". Eastern, Delta's main competitor in ATL, didn't name flights but they coined the name "The Great Silver Fleet" for their airplanes in 1939.
The practice came from competition. The domestic carriers' main competition was the rail roads. Rail roads were affordable, comfortable, efficient and usually safe. Plus, to be distinctive, they named trains like AT&SF "Super Chief" and "Santa Fe Eight". It was cool. Instead of just saying "I'm taking the train", you could say "Yeah, man, I'm riding the Super Chief all the way!" Cool. But of course, trains were slower, so the airlines' sales pitch relied on names to echo the efficiency of the airplane. (I left comfort and affordable out for a reason. Until after the war, when pressurization and a/c was more common, flying could still be pretty miserable.) As we know from history, it was the jet age that really got ball rolling for affordable, efficient and safe air travel.
"The Rocket" that Andrew mentions was also one of the many "interchange" flights that was common practice to extend a route without actual CAA route authority. The airplane would get an American or National crew in MSY and DAL to fly the rest of the way to the west coast and back to Dallas.
Very interesting times.
Happy Thanksgiving, y'all!

|
DVA2887
Senior Captain, A320
OLP, 737-ATP, VFRADV E-MAIL
Joined on January 30 2006
50 State Club
Globetrotter
Tri-Jet Triumph
US Coastal Club
Millennium Club
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
US Mountaineer Club
Toulouse 250 Club
Online Eight Century
Charlotte, NC
1,283 legs, 1,792.7 hours
837 legs,
1,044.3 hours online 1,265 legs,
1,770.7 hours ACARS 31 legs,
49.6 hours event 3 legs dispatched, 2.5
hours
|
Posted onPost created on
November 22 2018 08:06 ET by Andrew Vane
|
Thanks for the great history lesson Jim! Have a great Turkey Day!

|
DVA1427
Senior Captain, MD-11
OLP
Joined on December 14 2003
Online Double Century Club
50 State Club
Tri-Jet Triumph
Globetrotter
Moose Club
US Capital Club
Everett 250 Club
Quincentenary Club
DVA Twenty-Year Anniversary
"Livin' in the Dog Pound!" Kannapolis, NC
558 legs, 1,984.3 hours
250 legs,
611.8 hours online 384 legs,
1,530.5 hours ACARS 38 legs,
82.7 hours event
|
Posted onPost created on
November 27 2018 20:23 ET by Lewis Gregory
|
Jim, Amtrak still carries some of those classic passenger train names to this day. When my wife and daughter took an Amtrak trip from Charlotte to Washington to Chicago to Seattle a couple summers back, the train they took from Chicago to Seattle was known as the Empire Builder, which was a name used by the Great Northern and later the Burlington Northern for their passenger service on the same route.
Lewis GregorySenior Captain, MD-11
|
|