Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Historic London-Sydney Non-Stop Flight Lands After 19 Hrs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Nov, 2019 11:34 PM

    After over 19 hours in the air, a non-stop Qantas flight from London to Sydney touched down here on Friday, as part of a project which is studying ways to combat jet lag for those on-board.

     

    The flight touched-down in Sydney about 12.30 p.m. after a marathon 19-and-a-half hour flight covering a distance 17,800 km from London carrying just 52 passengers and crew, reports news.com.au.


    This was the second test flight in a three-part series for Qantas, which connected New York and Sydney in a non-stop trial flight last month.


    It was also the second time in history the route has been flown by a commercial airline, with the first being in 1989.


    The London-Sydney flight is actually 1500 km further than New York to Sydney, but is shorter due to prevailing tailwinds.


    Ahead of the flight, Qantas CEO Alan Joyce explained that to make the non-stop journeys a reality within the next few years, the airline was looking at ways to redesign cabins and improve comfort to make the long stretches in the sky more manageable.


    The project has been named Sunrise, after Qantas' "double sunrise" endurance flights during WWII which saw two sunrises while in the air.


    Meanwhile, passengers boarded at 6 a.m. on Thursday (London time) and were offered high GI supper options like a steak sandwich or chicken broth with macaroni, followed by a milk-based pannacotta dessert.


    Pilots wore an EEG device to track brain wave patterns, while three Go-Pro cameras were put in the cockpit to monitor alertness.


    A final decision on whether the ultra-long haul flights will become a commercial reality is expected by the end of the year, with the service potentially launching by 2022.


    Ahead of the flight, Qantas CEO Alan Joyce explained that to make the non-stop journeys a reality within the next few years, the airline is looking at ways to redesign cabins and improve comfort to make the long stretches in the sky more manageable.

     

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Video: Nobody Stops To Help Woman With Head Stuck In New York Subway Doors

    Video: Nobody Stops To Help Woman With Head Stuck In New York Subway Doors
    The plight of the woman catches the attention of many commuters but all of them simply choose to turn a blind eye. Even a woman wearing the uniform of a Metropolitan Transportation Authority official walks past without batting an eyelid.

    Video: Nobody Stops To Help Woman With Head Stuck In New York Subway Doors

    WATCH: These Two Aunties Are Killing It On The Electric Guitars

    WATCH: These Two Aunties Are Killing It On The Electric Guitars
    A video shared on Facebook shows the aunties churning out some kickass music, that too effortlessly.

    WATCH: These Two Aunties Are Killing It On The Electric Guitars

    WATCH: New 'Iron Man Suit' Lets You Hover In Air Like A Superhero!

    WATCH: New 'Iron Man Suit' Lets You Hover In Air Like A Superhero!
    An amateur inventor in the UK has built an Iron Man-like jet engine-powered exoskeleton suit that enables him to hover in the air like a superhero.

    WATCH: New 'Iron Man Suit' Lets You Hover In Air Like A Superhero!

    Punjab Government Framing Policy To End Free Run Of Badal Buses

    Punjab Government Framing Policy To End Free Run Of Badal Buses
    The government will review the existing permits and the inter-state reciprocal agreement with Chandigarh.

    Punjab Government Framing Policy To End Free Run Of Badal Buses

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago
    Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have found evidence of a 'geological Brexit' that happened about 450,000 years ago when ancient Britain separated from the rest of the Europe.

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended
    Peggy Whitson — who broke Indian-American astronaut Sunita Williams record for the most spacewalks by a woman — is poised to set a new record for cumulative time spent in space by a US astronaut, NASA said today.

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended