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Cathay Pacific Flight 780 was a flight from Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, to Hong Kong International Airport [4] on 13 April 2010. On board were 309 passengers and a crew of 13. As Flight 780 neared Hong Kong, the crew were unable to change the thrust output of the engines.
Cathay Pacific Flight 700Z; Cathay Pacific Flight 780 This page was last edited on 17 February 2021, at 06:15 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The livery was designed to commemorate the topping out of the new Cathay Pacific Cargo Terminal. The name of the livery was taken from Cathay Pacific's very first 747 freighter, which entered the fleet in 1982. The aircraft was eventually repainted into the revised Cathay Pacific livery in August 2018. [citation needed]
All Cathay Pacific aircraft carry the following livery, logos and trademarks: the "Brushwing" livery on the body and the vertical stabiliser, introduced in the early 1990s, and was first deployed on a Boeing 747–400 (VR-HOT, later re-registered as B-HOT), ahead of the launch of Airbus A340 service for Cathay Pacific.
Aircraft was transferred to Cathay Dragon in April 2012, with a photo for proof. Cathay Pacific continues to use CX779/780 route after the incident. 221.124.75.194 07:45, 21 January 2020 (UTC) I would say it is not needed as it is really trivia on what is not a particularly noteworthy accident in the first place.
Cathay Pacific Flight 700Z was a flight from Singapore to Hong Kong operated by Cathay Pacific using a Convair CV-880 aircraft that crashed in Pleiku, then in South Vietnam on the afternoon of 15 June 1972, killing all 81 passengers and crew on board. It remains the deadliest aviation incident involving a Convair CV-880.
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Kenya Airways: In 2005, Kenya Airways changed its livery. The four stripes running all through the length of the fuselage were replaced by the company slogan "Pride of Africa", whereas the KA tail logo was replaced by a styled K encircled with a Q to evoke the airline's IATA airline code. KLM: Stylized crown representing royal charter status.