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  2. Wallaby Route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallaby_Route

    The initial survey flight took a total of 41 hours and 52 minutes of flying time done over seven days of November 14–20. Combining a 10-hour 21 minute flight from Sydney to Perth, an 8-hour 5 minute flight to the Cocos Islands, a 12-hour 8 minute flight to Mauritius, and a final 9 hour 40 minute flight to Johannesburg.

  3. Aviation in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_in_Australia

    In 1948, the first commercial flight from Australia to Africa was flown by Qantas, launching what is known as the Wallaby Route. [2] [3] In 1954, the first flight from Australia to North America was completed, as a 60-passenger Qantas aircraft connected Sydney with San Francisco and Vancouver, having fuel stops at Fiji, Canton Island and Hawaii ...

  4. Polar route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_route

    Flights between Australia and South America and between Australia and South Africa pass near the Antarctic coastline. Depending on the winds, the Qantas flight QFA63 from Sydney to Johannesburg – O. R. Tambo, or the return flight QFA64, sometimes flies over the Antarctic Circle to 71° latitude as well and allowing views of the ice sheet.

  5. Kangaroo Route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kangaroo_Route

    This was the first time an Airbus A380 flew nonstop between Australia and Europe. [64] In November 2021, Qantas resumed non-stop Kangaroo Route flights, this time from Darwin to London [65] before resuming the non-stop route between Perth and London in May 2022 following the reopening of Western Australia for international travel. [66]

  6. Flight length - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_length

    The related term flight time is defined by ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) as "The total time from the moment an aeroplane first moves for the purpose of taking off until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight", and is referred to colloquially as "blocks to blocks" or "chocks to chocks" time. [1]

  7. Southern Cross Route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Cross_Route

    [4]: 145 The name is in honor of Sir Charles Kingsford Smith's historic 1928 flight in the aircraft Southern Cross. [5] The equivalent route running through the Eastern Hemisphere is known as the Kangaroo Route. [6] Qantas operated on the route from 1949 — 1974, when it discontinued the London leg of the trip.