Sounds like my Cable and Phone Bills!But you won't believe the fees and taxes!
IMO a ferry boat is going to burn much more fuel. A 1500 pond airplane compared to a 20 - 40 ton ferry boat pushing thru water? water is much more resistant than air. Do all these islands have a slip for occasional ferry supply trips?
I don’t know much about boats, however this and a few other articles state 3mpg up to 8-10 mpg for various type or small vessels.… I'd even venture that this one would use less fuel loaded (about 12 passengers) than a Cessna 172 with four people traveling the same distance.….
I don’t know much about boats, however this and a few other articles state 3mpg up to 8-10 mpg for various type or small vessels.
https://www.boatingvalley.com/average-boat-mileages-with-50-examples-of-different-boat-models/A 172 should get 15mpg+. (Say 8gph at 105 knots).
Now, if we use passenger mpg, the race is closer and the boat may be a winner!
I once flew from IAD (Dulles) to BWI on United on a DC-8 in 1987. I was coming from Denver, and I'm not sure if they actually took on passengers at Dulles. It was about a 15 minute flight, but we had to fly out past Frederick in order to position ourselves properly for the approach to BWI.
Not the shortest flight, but I believe the shortest flight by an Airbus A380. I was on a flight from Paris to London--the last leg of a flight from Seattle where the original last leg got cancelled and replaced by the A380. It was early on in its certification, but the Johannesburg airport had not yet completed its special gate for unloading it, so the Paris-Jo'burg flights with the A380 weren't in service yet.
It took vastly longer to load and unload us than it did to travel the air distance. Unloading was further slowed because they gave each of us a certificate indicating we had flown on the A380, signed by the pilot! (I still have mine somewhere...)
Once flew from one of the San Francisco airports (SJC I think) to San Luis Obispo. It was a really short flight, with more time spent taxiing, ascending and descending than actual flying at altitude. There was no on-board service; the flight attendant never left her seat. The other carriers at SBP were using prop planes, but AA had a jet which used all of the runway on landing. It was an interesting experience.
Good map! The one I find most amusing is ONT-PSP. That's what - an hour drive? We used to visit Palm Springs regularly and often flew into Ontario, The saving over PSP was usually substantial.I was scheduled to fly SFO-SBA, which is pretty similar in distance. But there were a ton of short flights in the 70s and 80s - especially on Air California. Stuff like Oakland-San Jose.
Good map! The one I find most amusing is ONT-PSP. That's what - an hour drive? We used to visit Palm Springs regularly and often flew into Ontario, The saving over PSP was usually substantial.
Enter your email address to join: