Latest comment: 6 February 20184 comments3 people in discussion
On the Boeing 767 page of Wikipedia on mobile it oddly saids Supersonic Transport instead of jet airliner but on any browser it saids jet airliner. Is this just something that happens or is there a way to fix this. The Minecraft60 (talk) 00:51, 31 December 2017 (UTC)Reply
The "As of" template in the accidents & incidents section - not capitalized
Latest comment: 24 February 20194 comments3 people in discussion
Pardon my ignorance but why is the "as" right at the start not capitalized? I tried a few different options with the syntax but the best I could get was the "as" capitalized but without the month. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Youngjim (talk • contribs) 15:51, 24 February 2019 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 6 January 20202 comments2 people in discussion
I've been looking at the data in the template chart for this and the 757 trying to decipher it, and I have to admit I am stumped. What is the meaning off this "3-Class" "2-Class" business? If it is talking about planes set up in single, double or triple class sections, the numbers don't seem to add up. Maybe "3-class" actually means all third class? I don't know. And I also can't figure out why it appears to be showing less capacity than the 757. I'll have to look at that again. But moset of all, what is this "Y" "J" "F" business? There is no key at all, and even though I know something about planes I am totally baffled. "Youth", "Juniors" and "Females"? What happened to "First", "Business" and "Economy"? Is the average reader supposed to know what these letter mean and I'm just dumb? "18F/196Y"?
Idumea47b (talk) 05:14, 6 January 2020 (UTC)Reply
Y, J and F classes are economy, business and first, respectively. The booking class is explained when you leave your mouse over the letter. The code is used in airline reservations and is standard for airline seating classes. The average aviation reader is often informed. "3-Class" "2-Class" are seating arrangements. The numbers mostly add up (15+40+119=174, 18+42+150=210, 16+36+189=241 not 243 : there are 38J seats in Boeing's layout, thanks for checking, 18+196=214, 24+237=261, 24+272=296). To compare between the 757 and 767, you should compare 2-class seating not 3-class. The 757-300 does have a slightly higher 243 (12F+231Y) capacity than the 767-200 [214 (18J, 196Y)].--Marc Lacoste (talk) 05:48, 6 January 2020 (UTC) please proofread before saving and keep questions short, thanksReply
New Image
Latest comment: 8 September 20246 comments3 people in discussion
We currently have a Delta Air Lines Boeing 767-300 as the infobox image. But dosen't this DAL SkyTeam livery Boeing 767-400ER look better?
No, it's too tightly cropped, it's an unusual model, and it's an atypical livery for Delta. We should stick with standard liveries and typical variants for infobox entries. Acroterion(talk)14:13, 7 September 2024 (UTC)Reply
I don't see a compelling reason to change - neither alternative is an improvement in quality, composition or resolution, and Delta is still the largest passenger operator. The main articles on airliners get a lot of requests for image changes, which are typically resisted unless a new image is substantially better or serves the article in some better way. Images should not be used as favorites or changed without a specific reason. We try to avoid image churn. Acroterion(talk)12:39, 8 September 2024 (UTC)Reply
And I should note that all of the proposed alternatives are profoundly underexposed on the undersides of the airplanes. No details are visible, but they are visible on the Delta aircraft, which is noted as retouched, probably to lift the shadows. This is one of the difficulties with photographing airplanes in general - it's dark down there, and it's hard to accommodate the dynamic range. I speak from experience on this. This image of a cargo A300 that I took needed to have the belly shadows lifted and the sky highlights diminished before I would post it. It is a quality image on Commons, and at 20MB is 15 or 20 times more resolution that what we commonly see from Jetphotos and the like, which are usually little more than snapshots. Acroterion(talk)12:57, 8 September 2024 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 28 January 20251 comment1 person in discussion
The figures quoted in the article are for 2018 and, as one might expect, are way out of date. For example FedEx are now by far the biggest operator of the 767, with 141 aircraft as of November 2024, whereas Delta have only 62. I have citations for both those figures (from the two respective organisations), but I'm reluctant to update the page as I don't currently have numbers for the other two of the four primary users, and I don't want to simply change the "as of" date to 2024 and swap the ranking without additional information.
Any suggestions as to how to handle this? DaveReidUK (talk) 16:39, 28 January 2025 (UTC)Reply
Semi-protected edit request on 1 March 2025
Latest comment: 1 March 20252 comments2 people in discussion
Script error: No such module "protected edit request".
The Spirit of Delta aircraft, listed as "On display as of 2022" is currently on display as on 2/28/2025. Spychipper (talk) 05:13, 1 March 2025 (UTC)Reply