Talk:Longest flights

Latest comment: 2 months ago by DigitalExpat in topic Article Standards for Encyclopedic Assurance


Boeing 767-300 edit

Eastern Air Lines is not operating Miami - Asuncion anymore, so this row of the table seems out of date. CapitalSasha ~ talk 11:22, 1 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Great find @CapitalSasha - will leave it to the other contributors on here who are able to source information on type better than I can, it's still a popular type, @DoubleClawHammer's master talent & script is excellent at finding the citable longest operating routes, will leave this to his next update 👍 DigitalExpat (talk) 04:23, 4 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
@CapitalSasha @DigitalExpat It seems the only 767-300 example remaining in service is Asiana's HL7528, which only operates the GMP-CJU route. This has now been updated in the table. DoubleClawHammer (talk) 19:08, 17 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

A220-300 longest flight edit

Since airBaltic starts flying the TFS-TMP route in December link, I think it is the longest flight to be planned, but not sure, here is link to the new routes from airBaltic new hub in Gran Canaria, I this is the longest route operated by the A220-300, as now and as in history, please check me and correct the information if I am right. Also, RIX-TFS has existed for 4 years, it’s strange that the flight is not in the table, since the distance is 2436 nautical miles, but BOS-SJC only 2336 nautical miles. As far as I understood from the replies a special script is used, perhaps there is inaccuracy in its work since RIX-TFS flight does not appear in the table, as well as new airBaltic flights from Tenerife. Sincerely, Niknin (talk) 09:57, 16 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Updated. Thanks for pointing this out DoubleClawHammer (talk) 18:33, 17 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

longest flights by airline edit

I'd like that section to come back... It was useful and it would be easy to update the data... 190.95.44.117 (talk) 14:39, 2 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Longest 747SP flight edit

It seems like at some point or another (looking at the departedflights 1980s OAGs) PA815, UA815, and QF12 all operated LAX-SYD westbound on 747SP. However, each has a block time shorter than the 15:25 eastbound PA816 number currently in our table (which is sourced from a 1980 Pan Am timetable). We should give each of PA, UA, and QF "credit" for operating the longest 747SP flight, but it's unclear to me how to do so given the tiebreaker between flights of the same GC distance is block time and the eastbound 1980 PA816 appears to be the longest block time. Would appreciate any thoughts from @DigitalExpat. DoubleClawHammer (talk) 18:25, 15 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Hi @DoubleClawHammer - Great work as always and what great question - as this article has matured and grown, its gotten to the refinement point of these type of questions. (A very good sign I think!)
I am of the opinion that the record holder should go to first operator that sets the record on that route, whatever airlines came after and tied the record in my mind didn't set it (but definitely notable and should be recorded (as a note?). Alternatively if there are not a high frequency of these kind of ties and the 747SP is truly a one-off, I would sort them by date of first operation (and those dates should be mentioned in a note).
In my view, the historical record table is slightly different than the rest of the article, it is highlighting those who set the record, not those who subsequently recreated it or tied it.
As far as block time, I would suggest that these are ignored as they are entirely arbitrary in regards to the route - down to remote stands versus jet-bridge, ground traffic congestion, or probably more likely/murky - marketing (eg EU261 penalty avoidance or the conspiracy theories around Ryanair's block timings to enable them to play their beloved/despised ontime landing anthem over the tannoy :) )
What are your thoughts on who to display ties in the record-based tables? (and are there any other ties? I haven't really looked to be honest, you know the records table better than I for sure!)
Thanks @DoubleClawHammer and all! DigitalExpat (talk) 05:21, 16 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sorry for the self reply - just realised one more thought - if the "Current" table allows for multiple operators per route, then it makes sense for the historical as well...so I would revert my second option in the opinion, sorted by date of first operating (as it is record based) DigitalExpat (talk) 05:24, 16 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
There are a few ties, but it's quite rare. The sorting doesn't make a difference in my view -- especially when it's easier to combine an operator with a row above or below it -- but I do agree we should add some sort of note marking who was the first to operate a route when we can find that data. DoubleClawHammer (talk) 04:16, 17 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sounds good to me! DigitalExpat (talk) 08:49, 17 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Longest 777-200ER (CO 98 v UA 179) edit

Thanks again to @DoubleClawHammer for the great article additions - I had a philosophical question on this one (somewhat related to the 747SP tie question!) - CO 98 and UA 179 are the same flight, when they merged in 2011, UA took over the route and gave it a new number (even were using the same CO planes and UA's fleet couldn't make that distance I believe). In this case since its the same flight, I would be tempted to list is as Continental Airlines and then the call sign have both next to each other: CO98,UA179 (and a note explaining the pre-merge/post merge? What are others thoughts on the best way to do this? 05:41, 16 November 2023 (UTC) DigitalExpat (talk) 05:41, 16 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Following the other reply I made, I think the best thing to do would be keep the current display as is but add a note to mark that CO98 was the initial service that became UA179 after the merger. DoubleClawHammer (talk) 04:17, 17 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sure, sounds good to me as well, creates maximum visibility for those searching for encyclopedic information, nice one 👍 DigitalExpat (talk) 08:50, 17 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Distance of longest flight edit

The longest flight as per the article is the one on November 2005 listed under the non-scheduled section. The paragraph mentions that it flew eastward from Hong Kong to London-Heathrow at "great circle distance" of 11664 nautical miles. However, the direct distance between HKG and LHR is 5210 nm, as stated correctly in the paragraph. Considering that earth's circumference is 21600 nm, flying in the opposite direction would be not less than 16390 nm. Going back to the sources, the flight did not fly in the precise opposite direction. It only flew a long eastwardly route. Hence, the distance mentioned cannot be said to be "great circle distance", but just a "distance". Therefore, I suggest deleting the words "great circle" from the paragraph. Imdashti (talk) 07:13, 21 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Hi @Imdashti, great spot and good question/point!
It does need some clarification on the wording, as per the cited sources, the onboard observers from the NAA ensured that the 3 preplanned midpoints were overflown (just north of Midway Island at ~35Âș,180Âș, LAX, and JFK). If you plot these 5 points, that is resulting recorded "Great Circle Distance" that was given to the flight. While in reality they deviated substantially from an optimal "great circle" route between these points to seek out favourable winds, etc... (plus they did about 20 extra minutes of loops in the beloved Heathrow stacks before they could even land!)
So in reality they flew much further than this, but FAI and NAA use the covered great circle distances as a standard for measurement (just like this wiki article does :) )
Also one other point if I may - your observation about the circumference of the Earth being 21,600 nm at the equator is spot on. In this case though the circumnavigation was being done far north of the equator and all in one hemisphere. (to illustrate mentally, if you head north from the equator, the circumference of the earth at the Tropic of Cancer is ~19,844 nm, head extreme north to the Arctic circle and circumference is only ~8,629 km), so the total "great circle" distance for the flight makes a bit more sense (for better illustration, try tagging on an additional stop to my above linked GCMap of heading the rest of the way around the world from LHR back to HKG :) )
Back to your point, I agree with your observation that the way it is worded is not clear and could be quite easily misunderstood/misinterpreted. I'm tempted to add a qualifier of "[...] flew a confirmed (observed?) route covering a great circle distance of 21,602km [...] And if we wanted to a be a bit more belt and braces about it, we could add a [note] tag to explain the route built by CX for Boeing using the overlight points and the NAA Observer on board too (or could just leave it to the citations that explain it even better :) ) Again a great question @Imdashti and a very well thought out and worded one! Interested in yours and others thoughts as always :) DigitalExpat (talk) 09:04, 27 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Longest E190 - Kenya Airways monofleeting/no longer operating E190 on NBO-LOS edit

Hi all, I'm thinking @DoubleClawHammer for your next round of longest route updates, I don't believe KG533/KG535 are operating using an E190 anymore. KG has stated last year about transitioning to a monofleet (Boeing equipment) and looking at the route currently I can't even see the last time an e190 operating it as it is all 788 or 73H now. Confirmed with SkyTeam Schedule here: Skyteam_Timetable.pdf (page 5886) as well as Cirium data ( [1]https://info.flightmapper.net/route/YY_NBO_LOS )...so thinking this entry is no longer valid and needs updating and this kind of research you and others are better than I am at! So flagging this up and asking for help, thanks! DigitalExpat (talk) 05:54, 28 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

I think you're looking at the wrong table -- the Current table has 4Z132 HLE-JNB as the longest E190 flight; KQ LOS-NBO is only in the Records table. DoubleClawHammer (talk) 16:42, 28 December 2023 (UTC)Reply
đŸ€Šâ€â™‚ïž There's no doubt about it...I absolutely am/was!! (Apologies I am guilty of editing in non-visual editor trying to upgrade the old simpleflying citations and fell into this trap. Sorry @DoubleClawHammerDoubleClawHammer and thank you as always for the graciousness and the save (what a rookie mistake!). (Pays to not wiki-edit when tired too!) Apologies! DigitalExpat (talk) 04:53, 29 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Longest A339 Route UPG-JED edit

Thanks to @Ajeterb for the addition of this very long route, but looking at it: I believe JT92/JT94 (and the return flights) are not scheduled flights, but all chartered as are part of Lion Air's Umrah packages (but also marketed as public/tourist purposes, but all on a chartered basis only) Evidence:


- Looks Scheduled (these flights really do operate this frequently)
- Insinuates Chartered Operations (Umrah packages)
- and then the flights are not bookable on any GDS/OBE or even directly via lionair.id

So I believe this is a kin to like a pure chartered operator in this case (eg: Titan Airways (UK), or even NetJets (US) ), in that this route is not scheduled/bookable by the public, therefore should this be excluded from the list? (It will end its seasonality at the end of April so may be a moot point by then irregardless) DigitalExpat (talk) 05:02, 16 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Chartered Flights edit

We've had a couple of great additions of some record setting chartered flights to the article. Unfortunately these are against the current article detailed definition of the general term "longest flights" to the specific: "longest scheduled commercial passenger flights".

It's worth re-evaluating (as always) to ensure this is producing the best quality wikipedia article as always I think instead of outright rejecting, so my thoughts are twofold: inability for unequivocal comparision & lack of encyclopedic quality research/documentation:

1) Unfair Comparisons - I believe the reason this article remains encyclopedic quality is due to being explicitly limited to scheduled commercial passenger flights, which by nature have an ability to verify from multiple sources. Non-scheduled flights (eg: chartered, positioning flights, government repatriation flights, delivery flights etc...) (which can be of extraordinary distances in part due to not needing to conform to route planning, profitable load maximising (allowing above standard range/performance), or even being confined to commercial airspace agreements are far less restrained by their clients' desired routes from A to B. Making for relatively unfair/disparate comparison

2) Lack of ability for quality citations/research - While many (but not all) chartered flights can be accurately tracked via popular tools like FlightRadar24, FlightAware, FlightStats etc... (given you have the registration/tail number), it is not exhaustive and relies on the researcher looking for the "right flight at the right time" to be able to cite the data. Where as scheduled commercial flights are verifiable from multiple cite-able sources (including the operator itself) and I believe passes the "red face test" as far encyclopedic quality information. Readily available sources (printed, online) still exist now demonstrating the longest scheduled flights in the decades past, where-as ready access to flight tracking data (the only way to reference chartered flights becomes constrained or unavailable rapidly as the days/weeks pass from a flight)

For just these two reasons alone, I think the article has no ability to confidently include chartered flights. For those truly exceptional non-scheduled flights - I am encouraged that they are often well covered in the press and therefore rightly able to be included in their own section so as not to deny them completely as they are notable indeed.

Interested in others thoughts? (And of course all chartered flight submissions like @RAFI2024 's are still indelibly in the article revision history so they could be retrieved if there was a decision to use the data otherwise/in another article) DigitalExpat (talk) 04:40, 17 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Article Standards for Encyclopedic Assurance edit

Hi All,

While the topic has been covered in pieces of previous talk subjects as well as explicitly mentioned in the Measurement method portion of article itself, as we get more new contributors the article (which is great!) - it looks like we would benefit from having a talk subject regarding the data standards (and discussion/challenging them if we think we can make them better, as always of course)

Distances = The article uses the Great Circle Distance from Origin to Destination, it is the only way to possibly compare routes (flights in of themselves are not comparable). This negates the other variables or routings, equipment performance, arrival stacks, etc... The calculation for GC Distance done on http://gcmap.com is (as discussed in previous talk subject) superior and of demonstrated accuracy

Durations = These are the published scheduled durations for these flights' routes, again negating the natural variability of each individual flight's routings, timings (eg: traffic), etc...

Reliable Sources = As per all entries/contributions to Wikipedia, they need to be cited by a reliable source (see Wikipedia:Reliable sources ), in particular Simple Flying is not a RS (see: WP:SIMPLEFLYING )


I'd be very happy to see the above enhanced/refined/challenged if we think there is a way to improve the article even more!

DigitalExpat (talk) 11:25, 4 March 2024 (UTC)Reply