nicho
RIP
Hurric and others, you're living in a fantasy land. You can't really believe that the entirety of air travel safety is encapsulated in an aircraft maintenance schedule. Safe air travel is not a commodity that can be manufactured in vast quanitites and sold on the cheap by exploiting economies of scale. Safety has a price and it's not being met by the fares of low cost airlines. The sums simply do not add up.
You may think this is alarmist nonsense but you may also have thought, two years ago, that warnings of financial crisis were alarmist. There are some striking parallels: external regulation replaced by self-regulation; aggressive marketing; 'too good to be true' deals; quantity not quality attitudes; prudence and caution distorted by self-interest; and so on.
You may dismiss me as a crackpot but my views have been shaped by others who have vast experience and knowledge. Take the following contribution, from a retired airline pilot with particular background in air transport safety:
There's plenty more like that (although this is one of the most thoughtful contributors) from current and former airline pilots.
Bottom line - if we (the flying public) are not paying the price of sustaining the safety standards that air travel has built over decades, then those standards will surely fall, sooner or later. I don't believe that price is being paid. We're living off the fat built up during decades of incremental safety gains, but it won't last forever.
However, it's the likes of Virgin and BA that are losing packets, not Ryanair, who still continue to make good profits. So who's safety is more likely to be compromised?
It was only a short while ago that BA were criticised over their maintenance standards - the likes of Ryanair simply cannot afford to cut corners. Just one accident due to short cuts in maintenance will kill them off.