
I've gone out of my way to avoid flying with them as a result.
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 9:07, Reply)

I've gone out of my way to avoid flying with them again as a result
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 9:15, Reply)

More a cumulative impression that the way the company was run would aggravate such incidents as above, rather than mitigate them.
There's a saying in aviation: Time to spare, go by air. In other words caution should be above punctuality. Encouraging the Captain to always have one eye on the clock doesn't seem to me to be the best way to promote that.
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 10:02, Reply)

"There are old pilots and bold pilots, but no old and bold pilots."
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 11:56, Reply)

That's the American Airlines plane, which had just made a transatlantic crossing. Not sure if that's reassuring or scary.
The picture below it in the article shows much less dramatic damage to the Ryanair plane.
However, the Ryanair captain does seem to have been very blase about it. Women drivers, eh?
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 9:08, Reply)

Their poor handling of a reported ground contact directly led to two damaged aircraft taking off.
There may not be much visible damage to the Ryanair plane's wingtip, but that doesn't mean it wasn't hiding structural damage. They should have informed tower of the reported collision, then asked for ground crew to come out and visually inspect both planes for verification. That all takes time though.
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 9:29, Reply)

but there are a fair number of mitigating factors here - the captain thought it was only one passenger who had reported it, which she dismissed because she had:
eyeballed the pass by actually leaving her seat
noticed that the taxiway was particularly bumpy
given extra clearance to the 767 which was at least 16m behind it's stand.
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 10:08, Reply)

when in doubt, just deal with it.
Apparently she's been demoted to co-pilot by Ryanair
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 12:05, Reply)

The Ryanair cabin crew should have taken the passengers' observations more seriously and believed that there HAD been a minor collision.
But... to have worried and alarmed passengers before take-off is not unknown to cabin crew, and (almost) invariably, any 'problems' they report are just part of the normal taxi and take-off procedure.
( , Sat 4 Aug 2012, 10:16, Reply)