sky

Delta regional jet wing struck runway at New York airport

A Delta Air Lines regional jet struck the runway at New York LaGuardia Airport late on Sunday while executing a go-around, the Federal Aviation Administration said. No injuries were reported. The left-wing of Endeavor Air Flight 4814 made contact with the runway at around 10:10 p.m. EDT while the pilot was executing a go-around due to an unstable approach, the FAA said, adding it will investigate the incident. Delta said the flight had departed from Jacksonville, Florida for New York with 76 passengers and four crew. The airline said the crew "followed established procedures to safely enact a go-around at New York-LaGuardia. The aircraft landed safely and proceeded to its arrival gate."<br/>

Delta unveils centennial-celebrating livery

Delta Air Lines unveiled over the weekend a special aircraft livery to mark the airline’s 100th year of operations. The livery was revealed on one of Delta’s Airbus A321neos during a gala event at the recently refurbished Delta Flight Museum in Atlanta. It features “swooping details, a bold 100 emblem” and the carrier’s “first-ever silver super graphic”, Delta says. Delta also shares images of the same livery on an A350-900 that has yet to be delivered to the carrier. The company that was to become Delta was incorporated in March 1925 as Huff Daland Dusters, a subsidiary of an early aerial crop-dusting company. It initially carried mail. ”100 years later, Delta is the leading global airline, owing that success to the resilient spirit and warm service of our people,” Delta says. Atlanta-headquartered Delta now operates narrowbody and widebody fleets approaching a combined total of nearly 1,000 aircraft. Together with rival United Airlines, Delta has massively outperformed other US carriers following the Covid-19 pandemic and is an increasingly dominant financial position. Delta reported a full-year 2024 profit of nearly $3.5b. <br/>