Talk:Olympic Airlines

Latest comment: 3 months ago by WendlingCrusader in topic Final Fleet

Fleet

edit

I'm not very good at wiki editting so can someone please update the fleet section - Olympic recently took deliver of an Airbus A319-132. (Manf. 2007, formerly of Mandala Airlines) - there is a picture of it on Airliners.net —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.145.205.232 (talk) 11:39, 16 July 2009 (UTC)Reply


Big paragraph

edit

I edited this page a lot. Something that still bugs me is the big paragraph, which is probably accurate but does not seem to have an NPOV. Comments? --Twinxor 02:07, 17 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Misleading claim about safety record erased

edit

There was a part of the article which misleadingly claimed that "Olympic's safety record is one of the best among European and North American airlines." I called the author's bluff, and followed his link only to find out, to my surprise, that in fact, Olympic's safety record is slightly below average, in comparison to European airliners, and not the other way around. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 193.92.229.85 (talkcontribs) 14:38, 22 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

The Rise of OA

edit

I would like something on how Onasis made the airline such a success. His target customer in the 60's and early 70's. OA was famed for its lavish upper class, the first airline to fly to all 5 continents, its exotic routes. I would like to see how Onasis created such a wealthy and successful airline, what passengers ie upperclasses, foreign holidaymaker ect ect were OA's target customer and how perhaps the rise of the Junta and mass tourism helped OA rise to success. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Reaper7 (talkcontribs) 10:59, 28 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Translated

edit

Hi! I translated your article into German, you can find it on wikipedia.de. Thankx to all contributers here, I was searching the net for ages for interesting facts about Olympic - I hope these are not just rumors... some references would be helpful - I'll come back frequently, here seems to be a lot of traffic and updating! Keep on!--Zvieri (talk) 10:59, 1 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

"The Future"???

edit

This section refers to what "will" happen in fall 2006. Someone update it! —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 86.132.143.43 (talk) 23:53, 27 March 2007 (UTC).Reply

WikiProject class rating

edit

This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as start, and the rating on other projects was brought up to start class. BetacommandBot 15:35, 29 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Recent edit warring and misleading use of citations

edit

There has been an edit war going on over the inclusion of an edit that "Olympic has lost its credibility. The passage that the anon tries to insert reads as follows:

Apparently there are customers who have a different opinion, considering service during recent months "tragic" and that Olympic "has lost its credibility". [1]

However the Google translation of the citation mentions only (and I quote the whole article):

Foreign (ed. note:Xenia) Kostiopouloy, 30 years old private employee: «emotionally bothers me that the Olympic will close in its current form, but the last few months have been tragic for the company. I travel because of my work and often by a point and then began to shun their reservations to Olympic because it had lost its credibility. The delays of flights was given, and was sometimes faced with cancellations which of course has jeopardized my job. I am pleased that the new company will retain its name and brand of Olympic, which we all know, however, it saddens me that I do not know yet how many destinations will fly the new company. The economic problems not with the Olympic great, but a passenger who paid the price of the ticket, just me the wrong way to manage the company from the governments and administrations. As a passenger, I can not accept that my obligations towards the company are covered, and that can not be sure that I will fly this time and day, as I planned. When it does not move for professional consider unacceptable the customer to bear the delay or even cancellation ». Vangelis Topalidis, 47 years old, employee: «In fact here who have reached the things I do not care for either the name or the brand new company, enough to fly on time. I want to know that there is a reliable company, which can rely and to know that they will carry with me to the destination scheduled time and safely. I do not care where to fly and whether to limit the destinations, although I would prefer to offer more choices. What is important is to fly on time ».

Here we have a single customer (Xenia Kostiopoulou) who said the comments the anon attributes to "customers" (plural). This is misleading. Dr.K. (talk) 17:27, 23 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

And this is on top of being called "Olympic watchdogs" and "Greek Nationalists" in the IP's edit summaries. This is editing by attempted intimidation and name calling. Dr.K. (talk) 18:55, 23 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
When a paper of repute cites opinions of small number of people it clearly implies that such opinions represent a significant number of others, not necessarily cited. This is self-evident. No serious reporter would just go and cite his/her neighbor's ramblings on any issue.
The mere fact that the deletion of any critical information regarding Olympic airlines happens so fast, and at any time during the day suggests that there is a number of editors using the same ID. The fact that this is very unusual for Wikipedia articles suggests that we do indeed have a group of Olympic watchdogs, who simply censure what they do not like. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.75.249.159 (talk) 23:09, 2 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
This is called a personal attack. Please read Wikipedia policies about civility (WP:CIVIL) and about personal attacks (WP:NPA) and modify your behaviour accordingly or you will be blocked (WP:BLOCK). Thank you. Dr.K. (talk) 23:16, 2 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ [1]

Third opinion

edit

Hi everyone! My first thought is that this reference [3] must be translated by a native Greek speaker. Google is no where near good enough for translating references, especially negative ones. This must be done, or it can not be used. This has to be done before we can debate its merits. fr33kman t - c 14:14, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hi Fr33kman, I can attest that Google essentially captures the essence of the translation, in that it is the opinion of a single customer (Xenia Kostiopoulou) who says what I wrote above. The question is can we use a single customer's view and generalise it as if other people say the same thing? Thanks. Dr.K. (talk) 15:03, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
Hi, thanks for the clarification. It is still not the best idea to use an automated translation service, especially for references. That said, the view of the person in the reference seems to be an opinion. Does opinion have any place here, that's the question. If this person's view of Olympic Airlines is a prevalent one, then additional sources that back his opinion up should be easy to find. If not, then it's the opinion of one person. We can assert fact about opinion, but not opinion itself. Therefore it is acceptable to state something like; "customers have said that they are upset with the service provided by company X" but not "customers are upset with the service provided by company X". You can assert what others say, but must credit them and make sure that the reader (and they are the only important ones here really) is left with the knowledge that the encyclopaedia is not claiming such-and-such, but that the person quoted is. Having said that, I still maintain that if this is a common viewpoint, then other sources should be easy to find; if not, then it shouldn't be included (it's just the opinion of a single person). I could call up my mate at The Sun Newspaper (UK) tell him "Wikipedia sucks" and get that quoted on the Wikipedia article. That, surely is wrong. Now if many people have that view and express it to many newspapers, then it's going to get included; indeed it must be included in those circumstances. Comments? :-) fr33kman t - c 15:33, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
I wholeheartedly agree. If there are other citations backing up Xenia Kostiopoulos' comments then by all means it is our duty to report them. But citing Xenia's comments alone clearly, I am in agreement with you, will not suffice to support the statement given by the anon that:

Apparently there are customers who have a different opinion, considering service during recent months "tragic" and that Olympic "has lost its credibility". [1]

If the anon comes up with additional citations backing up this statement then it can be inserted. If not, Xenia's opinion, valuable though it may be, is not sufficiently notable to be quoted. To quote you:

"Having said that, I still maintain that if this is a common viewpoint, then other sources should be easy to find; if not, then it shouldn't be included (it's just the opinion of a single person)."

Many thanks for the great and thoughtful work Fr33kman. I really appreciate it. Dr.K. (talk) 16:14, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
If the reporter made a choice to quote the remarks of Kostiopoulous and Topalidis, then I believe this article is as usable, and citable, as any other newspaper article. You could summarize by saying "A reporter for Kathimerini quoted two customers as saying..." Literally, these customers speak only for themselves, but the reporter's quotation of those people makes them quotable by us. I would avoid using the phrase Apparently there are customers who have a different opinion.. because that is WP:SYNTHESIS. The views of these two customers as quoted by the reporter are a real data point, and they can't be excluded by saying 'surely you could find other data points if you tried.' There are no grounds for excluding them unless they are not interesting or relevant, or if their views duplicate other information that deserves more weight. E.g. if a survey of 1,000 customers is published somewhere, we would prefer that, and might omit the views of Kostiopoulos and Topalidis. EdJohnston (talk) 18:20, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
Even if I accept your position this piece bears no name of a reporter. It has no structure such as the name of the reporter or the circumstances of the interview or any other identifying marks to specify its origin. So we cannot say "a reporter wrote this" because it is unattributed. As far as I know it could be a letter to the editor. Dr.K. (talk) 19:16, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
I wondered about it being a letter to the editor, but don't think so. Each customer's opinion is introduced by 'Firstname Lastname, Age 30, Private-sector employee', followed by their remarks in quotes. This is almost certainly written by a reporter who selected the material. Regarding attribution, the majority of the articles in Kathimerini are unsigned by the reporter, even those that appear on the front page. EdJohnston (talk) 19:34, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
For example this article from the same source has the reporter's name clearly visible. Dr.K. (talk) 19:40, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
(edit conflict) Your suggestion of including an unattributed article mentioning the opinions of two people falls under WP:UNDUE, in my opinion and it is pointless given that it only highlights the opinions of two people. Including it in the article, IMO, adds nothing to the article and it confuses the reader because I don't think there is a precedent of such usage in any other Wikipedia article. Can you provide me with an example in which two otherwise unnotable persons' opinions have been cited? Why should we use this article to establish such a dubious precedent? Dr.K. (talk) 19:54, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

(Unindent) And in fact it is not even about the opinion of two persons. It is only about the opinion of Kostiopoulou. The anon used her statements, not Topalidis'. Topalidis' statement actually is quite neutral. It says he doesn't care what the company name is, he just wants to fly. The drama lies in Kostiopoulos' statement where she mentions that it is "tragic" for Olympic etc. So what are we going to say? "According to a reporter a passenger said that the situation is tragic"? What would this add to the article? How notable is that? Dr.K. (talk) 20:07, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

I agree that the article could be used but it has multiple problems of reliability, no name of reporter, it seems to be one persons opinion. If this was a prevalent view of the airline's customers I think it would be more widely reported and sources would be easy to find. Are they ???? fr33kman t - c 23:51, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

How could this be used? How can a single person's opinion be used? It's not even the voice of a minority. It's just one person. I quote from WP:UNDUE:

From Jimbo Wales, paraphrased from this post from September 2003 on the mailing list:

  • If a viewpoint is in the majority, then it should be easy to substantiate it with reference to commonly accepted reference texts;
  • If a viewpoint is held by a significant minority, then it should be easy to name prominent adherents;
  • If a viewpoint is held by an extremely small (or vastly limited) minority, it does not belong in Wikipedia regardless of whether it is true or not and regardless of whether you can prove it or not, except perhaps in some ancillary article.

So I ask: Is Ms Kostiopoulou's opinion the majority opinion? Is it the minority opinion? It is neither because no adherents can be found to substantiate it other than Ms Kostiopoulos. So it's worthless according to Jimbo. There is no doubt that Olympic Airlines has problems, big problems. Amidst all this maelstrom of Olympic news in the media and the internet, is this the best citation one can produce? This anonymous user knows well how to attempt harassment and intimidation of people he disagrees with, including myself. Yet he eschews participating in the discussion. And all of this for this lousy citation. If the anon could dedicate half the time he/she spends edit warring/trying to intimidate people to finding a better citation this problem wouldn't exist. I simply can't believe sometimes how bad things can get over a virtually worthless piece of information. Yet one thing is for certain. Wikipedia must be protected from aggressive editors with a WP:POINT to make and no citations to back it up. Dr.K. (talk) 01:33, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply


Let's analyze the anon's edit a bit closer:

Apparently there are customers who have a different opinion, considering service during recent months "tragic" and that Olympic "has lost its credibility". [1]

Now let me ask you something. Are we really going to find anyone, other than Ms Kostiopoulos, that actually think this situation is quote: "Tragic". Wait a minute here. These are Ms Kostiopoulos' thoughts, her words. How many adherents among the general public are we going to find that think that Olympic's predicament is exactly "Tragic" and not, say, "Bad", or "crazy" or "unacceptable" etc. etc. "Tragic" is a very specialised term. I would love to know how many people adhere to this exact term. Let's be real now. Let's cut this ___. Dr.K. (talk) 02:02, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

I agree that it shouldn't be used and I've already said it was unreliable, therefore should not used. It could be used based on current practice at wikipedia, but it shouldn't. Even JW admits that it can be used in an ancillary article. Pesonally, I think that there probably are others who feel the same way, but how do we know, where's the proof.fr33kman t - c 02:09, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
Precisely. I have no doubt that there is a set of people, how big I can't say, that think Olympic's situation is bad. Others that think Olympic's situation is nuts. And so on. Now out of all of these groups here comes the group that thinks Olympic's situation is "tragic". I mean who can know the size of this "tragically thinking" group? Let alone quote it in the article as was attempted by the anon. Now as you mentioned, according to Jimbo we can create an ancillary article: Public comments about Olympic's plight where we can mention the "tragic" comment. I'm all for it. Just don't expect me to create it. I'll wait for another editor to do this great service. Dr.K. (talk) 02:20, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
No, don't create it, bandwidth is shorter than that page would be :-) fr33kman t - c 02:34, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
How tragic. You just stopped me in my tracks. And I was just thinking about its DYK possibilities. Don't laugh. "It coulda been a contender". :-) Dr.K. (talk) 02:54, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

So, do we think that we're done here then? :-) fr33kman t - c 17:15, 25 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

I would think so. But in an encyclopedia that anyone can edit this is not completely over until it is over. So we have to see. In the meantime thank you very much for your efforts here and for the excellent opinion you rendered. Take care :-) Tasos (Dr.K. (talk) 17:46, 25 September 2008 (UTC))Reply

References

  1. ^ [2]

Semiprotection?

edit

User:Tasoskessaris has suggested semi-protection for this article. Recently an IP restored some text to Olympic Airlines that had been discussed previously but I don't see any comments from IPs here on the talk page, since the beginning of 2008. If IPs persist in tweaking disputed text, and not discussing anything, then semi-protection may be imposed on the article. This would prevent *all* IPs from editing. EdJohnston (talk) 17:36, 26 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Many thanks Ed. I agree. I left a note inviting the latest IP yet again to a debate. If they don't want to participate we cannot allow fly by night editing to remain anywhere in Wikipedia, including here. Thank you again for your fast response to this. Take care. Tasos (Dr.K. (talk) 17:24, 26 September 2008 (UTC))Reply
When a paper of repute cites opinions of small number of people it clearly implies that such opinions represent a significant number of others, not necessarily cited. This is self-evident. No serious reporter would just go and cite his/her neighbor's ramblings on any issue.
But it is not a small number of people. It is only Ms Kostiopoulos who said that. It is only one customer, this does not qualify for some people but for one person. Therefore when you write "some" you are misleading the readers. Dr.K. (talk) 23:07, 2 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
The argument stays the same. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.75.249.159 (talk) 23:11, 2 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Request for Comment:Can the comment of a single customer, as reported by a Greek newspaper, be included in the article?

edit

Closed RfC reason=Can the comment of a single customer as reported by a Greek newspaper be included in the article? 06:26, 3 November 2008 (UTC)

Dispute over including the comment of a single customer, as reported by a Greek newspaper, in the article.

Related discussions

Dr.K. (talk) 06:26, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

It appears that the comments of one customer appears to be against WP:WEIGHT, if the inclusion of the comment could be justified then it needs to mention the other 16,000 customers on one particular day that did not complain. To gain a better balance it would have to be something like On one day recently one of the 16,000 passengers had a bad time. or Although one customer complained about service another 15,999 travelling on that day did not complain. This is clearly not notable as one or even two (or even ten customers) are an extremely small percentage of the customers travelling on one particular day. MilborneOne (talk) 09:53, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thank you very much MilborneOne. That's exactly my point from the beginning. Dr.K. (talk) 14:49, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
Yet we have to inflict this on logic, this article and Wikipedia in general because a series of IPs who refuse to participate in the discussion, keep edit warring and personally attacking me about the point. The only IP so far who participated has commented that:

When a paper of repute cites opinions of small number of people it clearly implies that such opinions represent a significant number of others, not necessarily cited. This is self-evident. No serious reporter would just go and cite his/her neighbor's ramblings on any issue.

So a paper which carries an unattributed article with a single complaint from a single customer = The opinion of a significant number of customers. This original research turns statistics principles upside down, is based on the ridiculous and statistically insignificant and indeterminate sample size of one (1) and its current inclusion in the article brings Wikipedia to ill-repute. Even if the newspaper used calculus instead of statistics it could not extrapolate to the next point from this one because there is no information about the local slope (derivative) at this singular point. In fact it is the very definition of a Mathematical singularity. I have asked the one IP and the other IP to provide another, better citation for negative comments so that we can include it in the article but so far they have come up with nothing. The way this comment stands now makes a mockery of multiple Wikipedia content rules. It also forms a terrible precedent for a host of other articles and it is a prime example of WP:GAME by multiple, determined and edit warring IPs. Dr.K. (talk) 15:21, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
The opinion of a single passenger has no place in an encyclopedic entry about an Airline company. That's, to say the least, a weazle tactic, if not the paragon of tendentiousness. The purpose of an encyclopedia is not to reproduce every random individual opinion expressed in a newspaper over a given topic. There is enough consensus against the inclusion of this statement--Giorgos Tzimas (talk) 20:57, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
Excellent points. And you are right. WP:Tendentious editing as well as WP:POINT apply here. Coupled of course with violations of WP:WEIGHT, No personal attacks etc. This is a long-term concerted effort by multiple IPs. I even told them in their talk pages that if Olympic Airlines is such a basket case it wouldn't be difficult to find many negative citations about its service. I told them to just find a better one and I would personally add it to the article. Characteristically they have not even replied to my offer. Dr.K. (talk) 21:09, 3 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Definitely should not be included.--76.19.222.40 (talk) 01:24, 4 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Previously uninvolved RfC comment: No, of course not. I believe we have a consensus here, so I am closing the RFC. Cool Hand Luke 06:19, 19 November 2008 (UTC)`Reply

Many thanks Luke. Cool :) Take care. Tasos (Dr.K. (talk) 09:07, 19 November 2008 (UTC))Reply

Skytrax

edit

I see that we are starting a new edit war on whether Skytrax's two-star rating can be included. It seems Wikipedia already has an article on Skytrax, and while they do have a forum section on their web site, they also have this comment:

A 2 Star rating for a poor Quality performance - falling below the industry average in the different competitive rankings of Product and Service standards. This Ranking is assessed by SKYTRAX after detailed Product and Service standards analysis for each featured airline, and is NOT connected in any way to customer ratings across the Forum pages on this site.

Since Skytrax is a consulting firm that does research for airlines, they must have some reputation. The two-star rating doesn't come from an online forum, but is derived from their own studies. I would be inclined to allow it in the article. (We can still attribute it as Skytrax's opinion). Comments? EdJohnston (talk) 14:55, 20 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Hi Ed. Yes, it seems we are in the middle of yet another round of WP:SPA induced edit warring. Even though your points are well taken, I agree with MilborneOne that the actual citation is from a forum. Therefore it is unacceptable to use according to WP:RS. However I noticed that MilborneOne has raised this question at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Airlines#Skytrax. MillborneOne is an aviation expert and he has raised this matter with the WikiProject Airlines. I will wait for their opinion and I will abide by it. However the disputed edit includes WP:WEASEL wording and WP:OR, which will have to go in any case. Dr.K. logos 23:00, 20 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
A careful reading of the above text taken from the skytrax website, which I quote again since it seems that it was not read

A 2 Star rating for a poor Quality performance - falling below the industry average in the different competitive rankings of Product and Service standards. This Ranking is assessed by SKYTRAX after detailed Product and Service standards analysis for each featured airline, and is NOT connected in any way to customer ratings across the Forum pages on this site.

in particular the phrase "NOT connected in any way to customer ratings across the Forum pages on this site" contradicts the claim "the actual citation is from a forum". Schwertleite (talk) 11:53, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Consequently, the "weasel" criticism is also invalid. There IS a reference to the SKYTRAX webpage as well as the Wikipedia article about skytrax on the deleted portion of the article. Furthermore the criticism concerning original research surprises me. Is it not my original reasearch. It is the research of a fairly reputed institution. Schwertleite (talk) 11:56, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
In any case, if the four editors that have deleted my contribution (Patar knight, Tasoskessaris, MillborneOne and Mfield) wish to be consistent, they should immediately delete the corresponding references to skytrax in the Wikipedia articles about Cathay Pacific, Qantas, Thai Airways International, and so on.Schwertleite (talk) 12:04, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Your argument that WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is invalid. If other articles use questionable sources, this is no justification for us to use them here. From your edit statement:

According to the skytrax website, Olympic is given 2 stars for service quality, thus classified as poor.[4] (A North Korean airline is the single case awarded 1 star.)

"A North Korean airline is the single case awarded 1 star." is your own research. No expert has claimed that, especially in conjunction with Olympic Airlines. You are using this fact and attaching it to the previous sentence regarding Olympic, in order to synthesize a point, thereby violating both WP:OR and WP:SYNTH. Also the statement "thus classified as poor." is your own conclusion. Noone made that statement other than you. There are other, WP:NPOV, not WP:WEASEL ways to phrase that.
Also I am not convinced that a forum can be used as an inline citation because if we use it we must infer and construct a lot of data on our own, as my analysis of your statement above indicates. In addition I am not convinced that Skytrax is a noteworthy source, even if we assume that a forum can be cited (which it cannot). Noone knows its reputation in the airline industry or its standing among its competitors. We don't even know if there are any competitors and how large and respected is this ranking system represented by Skytrax.
Skytrax makes a statement that its ranking system is "in no way related to the opinion forums of its website" and that it is based on its own analysis of documents etc. Yet no details are given as to the exact method of evaluation.
Conclusion: Skytrax is an obscure rankings system with an unknown reputation and an even less known rankings methodology. This coupled with using an inline citation taken from a forum and using WP:WEASEL phrasing and WP:SYNTHESIS to arrive at conclusions, make for a very poor encyclopedic content indeed. Dr.K. logos 14:52, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I agree on all of these points - the addition of the second part of the sentence mentioning the North Korean airline is irrelevant at best and yet more likely inappropriate by what it insinuates. Getting back to the actual heart question, is the Skytrax rating system confirmed as a reliable and respected rating by other airline industry sources? Is the low score of Olympic in their ratings mentioned by any sources outside of Skytrax? These are the things that will give the rating credibility and relevance. As for 4 editors reverting your contribution, that has happened due to your not having discussed the matter here up until this point. Mfield (talk) 15:09, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Very well, then, I will take the North Korean reference off, although I think that the argument that it is my own research is silly. It is there for everybody to check, and it simply adds perspective to the information provided.

It is inaccurate that I did not discuss the matter earlier, but I let this drop. The fact remains that the contributions to Cathay Pacific, Thai, Qantas, etc. didn't meet all this flak. Why so?

Concerning Skytrax: according to the wikipedia article, "Skytrax is a United Kingdom-based consultancy, the public face of Inflight Research Services.....Inflight Research Services' research has been used by the UK government in formulating air-transport policy, for example in the UK House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology's Fifth Report." Sounds pretty reputable to me...Schwertleite (talk) 06:59, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Excellent points. Without a datum point, a reference line to establish the credibility and popularity of the Skytrax ranking process in the airline industry and its standing among its competitors, if any, what we are doing is basically setting up a virtual kangaroo court in order to prove the point that the service of Olympic sucks. That's no way to build reliable information as befits Wikipedia. Dr.K. logos 16:03, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
This is a gross exaggeration. Nobody is setting a kangaroo court. There was a simple addition concerning the airline. It is the only one disputed here. 85.72.178.92 (talk) 07:09, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Actually, the talk of kangaroo courts is revealing. A SINGLE user (and I have even been criticised for that) is trying to make a SINGLE contribution which is blocked by at least FOUR editors with a sequence of "arguments" about rules making their appearance along the way. I think this is called "projection".Schwertleite (talk) 08:05, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
All anyone is trying to do is to make sure that the source is reliable before adding information about a company that might be damaging to their reputation, and consequently to ours if we report it. If their rating system is respected then we would expect to find mention of it by other reliable sources such as industry publications, which would themselves be useful sources to back the information. That's all anyone is trying to establish, no one is judging you for trying to add this information, we are simply trying to have a complete discussion about it here on talk. Skytrax themselves are evidently notable but what does Wikiproject Airlines think of the use of their ratings system in airline articles? Mfield (talk) 16:36, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Addendum - I see the question has been asked the question at WP:AIRLINES with no response as yet Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Airlines#Skytrax. Mfield (talk) 16:38, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I agree completely. What in fact is being proposed here is to add an inline citation which links to a forum of a ratings company whose reputation is as yet unknown in the airline industry. Using this dubious link in Wikipedia and mentioning Skytrax in this article we lend credibility to the Skytrax rating system, which then increases the exposure of Skytrax on the Internet. This feedback loop should be avoided because Wikipedia should not be used as a vehicle to increase the reputation of companies. @Schwertleite:The onus is upon you to establish that the rating system used by Skytrax is reliable, respected and notable in the airline industry by using reliable inline citations and not conjecture (example: One of their safety reports was used by the House of Commons committee, therefore they are a reliable company). An airline industry expert must publish this opinion in a reliable industry publication in order for the credibility of Skytrax to be established. So far this has not been established to encyclopedic standards. Also a word of advice. Commenting on user behaviour and not their arguments and trying to use pop psychology to analyse the motives of the users here is not recommended. It is called a personal attack and it is covered under another of these pesky Wikipedia policies: WP:NPA. Also looking at your other contributions here such as Olympic Airlines Privatization, which is just an unnecessary POV fork of this article, and uses such uncited POV language as:

The Olympic Airlines case has been the par excellence case of company mismanagement after nationalization by the Greek state. After nationalization in 1974[5], a profitable company has been turned into a loss-making[6] illegally subsidized disaster.

it soon becomes clear that you need to understand a few policies before your contributions are accepted here. Dr.K. logos 17:41, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I thought that this space concerns Skytrax. Apparently it is also a space for WP Old Boys to intimidate any newcomers. I don't know if this is a single case, or if it is widespread among WP editors. If it is, then maybe this phenomenon (WP editors who have spent lots of time with WP intimidating those who haven't) is worth a WP article of its own. Concerning the word "disaster", well, this is not a POV in the sense that "Houston is beautiful" is a point of view, but rather in the sense that "the Earth is not flat" or that "the economic crisis of the 30s was a disaster" is a POV. Nobody doubts that Olympic has been a disaster in the last decades. The debate is whether the fault belongs to the Greek Government, or the unions, or Mr. Karamanlis, or Mr.Simitis, or the corruption of politicians who press that their nephews are hired, or whatever. I have not expressed a POV to that effect and I would never do that here. I am afraid that some of you are too eager to appeal to (very reasonable) WP rules disregarding the spirit of such rules.Schwertleite (talk) 14:41, 26 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I will not dignify your edit by replying to these ridiculous assertions and allegations. Other than to remind you for the last time to cease your personal attacks. Also using personal characterisations is not recommended because it does not advance the debate. Dr.K. logos 14:56, 26 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Can I remind you all about WP:CIVIL, thank you. MilborneOne (talk) 17:25, 26 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I don't get it MillborneOne. Replying to comments about Old Boys and intimidation and characterising them as ridiculous in no way violates WP:CIVIL. So please do not direct your comments to "all" Thank you. Dr.K. logos 17:57, 26 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Schwertleite, it has nothing to do with intimidating newcomers. Everyone here has been trying very patiently for from some time to explain to you the problems you have been having. You have continued against advice to attempt to insert material that you want to see included, first in this article and then in a fork article. You now seem to be attempting to blame everyone else fot the fact that you have not understood these policies and guidelines, when you have been pointed to all of the relevant information multiple times, and thousands of other editors created those guidelines in consensus and apply them without trouble on every edit they make. The basic problem you seem to be having is in understanding what an encyclopedia is and what it is for. It is not the place for editorials - if you want to write a piece of investigative journalism exposing the failure of Olympic Airlines then there are other places you can do that on the internet. An encyclopedia has to stick to notable facts and they have to be verifiable. We can't infer things that people might have meant and we can't draw conclusions from facts ourselves. We have to use language that is neutral and balanced and not sensational or POV. These are core principles. There is no debate that Wikipedia or its editors can or should take a side in. We are not here to debate who is to blame or take political sides. That is for editorial journalism. If you have notable journalists and sources that have attributed blame then that can be reported, as part of a balanced summary of points of view. All else is speculation and as such is attempting to advance a POV. Once again if you need help understanding the reasons for these policies then please ask, or maybe get involved in editing some other areas of the encyclopedia and you will pick up more as you edit. There is a lot to learn and no one is expecting you to know it all from the get go, but you have to accept that editors that have been contributing to the project for a number of years will know more about the way the project works. Mfield (Oi!) 18:45, 26 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

JFK, YYZ, and YUL flights

edit

One editor made edits that New York-JFK, Montreal, and Toronto flights are ending September 30th but however Olympic Airlines' website still has these flights well bookable into October 23rd at the latest. Has this been confirmed? 74.183.173.237 (talk) 02:35, 29 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

Olympic Air

edit

Would it not be better to start a new article for Olympic Air and leave behind the history and information on Olympic Airlines? MilborneOne (talk) 10:22, 18 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Great idea. This way the name and history of the old airline, which lasted for such a long time, will be preserved in one article. Dr.K. logos 13:27, 18 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
Done, this article can now just discuss the older airline. MilborneOne (talk) 19:13, 18 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
Excellent job. Fast too. Take care. Dr.K. logos 21:17, 18 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Former Fleet Table

edit

In the Former Fleet Table the six De Havilland Comet 4B's (DH106) are quoted to accomodate 147 passengers (1966) and 165 passengers (1968). That must be a mistake. The Maximum Payload of Comet 4B was 10,930 kg and 71 to 119 passenger, 71 in 3-class configuration, 101 in 2-class and 119 packed in 1-class. Olypic probably had a 3-class or 2-class configuration. 147 passengers equals a payload of 13,000 kg and 165 of more than 15,000 kg. Only a limited number of 4Bs were produced (18 according to Wikipedia) and Olympic shared the aircrafts with BEA, so presumeably same configuration as BEA had (cannot find any reference, but may have been same as Trident with 79, as 15 1st and 64 2nd). BEA Airtours later used second-hand ex-BEA de Havilland Comet series 4B aircraft seating 109 passengers in a single-class high-density configuration. --Per Meistrup (talk) 17:33, 9 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

edit

Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just added archive links to one external link on Olympic Airlines. Please take a moment to review my edit. If necessary, add {{cbignore}} after the link to keep me from modifying it. Alternatively, you can add {{nobots|deny=InternetArchiveBot}} to keep me off the page altogether. I made the following changes:

When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the checked parameter below to true to let others know.

This message was posted before February 2018. After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{source check}} (last update: 5 June 2024).

  • If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with this tool.
  • If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with this tool.

Cheers. —cyberbot IITalk to my owner:Online 18:38, 19 October 2015 (UTC)Reply

Is Klitys a real place name?

edit

Describing a 1959 crash, the "locality of Klitys, on mount Parnitha" is referenced. As klitys (κλιτύς) is a Greek word for slope, is this an actual place name or, rather, a misunderstanding of a Greek text referencing just the slopes of mount Parnitha? --79.167.99.127 (talk) 23:33, 22 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

Avro 748

edit

There is no mention of the Avro 748 which Olympic had on lease from Avro between 16 Jun 1969 and 04 Oct 1969 for evaluation purposes. References: 'The Avro 748' by Richard Church p177 and the fuller story of why the aircraft, despite being very successful, is covered in 'Avro 748' by Barry Lloyd, p 19/20 Garstonboy (talk) 15:09, 24 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Top marks for bringing it up, but in the big scheme of things a three-month lease for evaluation is small beer. Adding an entry for the HS748 does not really add value to the Olympic Airways article, particularly when Olympic went on to buy a direct competitor (the NAMC YS-11). Unfortunately here on Wikipedia the fleet tables for any number of airlines are cluttered up with entries that, whilst accurate, only serve to detract from giving a flavour as to what the airline was really about.
WendlingCrusader (talk) 12:17, 7 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

Olympic Aviation - serving the islands

edit

There is a separate article covering this subsidiary or operating division, somewhat poorly written and lacking citations, but it exists. The overlap is currently very poorly explained, maybe because its role changed over the years. The only visible title painted on aircraft was 'Olympic' (i.e. without any further qualification), and for many years the aircraft carried exactly the same overall colour scheme as the remainder of the mainline fleet (six rings on a dark blue background), so was it simply a separate operating division?

Around 1993 Olympic Aviation adopted a plain white background, with revised colours for the rings (otherwise the white rings would disappear!), which should have clarified the picture, but... some of the Olympic Airlines international fleet also then appeared in white (e.g. Airbus A300 SX-BED & SX-BEE), and occasionally Olympic Aviation (white) aircraft would venture further afield on international flights. All very confusing!

 
Boeing 717, Olympic Aviation, (note full title displayed) March 2000
 
Boeing 717, now just Olympic (Airlines) titles, March 2006

As regards the fleets, there are some types that are clearly Olympic Aviation light aircraft (Piper Cherokee, Piper Navajo, Cessna 152), and others (turboprop airliners) that appear in lists for both Olympic Airways and Olympic Aviation (Do228, Short Skyvan, Short 330, ATR42). In the final years (2000-03) the seemingly separate Olympic Aviation with its own identity leased three Boeing 717s, but these too appear in both listings.

Standard reference books at the time (e.g. JP Airline Fleets, 1977 edition) initially made no distinction, putting everything under 'Olympic Airways', although by the 1982 edition 'Olympic Aviation' was listed as a separate 'Division' with a fleet of smaller light aircraft and helicopters, but specifically excluding airline types such as the Skyvans, SD-330s and NAMC YS-11.

At the moment that is as far as I have got, but both articles need straightening out and cross-referencing. Meanwhile, it's all Greek to me!

WendlingCrusader (talk) 14:06, 7 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

The only photos I can find of aircraft displaying full 'Olympic Aviation' titles are of the three Boeing 717 aircraft (SX-BOA, -BOB and -BOC), operated on lease from 2000-2007.
These Boeings were subsequently absorbed into the 'new' Olympic Airlines fleet, and almost immediately the 'Aviation' subtitle was removed, as can be seen in the second photo, taken in snowy conditions in 2006 (at Frankfurt).
As described earlier, these aircraft are also displaying the 'white' livery associated with 'Olympic Aviation', but also seen on some mainline Olympic Airways aircraft.
WendlingCrusader (talk) 16:26, 7 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

Ilyushin Il-62M leased from Aeroflot?

edit
 
Aeroflot IL-62 CCCP86506 at LHR in 1979 with 'Official Olympic Carrier' titles (in red script, after Aeroflot)

The former fleet list includes an Il-62M (CCCP-86455) supposedly leased to Olympic. The claim is backed up by two sources, at least one of which adds 1979 as the year this allegedly happened. I've even found a third source - a photo on pinterest, except that was clearly faked! The original can be found at airteamimages.com, taken at Heathrow, with standard Aeroflot titles, and dated 6/8/1974 (a date which unfortunately is itself highly dubious). The fake is the same photo, supposedly now from 1979, with Olympic Airways titles, together with the revised set of six Olympic rings that were only introduced fourteen years later in 1993.

So what about the other two sources? One is a Russian site, in Russian, which I have viewed before, but..... with a pinch of salt. The other is planelogger.com, that states the aircraft was only delivered in 1976, two years after the AirTeamImages.com photo date.

So what is behind this 'Olympic' kerfuffle? Cast your minds back to 1980 and the Moscow Summer Olympic Games. In the run up to those games, any number of Aeroflot aircraft were marked 'OFFICIAL OLYMPIC CARRIER'. Now finding photos from 1979 & '80 showing these 'Olympic' titles is relatively easy; but finding examples here on Wikimedia was something else, quite a challenge in fact, but eventually I found one. Sorted!

TLDR; Olympic Airways never did lease an Aeroflot Il-62.

WendlingCrusader (talk) 19:24, 8 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

Final Fleet

edit

Here we find yet another section without a single source for the information, much of which is dubious or unhelpful.

Occasional flights flown on behalf of Olympic Airlines does not warrant their inclusion in this listing.

  • A319 - eight examples of this type were rapidly put into service with Olympic Air immediately following September 29th, 2009. To enable this, they were also observed emerging from paintshops and on crew training flights before the 29th September deadline, but I'm not sure they flew any revenue flights for Olympic Airlines and could therefore be counted as part of their Final Fleet
  • Bombardier Dash 8-102 - these five aircraft were absorbed into the new Olympic Air, with two of them still flying in 2024.

The remaining types were retired; either parked up at Athens (LGAV), sold off, or returned to various lessors. The table does not need excess detail of various sub-types, and who they were leased from. I will also remove the suggestion that Boeing 737-300 & 400 served 'intercontinental' routes.

I hope the final table will be much shorter, and much easier to understand. I might even add a citation or two. WendlingCrusader (talk) 02:16, 9 August 2024 (UTC)Reply