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{{Infobox Airline
New Akon song called Beautiful, possible cut for album.
|airline = Delta Air Lines
|logo = Delta_logo.svg
|logo_size = 300
|fleet_size = 452 (+49 orders)
|destinations = 324
|IATA = DL
|ICAO = DAL
|callsign = DELTA
|founded = 1924<br>(as Huff-Daland Dusters) in [[Monroe, LA]] <ref name="NAAH">{{cite book|last=Norwood|first=Tom|coauthors=Wegg, John|title=North American Airlines Handbook|publisher=Airways International|location=Sandpoint, ID|year=2002|edition=3rd|isbn=0-9653993-8-9|page=40|url=http://www.airwaysnews.com}}</ref>
|commenced=[[July 17]], [[1929]]<ref name=NAAH/>
|headquarters = [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]
|key_people = Richard Anderson ([[Chief Executive Officer|CEO]])<br>Edward Bastian ([[President]] / [[Chief Financial Officer|CFO]])
|hubs =
<div> <!-- Hubs should be listed alphabetically, not by size -->
*[[Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport]]
*[[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport]]
*[[John F. Kennedy International Airport]]
*[[LaGuardia Airport]]
*[[Salt Lake City International Airport]]<ref>[http://news.delta.com/images//delta_network_general_0908.pdf General Network Fact Sheet as of September 2008] retrieved 9/14/2008</ref>
</div>
|frequent_flyer = SkyMiles
|lounge = Crown Room Club
|alliance = [[SkyTeam]]
|subsidiaries = [[Comair]]<br />[[Delta Shuttle]]<br />[[Delta AirElite Business Jets|Delta AirElite]]
|website = http://www.delta.com
}}

'''Delta Air Lines, [[incorporation (business)|Inc.]]''' ({{NYSE|DAL}}) is a [[United States]] [[airline]]<ref>[http://av-info.faa.gov/detail.asp?DSGN_CODE=DALA&OPER_FAR=121&OPER_NAME=DELTA+AIR+LINES+INC Federal Aviation Administration - Airline Certificate Information - Detail View<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> based and headquartered in [[Atlanta]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]].<ref>http://apps.atlantaga.gov/citydir/dpcd/maps/zoning_sheet_14-128.pdf</ref> Delta operates an expansive domestic and international network, spanning [[North America]], [[South America]], [[Europe]], [[Asia]], [[Africa]], the [[Middle East]] and the [[Caribbean]]. Delta flies to over 332 destinations in 57 countries (excluding codeshare), across 5 continents.<ref name=300destinations>{{cite press release| url=http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10483| title=Delta Becomes Only Global Airline to Serve 300 Worldwide Destinations| publisher=Delta Air Lines| date=[[2006-12-14]]| accessdate=2007-01-10}}</ref> Delta is the only major U.S. carrier that flies to Africa.<ref>{{cite press release | url=http://www.primezone.com/newsroom/news.html?d=101963 | title=Delta Invites Budget-Minded Jet Setters to Explore the World With Special Low International Fares | accessdate=2007-01-10 | publisher=Delta Air Lines | date=[[2006-07-12]]}}</ref> On [[April 14]], [[2008]], [[Northwest Airlines]] announced it would be [[Delta Air Lines-Northwest Airlines merger| merging]] with Delta to form the new Delta Air Lines<ref>{{cite web|title=Delta and Northwest in $3 Billion Deal|publisher=''The New York Times''|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/15/business/15air.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin|date=2008-04-15|accessdate=2008-04-15}}</ref>. Once in place, the "new" Delta would become the world's largest carrier. <ref>http://www.nwa.com/features/mergerletter/index.html?intomni=tc.100percentservesV2.hplead</ref>

Delta operates [[Airline hub|hubs]] at [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport]], [[Salt Lake City International Airport]], [[Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport]], [[New York]]'s [[John F. Kennedy International Airport]], and [[New York]]'s [[LaGuardia Airport]]; Delta's Atlanta hub is the largest/busiest airline hub in the world. Delta carries more passengers across the Atlantic than any other carrier worldwide. Its major transatlantic gateways are Atlanta, Cincinnati, and New York-JFK. [[Transatlantic flight|Transatlantic]] service from Salt Lake City to Paris started in 2008. Its major Latin American gateways is Atlanta. The Los Angeles secondary hub was significantly reduced in 2008, ending the build up as Delta went from a high of 48 destinations from the airport to just 17. <ref>{{cite web | url=http://images.delta.com.edgesuite.net/delta/pdfs/speeches_pres/investor.pdf| title=Delta Air Lines Plan Of Reorganization (LAX included in 5 hubs/gateways, pgs 23 and 24) | accessdate=2006-12-20 | format=PDF}}</ref>

In terms of passengers carried (approximately 119 million in 2005),<ref name="delta_stats_facts">{{cite web | url=http://www.delta.com/about_delta/corporate_information/delta_stats_facts/index.jsp | title=Delta Stats & Facts | accessdate=2006-09-17}}</ref> Delta is the second-largest airline in the world (behind [[American Airlines]]). In terms of revenue passenger miles, Delta Air Lines is the third largest airline, after [[American Airlines]] and [[United Airlines]]. Delta Air Lines serves more destinations than any other airline in the world.<ref>Aviation Week and Space Technology, [[January 15]], [[2007]], p. 349, 2005 data</ref> In terms of total operating revenues, Delta is the sixth-largest airline in the world.<ref>Aviation Week and Space Technology, [[January 15]], [[2007]], p. 348, Charts show Air France/KLM, American, Lufthansa, United, British Airways with higher revenue</ref>

==The company==
[[Image:N701DN 1.jpg|thumb|right| Delta Air Lines' flagship, the Boeing 777-200LR.]]
===Airline operations===

*'''[[Comair]]''' a [[regional airline|regional]] component of Delta Air Lines, Inc., - serves primarily domestic short-haul, low-density, high frequency flights.

*'''Delta''', the "[[mainline (flight)|mainline]]" component of Delta Air Lines, Inc., - serves primarily high-volume domestic flights and long-haul international services

===Aviation business related operations, divisions, and subsidiaries===

*[[Comair, Inc.]]
*[[Comair Holdings, LLC]]
*[[Comair Services, Inc.]]
*[[Crown Rooms, Inc.]]
*[[DAL Aircraft Trading, Inc.]]
*[[DAL Global Services, LLC]]
*[[DAL Moscow, Inc.]], a 50/50 partnership with [[Aeroflot]]
*[[Delta AirElite Business Jets, Inc.]]
*[[Delta Benefits Management, Inc.]]
*Delta Cargo, Delta's air freight division.
*[[Delta Connection]], a [[marketing]] [[brand]] given to flights operated by certain [[regional airlines]] on short- to mid-haul, low- to mid-volume routes, "connecting" [[Airline hub|hubs]] to airports where the larger "mainline" planes would either have a hard time accessing, go unfilled or too infrequently to be profitable.
*[[Delta Connection Academy|Delta Connection Academy, Inc.]]
*[[Delta Corporate Identity, Inc.]]
*[[Delta DASH]], Delta's same-day small package delivery service, part of Delta Cargo.
*[[Delta Loyalty Management Services, LLC]]
*[[Delta Shuttle]], which operates high frequency, [[short-haul]] service using [[McDonnell Douglas MD-88]]s configured with a single-class cabin. The flights operate between [[LaGuardia Airport]] and [[Logan International Airport]]; and between [[LaGuardia Airport]] and [[Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport]]. [[Delta Shuttle]] operates with the same [[operating certificate]], [[callsign]], [[IATA]], and [[ICAO]] codes as Delta Air Lines, Inc., unlike Delta Connection branded sub-fleets flown by other certificated regional airlines.
*[[Delta Technology, LLC]]
*[[Delta Ventures III, LLC]]
*[[Epsilon Trading, Inc.]]
*[[Kappa Capital Management, Inc.]]
===Former subsidiaries===
*[[ASA Holdings]]
*[[Song, LLC]]

===Defunct airlines operated by Delta===
*'''[[Delta Express]]''' began service in October 1996 in an attempt by Delta to compete with [[Low-cost carrier|low cost airlines]] on leisure-oriented routes. Its main base of operations was [[Orlando International Airport]] and it used [[Boeing 737-200]] aircraft. It ceased operations in November, 2003 after Song was established.
*'''[[Song (airline)|Song]]''' began service on [[April 15]], [[2003]] as a single-class airline operated by Delta to compete directly with [[JetBlue Airways]] from both airlines' hubs at New York-JFK. While the brand was considered a successful addition to the Northeast-to-Florida market, financially the airline suffered. As a result, on [[May 1]], [[2006]], Song was folded into the Delta mainline brand. The "Song" entertainment system will remain in place on certain long-haul domestic flights. Additionally, all former "Song" aircraft have been reconfigured to accommodate 26 First/158 Economy passengers. These aircraft are now focused primarily on trans-continental flights from JFK and ATL. Song used [[Boeing 757]] aircraft.

As a historical footnote, [[Western Airlines]] was acquired on [[December 16]], [[1986]], and was operated as a separate airline by Delta for over three months.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE4D71438F934A25751C1A960948260 COMPANY NEWS; Delta-Western Merger Approval]</ref> In a case by a union to stop the workforce integration, the U.S. Supreme Court wrote "On [[December 16]], [[1986]], shareholder approval of the merger was confirmed and Western Airlines became a wholly owned subsidiary of Delta."<ref>[http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=480&invol=1301 FindLaw for Legal Professionals - Case Law, Federal and State Resources, Forms, and Code<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The changeover date for discontinuation of the Western Airlines brand and the date for merger of the two airlines' ''workforce'' was [[April 1]], [[1987]].

===Merger with Northwest Airlines===
{{main|Delta Air Lines-Northwest Airlines merger}}
On [[January 15]], [[2008]], Delta Air Lines was reported to be in merger talks with [[Northwest Airlines]] and [[United Airlines]].<ref>[http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2008-01-15-delta-ua-nwa_N.htm Delta Air Lines Begins Merger Talks With NWA and UAL] (USA Today: [[January 15]], [[2008]])</ref> Although each airline declined to comment officially, many notable newspapers, as well as industry analysts, expected an announcement as early as mid-February 2008 as to which airline the Delta Board of Directors would like to pursue a merger. Delta asserted that it would retain its name and its Atlanta hub in any merger, possibly as the surviving airline.<ref>[http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2004129533_airmerger17.html Business & Technology | Delta, United, NWA merger talks confirmed | Seattle Times Newspaper<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> By late February 2008 the merger discussions with Northwest Airlines appeared to have broken down over pilot seniority issues.<ref>Stone, Mike and Claudia Montoto. "[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/11a34200-e6da-11dc-b5c3-0000779fd2ac,dwp_uuid=e8477cc4-c820-11db-b0dc-000b5df10621.html Delta/Northwest merger put on two weeks ‘life support’; chances of failure increasingly high - sources]." ''[[Financial Times]]''. [[February 29]], [[2008]] 15:31</ref>

On [[April 14]], [[2008]], both Delta and [[Northwest Airlines]] announced that they would merge to create the world's largest airline. The [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]]-based combined airline will have $17.7 billion enterprise value. The company also stated on [[April 14]], [[2008]] that it agreed with its pilot union to extend the existing collective bargaining agreement through the end of 2012. The agreement, subject to a vote by the pilots, provides Delta pilots a 3.5 percent equity stake in the created new airline.<ref>[http://edition.cnn.com/2008/BUSINESS/04/14/delta.nw/index.html | Delta, Northwest approve merger | CNN ]</ref>

==History==
{{Split|date=July 2008}}
===Early history===
[[Image:Delta DC-7.jpg|thumb|A [[Douglas DC-7]] in Delta livery]]
The company has its roots in [[Huff Daland Dusters]], which was founded on [[May 30]], [[1924]] in [[Macon, GA|Macon]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], by several partners including [[Collett E. Woolman]] becoming the world's first [[Aerial application|aerial crop dusting]] company. Huff Daland moved to [[Monroe, Louisiana|Monroe]], [[Louisiana]] the following year. On [[September 13]], [[1928]], [[Huff Daland Dusters]] was purchased by C.E. Woolman and renamed '''Delta Air Service''' after the [[Mississippi Delta]], where its route connected [[Dallas, Texas|Dallas]], [[Texas]] to [[Jackson, Mississippi|Jackson]], [[Mississippi]], via [[Shreveport, Louisiana|Shreveport]] and [[Monroe, Louisiana|Monroe]]. The original directors of Delta Air Service were C.H. McHenry, Travis Oliver, and M.S. Biedenharn. This service was terminated in 1930 after the "Spoils Conference" and the Post Office awarded the route to American Airlines. Delta restarted passenger service in August 1934 with a route from Charleston, SC to Fort Worth, with stops in Columbia, SC, [[Augusta, Georgia|Augusta]], Atlanta, [[Birmingham, Alabama|Birmingham]], and [[Meridian, Mississippi|Meridian]] along the way.<ref>http://www.delta.com/about_delta/corporate_information/delta_stats_facts/delta_through_decades/index.jsp Delta Air Lines; Delta Through the Decades</ref>

In 1941, Delta moved its headquarters from [[Monroe, Louisiana|Monroe]] to [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]], to center itself along its new route network that now stretched to [[Chicago]], [[Miami, Florida|Miami]], and [[New Orleans, Louisiana|New Orleans]]. The logo for [[Monroe Regional Airport (Louisiana)|Monroe Regional Airport]] is based on the Delta logo, in honor of it being the airline's birthplace and the original headquarters for Delta.

In 1953, Delta purchased the [[Chicago and Southern Air Lines]], and flew under the name '''Delta C&S''' for the next two years. <ref>[http://www.delta.com/about_delta/corporate_information/delta_stats_facts/delta_through_decades/index.jsp#1950 Delta Through the Decades<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Delta was the launch operator of the [[Douglas Aircraft Company|Douglas]] [[Douglas DC-8|DC-8]], which began service in 1959, and the [[Convair CV-880]] in 1960. The DC-8's graceful [[swept-wing]] design inspired Delta to come up with a new red, white, and blue delta-shaped logo (the "widget"). Just a few years later, Delta became the launch operator of the [[Douglas Aircraft Company|Douglas]] [[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|DC-9]]. By 1970, Delta was an all jet airline.

===1970s and 1980s===
In 1970, Delta entered the "wide-body" jet era with the purchase of five [[Boeing 747]]s to service its new long-haul high density routes. The initial route was a Los Angeles-Dallas Love Field-Atlanta routing. Delta also had an interchange with [[Pan American World Airways|Pan Am]] using Delta 747 to fly to [[London Heathrow Airport]]. However, with the economic slowdown of the early 1970s, Delta found the aircraft too large for its routes and it sold them a few years later. Shortly thereafter, Delta leased five [[McDonnell Douglas DC-10|DC-10]]s from United Airlines as a stopgap until its larger order of the new [[Lockheed L-1011]] TriStars could be delivered.

[[Image:DeltaL-1011.jpg|thumb|A Delta [[L-1011]]]]

Delta purchased [[Northeast Airlines]] in 1972 to strengthen its market share in the northeastern [[United States]]. Through the purchase, Delta began its long [[Boeing 727]] operation.

In 1973, the Lockheed TriStar entered service for Delta. Delta placed these aircraft in international service from Atlanta to [[London]] in 1978; [[Frankfurt]] was added the following year. Delta's fast growth showed in August 1979 when it became the first airline in the world to board one million passengers in one city in one month ([[Atlanta]]).

Delta launched '''Delta Air Express''' in 1975, the first "high-priority, guaranteed cargo service"<ref>[http://www.delta.com/about_delta/corporate_information/delta_stats_facts/delta_through_decades/index.jsp#1970 Delta Through the Decades<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.

Delta launched its first frequent flyer program in 1981 which became the SkyMiles program in 1995. In 1983, Delta took delivery of its first [[Boeing]] [[Boeing 767| 767-200]], named the ''Spirit of Delta'', which was paid for "by voluntary contributions from employees, retirees and Delta's community partners." The effort, called Project 767, was spearheaded by three Delta flight attendants to show the employees' appreciation to Delta for solid management and strong leadership during the first years following airline deregulation."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.l1011.homestead.com/SpirtofDL.html | title=Spirit of Delta | accessdate=2006-09-17}}</ref> The airplane remained the flagship of the Delta fleet until 2006, and was repainted in a commemorative paint scheme and toured the country to celebrate the airline's 75th anniversary in 2004.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2004/04/19/daily67.html | title=The Spirit of Delta launched to commemorate anniversary |work=[[Atlanta Business Chronicle]] | accessdate=2006-09-17 |date=[[2004-04-23]]}}</ref>

In 1984, the company established the [[Delta Connection]] partnership linking local "feeder" airlines that served mid-size population areas to Delta nodes. The same year, Delta began its first flight to [[Hawaii]] ([[Honolulu International Airport]]) with L-1011 aircraft. Also in 1984, Delta began to offer the nation's first public air-to-ground telephone system with [[Airfone]], on the L-1011. Delta was named 'Official Airline of [[Walt Disney World]]' in 1986, and its official ride in the Magic Kingdom was [[Delta Dreamflight]], and was discontinued in the late 1990s when Delta's partnership with Walt Disney World ended.

In 1987, Delta merged with [[Western Airlines]] of [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] and absorbed its large hubs at [[Salt Lake City]] and [[Los Angeles]]. Through these acquisitions and expansions Delta became the fourth largest U.S. carrier and fifth largest world carrier. Also in 1987, Ronald W. Allen became chairman and CEO.

===1990s===
[[Image:Delta B763 N1201P.jpg|thumb|right|A Delta Air Lines [[Boeing 767-300ER]] in 1997-2000 livery. The last mainline aircraft in this livery was repainted to the current livery as of July 2008.]]

In 1990, Delta became the first U.S. airline to operate the [[McDonnell Douglas]] [[McDonnell Douglas MD-11|MD-11]] aircraft <ref>[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=AT&p_theme=at&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB7C4CD465670BB&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM MD-11 jumbo jet arriving to fly Delta into the future], ''Atlanta Journal-Constitution'' December 22, 1990</ref>, leasing two from Mitsui. Delta operated 15 MD-11s. Delta's most dramatic expansion (at that time) came with its purchase of Pan Am's European routes in 1991 which included all north Atlantic routes except Miami to London and Paris, and the Frankfurt, Germany hub, after Pan Am declared [[bankruptcy]]. The purchase gave Delta the largest transatlantic route network, a fleet of 21 [[Airbus]] [[Airbus A310|A310]] aircraft, and the [[Worldport (Pan Am)|Worldport]] (Terminal 3) at JFK. Due to these acquisitions, Delta became and remains today the largest U.S. transatlantic carrier, in terms of passengers carried and number of flights operated. Delta also acquired Pan Am's northeastern shuttle, inheriting of a number of [[Boeing 727]]s, and forming what is today [[Delta Shuttle]].

In 1991, as one of the conditions for Delta's financial support of Pan Am, Delta had the rights to use the Pan Am name on flights across the Atlantic. Delta obtained all of Pan Am's remaining transatlantic rights, except Miami to Paris and London, in November, 1991, including the route from Detroit to London, despite [[Northwest Airlines]]' objections. It was an unusual route for Delta given its small presence in Detroit, and Northwest's correspondingly larger operations.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE3D91738F932A35757C0A964958260 COMPANY NEWS; Pan American Route Transfer]</ref> Northwest later attempted to buy US Air's (now [[US Airways]]) Baltimore-London route for $5 million and transfer the route to Detroit<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE3D8153FF935A25757C0A965958260 Company News; Northwest Agrees To Pay $5 Million For London Route]</ref> but ended up buying the route from Delta in 1995<ref>[http://www.metroairport.com/about/history.asp MetroAirport.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> for a rumored $32 million. The naming right was never exercised even though the Pan Am name was a much more widely recognized name in Europe than Delta. Within weeks after the route and asset transfers were complete, Delta ended its financial support, which led to Pan Am ceasing operations on [[December 4]], [[1991]].<ref>[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=BG&p_theme=bg&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EADDF987B230E98&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM Pan Am Faces Shutdown Today Without Financing], ''Associated Press'' December 4, 1991</ref>

After withdrawing its agreed upon financial support, which would have allowed Pan Am to continue with a hub in MIA, Delta was sued for more than $2.5 billion on December 9, 1991 by the Pan Am Creditors Committee. <ref>[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1099194.html Pan Am, Creditors Sue Delta - The Washington Post - HighBeam Research<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Shortly thereafter, a large group of former Pan Am employees also sued Delta. Delta was able to combine and move the cases from New York to Atlanta. Delta was also able to prevent a jury trial, which, according to Business Week magazine, its attorneys had stated it would likely lose. The Atlanta judge then dismissed the lawsuits.

In 1995, responding to [[Qantas]] and [[American Airlines]] innovation of [[codeshare]] agreements, Delta established its own [[code sharing]] arrangements with [[Swissair]], [[Sabena]], and [[Austrian Airlines]], which launched [[Atlantic Excellence]], disbanded in 2000, for codesharing with [[Air France]] which led to the [[Skyteam]] alliance.

By 1997, during which [[Leo Mullin]] was named CEO, Delta began large expansions into [[Latin America]] and in 1999 introduced the [[Boeing 777]] into its fleet, for longer non-stop flights. During Mullin's tenure, Delta saw large expansions into Latin America and the Caribbean. This was also known as Delta's "technological growth period".{{Fact|date=March 2007}} Airport kiosks were introduced, Delta Technology was developed into an industry leading technology division,{{Fact|date=February 2007}} gate information display screens (GIDS) were rolled out, and internal software was thoroughly revamped. However, Mullin's legacy was ruined by labor woes, huge losses in the post-9/11 period, a major executive compensation scandal, and a bankruptcy filing months after he abruptly retired.

Throughout the 1990s, Delta maintained a secondary hub at [[Portland International Airport|Portland]] for its Asia operations. In addition to regularly scheduled flights to Delta's primary hubs during this time (Atlanta, Cincinnati, [[Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport|Dallas]], and Salt Lake City), several of Delta's flights to Asia were routed from Portland and Los Angeles, using L-1011 and MD-11 aircraft. Destinations included [[Bangkok]], [[Fukuoka, Fukuoka|Fukuoka]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Manila]], [[Nagoya]], [[Seoul]], [[Taipei]], and [[Tokyo]]. Delta was one of the airlines targeted in the failed [[Operation Bojinka]] plot: the conspirators planned to bomb a Delta [[McDonnell Douglas MD-11|MD-11]] flying from Seoul to Bangkok via Taipei on [[January 21]], [[1995]]. Today, all Asia operations from Portland and Los Angeles have ceased. Asian service is offered from Delta’s Atlanta and New York – JFK hubs to Mumbai, India; Tokyo, Japan; Seoul, South Korea; and Shanghai, China (effective [[March 30]], [[2008]]).<ref>http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10864 Delta Customers Invited to Book Flights to China</ref><ref>Delta Worldwide Timetable effective [[February 1]], [[2008]]</ref>

In 1996, Delta carried the [[Olympic Torch]] from [[Athens, Greece]] where it was lit, to [[Los Angeles, California]] for its traditional circuit to the [[Centennial Olympic Stadium|Olympic Stadium]] in Atlanta, GA for the [[1996 Summer Olympics]], of which Delta was the official airline.

In 1998, Delta and [[United Airlines]] introduced a marketing partnership that included a reciprocal redemption agreement between SkyMiles and Mileage Plus programs and shared lounges.<ref>[http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0CWU/is_2003_July_29/ai_105988602 Delta Air Lines and United Airlines to end marketing relationship | Airline Industry Information | Find Articles at BNET.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This scheme allowed members of either frequent flier program to earn miles on both carriers and utilize both carriers' lounges. Delta and United attempted to introduce an even cozier codeshare relationship, but this was deal was effectively killed by [[ALPA]].<ref>[http://www.frequentflier.com/ffc-0905.htm FrequentFlier.com - News & Analysis<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The marketing partnership ended in divorce in 2003 and paved the way for an expansion of the SkyTeam alliance.

In 1999, Delta was a founding partner of the online [[travel agency]] [[Orbitz]] originally began by a group of several major U.S. airlines, which was purchased by [[Cendant]] in 2004. Earlier in that decade, [[Deltamatic]] [[Computer reservations system]] was deprecated in favor of [[Worldspan]].

[[SkyTeam]], a global alliance, was created in 2000 and Delta partnered with [[AeroMéxico]], [[Air France]], and [[Korean Air]]. Three years later, Delta implemented the largest domestic codeshare alliance with [[Continental Airlines]] and [[Northwest Airlines]]. Today SkyTeam now the second largest airline alliance in the world and continues to add members to its ranks.{{Fact|date=March 2007}}

===Fleet transformation in the early 2000s===
[[Image:Delta B763 N194DN.jpg|thumb|right|A Delta [[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-300ER]] at [[Stuttgart Airport|Stuttgart, Germany]]]]
In an effort to simplify its fleet and capitalize on cross-platform compatibility not only in pilot training but also maintenance, the airline began to retire its [[trijet]]s (three-engine planes) in favor of [[twinjet]]s (two-engine planes). Delta's entire active fleet is now composed of twinjets, and the airline is the world's largest operator of [[Boeing 767|767]] aircraft:

*The [[Lockheed L-1011]], for many years the workhorse of the Delta fleet, numbering as high as 56 aircraft in service. The last L-1011 (N728DA) was retired on [[July 31]], [[2001]]. The final flight operated as Flight #1949 from [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]] to [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]], and received a huge display of bittersweet fanfare from Delta employees, Hartsfield International Airport Fire/Rescue, and aviation enthusiasts, many of whom took the day off from work, or school to attend the historic final flight. The big Lockheeds were replaced with the [[Boeing 767-400]].
*The airline's many [[Boeing 727]]s were completely replaced with [[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-800]]s in 2003.
*Delta operated its last [[McDonnell Douglas MD-11|MD-11]] flight on [[January 1]], [[2004]], operating as Flight 56 from New Tokyo International Airport (now [[Narita International Airport]]) at 4:45pm. The aircraft arrived in Atlanta at 3:20pm. This concluded the MD-11s relatively short service in the fleet. [[MD-11]] aircraft have been replaced with [[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200ERs]]. On [[September 23]], [[2004]], a Delta spokesperson confirmed plans to sell eight MD-11s to [[FedEx Express]]. The remainder MD-11s were sold to World Airways for charter use, and some were converted to freighters for [[UPS Airlines]].

===Bankruptcy===
[[Image:Deltaairline-logo-1.png|thumb|right|Logo of Delta Air Lines from March 2000 to July 2007 - Based on Soft Widget]]

As early as 2004, in an effort to avoid [[bankruptcy]], Delta announced a restructuring of the company that included job cuts, and an aggressive expansion of Atlanta operations by some 100 new flights, making it a 'super-hub' and requiring the airline to spread its flight schedule more evenly across the day.<ref>[http://www.fltops.com/profile.asp?ID=7 FLTops.com: Guiding Pilots to their Professional Goals<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This was known to all Delta employees as "Operation Clockwork". Further, by mid-2004 the airline had announced it would be closing its fourth busiest hub ([[Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport]]), which it did on [[January 31]], [[2005]]. In a huge concessionary move, the pilots at Delta agreed to across-the-board 32.5% reductions in hourly pay rates in order to help the company stave off a bankruptcy filing. The agreement also included numerous changes in work rules, granting the company efficiencies in staffing and scheduling.

On [[January 5]], [[2005]], Delta introduced SimpliFares, a radical transformation of its fare structure, which cut its most expensive fares by as much as 50 percent nationwide and capped one-way domestic fares at $499 in coach class and $599 first class. However, due to continued high fuel costs, the company was forced to raise these fare caps by $100 in July, 2005, to $599 in coach class and $699 in first class. Airline fares are constantly in a state of flux, in addition to the constant change in fares due to the selling of seats allocated for lower fares. However, some claim that the SimpliFare is simply a marketing technique to alert the public that there is a maximum ceiling price for Delta's fares.{{Fact|date=June 2007}} Delta also launched a system of "same-day confirmed" whereby for $25, a passenger is able to confirm a seat on a different flight instead of standing-by. in August 2007, the "same-day confirmed" fee increased to $50.

Also in 2005, in an attempt to increase profitability, Delta applied to serve a daily non-stop flight from [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport|Atlanta]] to [[Beijing Capital International Airport|Beijing]], [[China]] starting in March, 2006, but rights were instead awarded to [[American Airlines]] operating from [[O'Hare International Airport|Chicago]] to [[Shanghai Pudong International Airport|Shanghai]] and [[Continental Airlines]] operating from [[Newark Liberty International Airport|Newark]] to Beijing.

On [[August 15]], [[2005]], in an SEC filing, Delta announced that it had finalized a deal to sell Delta Connection carrier Atlantic Southeast Airlines for $425 million in cash to SkyWest Airlines in an effort to obtain money to avoid bankruptcy. Analysts called the move a desperate one, estimating ASA's worth at around $700-$800 million — a price which SkyWest would not have been willing to pay.<ref>http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=9836 Delta Air Lines Reaches Definitive Agreement to Sell Atlantic Southeast Airlines to SkyWest</ref>

On [[September 7]], [[2005]], Delta announced that it would cut 26% of its flights at its [[Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport|Cincinnati]] hub and redeploy aircraft to its hubs in [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport|Atlanta]] and [[Salt Lake City International Airport|Salt Lake City]].<ref>http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=9852 Delta Air Lines Strengthens Domestic Hubs, Offers Customers More International Choices with Winter Schedule</ref> The move will ultimately eliminate up to 1,000 jobs in Cincinnati. In addition and in hopes of increasing profit yields, the airline announced further international expansion into [[Europe]] and [[Latin America]].

On [[September 14]], [[2005]], Delta filed for [[Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 11 bankruptcy]] protection for the first time in its 76-year history. The company cited high labor costs and record-breaking jet fuel prices as factors in its filing. At the time of the filing, Delta had $20.5 billion in debt, $10 billion of which accumulated since January 2001.

===Reorganization during bankruptcy===
[[Image:delta b767-300er n1611b arp.jpg|thumb|[[Boeing 767-300ER]] in the livery used from 2000 to 2007]]
On [[September 22]], [[2005]], Delta announced the acceleration of restructuring activities, targeting an additional $3 billion per year in cost reductions by 2007. $970 million of this amount was to come from debt relief, lease and facility savings, and previously commenced fleet modifications. Non-union workers' salaries were to be reduced by a minimum of 9% across the board, with a 15% reduction for executive officers and a 25% pay cut for CEO Gerald Grinstein. In December 2005, the Delta pilots agreed to an additional temporary 14% cut in pay, piggybacking onto the 32.5% taken at the beginning of 2005. This cut was made permanent with the ratification of an agreement in June 2006. Additionally, the company planned to lay off between 7,000 and 9,000 of its 52,000 employees.<ref>http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=9879 Delta Air Lines Steps Up Transformation Plan to Accelerate Path to Profitability</ref>

As for its route network, Delta planned to alter its structure by reinforcing hub presence in Atlanta, Cincinnati, New York, and Salt Lake City, while at the same time increasing point-to-point routes, reducing domestic capacity by up to 20% while growing more profitable international route (especially Asia, Caribbean and Europe) capacity up to 25%.

In 2006, Delta purchased rights to fly between New York and London from United Airlines.<ref>[http://news.delta.com/print_doc.cfm?article_id=10303 Delta Air Lines Seeks ‘Crown Jewel’ for New York-JFK Hub: Nonstop Flights to London<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On [[February 24]], [[2006]], Delta, along with [[Continental Airlines]] and [[FedEx Express]], saw future operations to [[Venezuela]] severely affected by [[List of Presidents of Venezuela|President]] [[Hugo Chávez]]'s decision to restrict flights coming into that South American country from the United States.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world/venezuela/16075909.htm | title=Chávez restricting U.S. flights | accessdate=2007-01-10 | date=[[2006-02-25]] | work=[[The Miami Herald]] | last=Bachelet | first=Pablo | coauthors=Jane Bussey and Ina Paiva Cordle}}</ref> As of [[March 23]], [[2006]], U.S. and Venezuelan aviation authorities were able to negotiate a solution to their dispute, likely ensuring that Delta's operations to Venezuela would not be curtailed in the future.

On [[March 7]], [[2006]], Delta announced expanded service from its prominent hub at New York-JFK. In addition to the expansion of mainline service at the airport, Delta would partner with [[Mesa Air Group]] to provide regional flights throughout the northeast under the Delta Connection banner. At the same time the airline announced an expansion to a number of new cities from its Salt Lake City hub.

Based on all of these new initiatives, Delta projected a return to profitability by late 2007, based on a crude oil price model of $66 per barrel, in contrast to other bankrupt carriers' restructuring modeled on $55 per barrel. Delta would eventually reach this goal of full year profitability in 2007<ref>http://cincinnati.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/stories/2008/01/21/daily26.html Delta Air Lines in black for 2007; Business Courier of Cincinnati, Wednesday, January 23, 2008</ref>.

Delta announced that coach travelers in the United States who have a flight longer than four hours will have on-demand programming on all those flights starting in 2007 at its main hubs in New York, Salt Lake City, and Atlanta. This was to counter entertainment offerings of other airlines like [[JetBlue Airways]], and take place of Song Airlines' service. Delta claims to offer the leading in-flight entertainment system in the United States. Live programming and music are free, and movies will be available on demand for a nominal fee in coach and for free in first class.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.usatoday.com/money/biztravel/2006-09-12-delta-entertainment_x.htm?csp=34 | title=Delta plans to keep fliers entertained | work=[[USA Today]] | date=[[2006-09-13]] | last=Adams | first=Marilyn | accessdate=2006-09-17}}</ref> Delta also intends to install an improved in-flight entertainment system on internationally-configured aircraft, featuring a personal selection of movies. The system will be installed in all classes on Boeing [[767-400ER]] and [[777-200ER]] aircraft, and in the BusinessElite section on Boeing [[767-300ER]] aircraft.<ref>{{cite press release | url=http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10411 | title=Delta Continues Successful International Expansion with New Nonstop Service to Dubai, Seoul, three Destinations in Europe| accessdate=2006-10-12 | publisher=Delta Air Lines | date=[[2006-10-12]]}}</ref>

On [[November 9]], [[2006]], the airline announced that it would recall 1,000 flight attendants that were previously laid off. In addition to the flight attendant recall, Delta announced in late December 2006 that it had exhausted its pilot recall list and was now accepting pilot applications for the first time in 5 years. They expected to take on close to 200 first officers through 2007.<ref>http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10496 {{cite press release |title=Delta Accepting Pilot Applications|publisher=Delta Air Lines|accessdate = 2007-01-25
}}</ref>

On [[January 4]], [[2007]], the airline announced an order for 30 [[Bombardier]] [[CRJ-900]] [[regional jets]] with an option for 30 additional aircraft, pending approval of the bankruptcy court judge.<ref>{{cite web
|last = Silcoff
|first = Sean
|url = http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/story.html?id=f16b19e9-0c30-47ed-a072-ceff24dfb2ea&k=25295
|title = Delta to buy 30 jets from Bombardier
|work = [[National Post]]
|accessdate = 2007-01-04
|date = [[2007-01-04]]
}}</ref> On [[February 9]], [[2007]], the airline received bankruptcy court approval to buy these aircraft as planned. These aircraft will be operated by [[Delta Connection]].

===Failed takeover attempt by US Airways===
During the later part of 2006 and early 2007, US Airways Group, holding company for US Airways, proposed an acquisition of Delta Air Lines. The combined entity would have been operated under the Delta name. This attempt was withdrawn after failing to gain support from Delta's major creditors and opposition by Delta management.

On [[November 15]], [[2006]], [[Bloomberg L.P.|Bloomberg]] reported that [[US Airways Group]], the parent of [[US Airways]], proposed a takeover of Delta for $8 billion in cash and stock.<ref name="bloomberg_20061115_usairways_delta_merger">{{cite news| url=http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a8nds0EYuWJg| title=US Airways Proposes Merging With Delta Air Lines| last=Schlangenstein| first=Mary| work=[[Bloomberg L.P.|Bloomberg]]| date=[[2006-11-15]]| accessdate=2007-01-10}}</ref> However, Delta's CEO reiterated that the best interests of Delta and its creditors were served by the company emerging from bankruptcy as an independent, stand alone carrier. In the ensuing days, Delta mounted an aggressive defense against the takeover attempt.

In addition to Delta management, Delta employees appeared to be extremely skeptical of US Airways management's claims that a merger would result in no job reductions and provide a more secure future for a combined entity. Employees had started wearing "Keep Delta My Delta" buttons and campaigning to raise public awareness of their opposition to the proposed takeover.<ref name="bostonglobe_20061123_delta_workers_see_trouble">{{cite news| url=http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/11/23/delta_workers_see_trouble_in_takeover_bid/| title=Delta workers see trouble in takeover bid |first=Peter J.| last=Howe| work=[[The Boston Globe]]| date=[[2006-11-23]]| accessdate=2007-01-10}}</ref>

On [[December 19]], [[2006]], Delta announced (as expected) it rejected [[US Airways Group]]'s proposed merger. Along with the announcement, it launched a media campaign against the merger to raise public support. The campaign, "Keep Delta My Delta", was picked up from the employee grassroots effort of the same name. The effort's website harbored an e-petition, quotes from prominent dissidents, and the effects the merger could have on selected localities. In its report, Delta cited many reasons for rejecting the bid, including it would lead to worse customer service, possible layoffs, an inefficient carrier, the carrier with the largest debt-load in the industry, and near-monopoly powers.<ref> [http://www.keepdeltamydelta.org Delta's Campaign Headquarters]</ref>

On [[December 20]], [[2006]], Delta and its financial advisor, the [[Blackstone Group]], declared that Delta would be valued at between $9.4 billion and $12 billion after emerging from bankruptcy, which would (at the time of this writing) give it a market capitalization comparable to that of [[Southwest Airlines]] Co. or greater than that of American Airlines' AMR Corp. and Continental Airlines, Inc. combined. [[US Airways Group]] CEO Doug Parker stated that Delta's self-valuation lacked credibility and was unrealistic.<ref name="DLValuation">{{cite news
|last = Grantham
|first = Russell
|url = http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/delta/stories/2006/12/21/1222bizdelta.html
|title = US Airways CEO: Delta's self-valuation 'lacks credibility'
|work = [[Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]
|accessdate = 2006-12-22
|date = [[2006-12-22]]
}}</ref> Delta CEO Gerald Grinstein retorted by stating that the Tempe-based airline was "the worst of all potential merger partners".<ref name="DLValuation2">{{cite news
|last = Gibbons
|first = Tom
|url = http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/index.php?sty=81138
|title = Money talks in bid to acquire Delta
|work = [[East Valley Tribune]]
|accessdate = 2006-12-24
|date = [[2006-12-24]]
}}</ref>

On [[January 10]], [[2007]], US Airways raised its bid by 20%, to $10.2 billion. The revised offer was set to expire by [[February 1]] unless Delta's creditors opened the airline's books to US Airways and delayed a scheduled [[February 7]] court hearing pertaining to Delta's reorganization plan.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.forbes.com/markets/2007/01/10/delta-usair-bid-markets-equity-cx_rs_0110markets02.html| title=US Airways Sweetens Delta Bid| last=Schneiderman| first=R.M. |work=[[Forbes]]| date=[[2007-01-10]]| accessdate=2007-01-10}}</ref> Delta responded with a statement, claiming that "...the revised proposal does not address significant concerns that have been raised about the initial US Airways proposal and, in fact, would increase the debt burden of the combined company by yet another $1 billion."<ref>{{cite press release | url=http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10513 | title=Delta Air Lines Issues Preliminary Statement Regarding US Airways Revised Proposal | accessdate=2007-01-10 | publisher=Delta Air Lines | date=[[2007-01-10]]}}</ref> That same day Delta Air Lines was speculated to be in talks with [[Northwest Airlines]] and [[United Airlines]] to fend off the [[US Airways]] bid.<ref>[http://money.cnn.com/2007/01/10/news/companies/delta_northwest/index.htm?postversion=2007011016 Delta Air Lines Is Speculated To Be In Talks with Two Other Airlines For Possible Merger] (CNN Money: [[January 10]], [[2007]])</ref> CEO Gerald Grinstein, however, denied that any serious negotiatons were ongoing with Northwest or any other airline.<ref>http://www.keepdeltamydelta.org/getObjectReal_Deal.aspx?Name=Issue2</ref>

On [[January 28]], [[2007]], US Airways holding company raised its bid by another $1 billion according to the Wall Street Journal,<ref>Wall Street Journal, [[January 29]], [[2007]], p. 3</ref> but company spokesmen denied any change.<ref>http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4509363.html</ref> On [[January 31]], [[2007]], Delta's creditors rejected US Airways' hostile takeover attempt, and US Airways withdrew its offer to buy Delta. On the same day, executives and employees of the company gathered to celebrate the re-lighting of the historic "FLY DELTA JETS" sign at the company's main hub, [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport]].<ref>[http://money.cnn.com/2007/01/31/news/companies/usair_delta/index.htm US Air drops hostile bid for Delta after creditors say no - Jan. 31, 2007<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YP-wl6_1VMo Video showing FLY DELTA JETS sign being relighted</ref>

===Emergence from bankruptcy===
[[Image:dal_b777200er_sm1.jpg|thumb|right| Delta Air Lines Boeing 777-200ER in new livery.]]
On [[April 25]], [[2007]], the airline's bankruptcy plan was approved by the Bankruptcy Court. On [[April 30]], [[2007]], Delta Air Lines emerged from bankruptcy protection as an independent carrier. Delta also unveiled a new logo, reminiscent of its logo from the 1970s and 1980s, and a new paint scheme. Delta's bankruptcy exit strategy was vastly different from that of United in that it expanded its way out of bankruptcy, rather than retrenching {{Fact|date=June 2007}}.

Delta's previous stock was canceled as of Monday, [[April 30]], [[2007]], and new shares are trading on a "when issued" basis on the [[New York Stock Exchange]]. These shares began trading normally on Thursday, [[May 3]], [[2007]]. The starting price was around $20.00 a share, and went up to as high as $23.35. But investors showed little confidence in the stock as the price fell to $19.00 later in the week. <ref>[http://finance.google.com/finance?q=DAL* DAL - Delta Air Lines, Inc. - Google Finance<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Upon exiting bankruptcy, Delta also announced a 50% increase in operations at [[Los Angeles International Airport]]<ref>[http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-delta7may07,1,4412767.story?ctrack=1&cset=true]{{Dead link|date=April 2008}}</ref>, thus establishing Los Angeles as Delta's second Latin America hub and new potential Asian gateway with a total of 99 daily departures.

===Post-bankruptcy===

On [[May 10]], [[2007]], Delta announced a partnership with [[US Helicopter]], who provides service from [[John F. Kennedy International Airport]] to several helipads in downtown [[Manhattan]].<ref>http://www.flyush.com/pdfs/USH-Delta-Announcement.pdf</ref>

On [[July 12]], [[2007]], Delta and its [[SkyTeam]] partners announced that they would forfeit slots in the [[European Union]] to relieve antitrust concerns.<ref>[http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=ag27VufFRVBI&refer=europe Bloomberg.com: Europe<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On [[August 21]], [[2007]], Delta named Richard Anderson, former CEO of [[Northwest Airlines]] and executive at [[UnitedHealth Group]], as a replacement for outgoing CEO [[Gerald Grinstein]]. Anderson assumed the post on [[September 1]].<ref>{{cite news | title=Former Northwest CEO Becomes Delta Chief | url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/08/21/business/main3191618.shtml | work=[[CBS News]] | publisher=[[Associated Press]] | date=[[2007-08-21]] | accessdate=2007-08-21}}</ref>

On [[November 14]], [[2007]], [[Pardus Capital Management LP]], a [[hedge fund]] that owns 7 million shares of Delta and 5.6 million shares of [[United Airlines|United]], called for the two carriers to merge. This action sent shares of both airlines up. However, the two airlines quickly denied official talks of any merger.<ref>[http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/stories/2007/11/12/daily33.html Hedge fund calls for Delta-United merger - South Florida Business Journal:<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> <ref>http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/delta/stories/2007/11/14/delta_1115.html</ref>
<ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/delta-consider-merger-after-pressure/story.aspx?guid=%7B38DA59AB-6D7C-40CE-AF17-E67FCF71DE9D%7D Delta Air says it's not in merger talks with United]</ref>

=== Hub history ===
''Former hubs:''
*[[Chicago O'Hare International Airport]] - Delta, until the early 1990s, operated a small hub at Chicago. It served thirteen non-stop destinations from its new Delta Flight Center, which opened in the summer of 1984. During this time Delta also maintained a flight attendant base in Chicago.
*[[Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport]] - Delta at one time operated over 200 flights a day from DFW. At times, it was Delta's second largest hub. Delta closed the hub in February 2005.
*[[Frankfurt International Airport]] - Delta's Frankfurt hub was acquired from [[Pan American World Airways|Pan Am]]. Delta dismantled the hub in 1997.
*[[Los Angeles International Airport]] - LAX is still a small Delta focus city. Delta has under 50 flights per day from LAX and has a market share of 7.7%, which is a distant fourth behind United Airlines, American Airlines, and [[Southwest Airlines]]. Delta had planned to make LAX a major hub, but those plans have since been reduced to just a focus city as Delta has significantly reduced the destinations served from the airport due to the [[2008 energy crisis]]. <ref>"[http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-delta19mar19,1,74652.story Delta to cut 2,000 jobs as price of oil soars]." ''[[The Los Angeles Times]]''.</ref>
''Former secondary hubs:''<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.accessmylibrary.com/comsite5/bin/pdinventory.pl?pdlanding=1&referid=2930&purchase_type=ITM&item_id=0286-6451992| title=Portland, Ore., Airport Likely to Lose Delta Air Lines' Japanese Route| work=[[The Columbian]]| format=reprint| last=Rogoway| first=Mike| date=[[2000-12-08]]| accessdate=2007-01-10}}
</ref>
*[[Memphis International Airport]]-MEM was a mini-hub in conjunction with regional carrier ASA. This operation ended in the mid-80's when competition became too stiff with then Republic and ASA shifted it to Dallas. (See www.flyasa.com History page for more information) Ironically, the two airlines are now considering merging which would mean a return of Delta Hub operations to Memphis on a substantially larger scale.
*[[Portland International Airport]] - Portland, Oregon (PDX) was at one time Delta's premier Asian gateway. It was closed in 2001, further described in the 'route eliminations' section of this article.

=== Focus City history ===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
''Former focus cities:''
*Boston [[Logan International Airport]]
*[[Port Columbus International Airport]]
*[[Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport]]
*[[Los Angeles International Airport]] (former secondary hub)
*New York [[LaGuardia Airport]] - JFK hubs operations folded with LGA operations.
*[[Orlando International Airport]]
*[[Tampa International Airport]]

==Personnel==
Between its [[mainline (flight)|mainline]] operation and subsidiaries, Delta employs approximately 48,000 people.

Delta's approximately 6,600 pilots are represented by the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). The union has represented Delta pilots since 1940.<ref>[http://www.alpa.org/?tabid=183#Delta Crewroom > Pilot Groups<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Pilot domiciles are located in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, New York City, and Salt Lake City.

The company's approximately 180 flight dispatchers are represented by the Professional Airline Flight Control Association (PAFCA).

The rest of Delta's workforce, in contrast to other legacy air carriers, is nonunion.

On [[March 18]], [[2008]], Delta announced that it was offering voluntary severance payouts for up to 30,000 employees (though the target headcount reduction is significantly less than that), and that it would cut domestic capacity by 5%.<ref>[http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/18/news/companies/delta_jobs.ap/index.htm?cnn=yes Delta planned to buy out up to 3,000 workers and cut capacity by 5% - [[March 18]], 2008<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==Destinations==
{{see|Delta Air Lines destinations}}
*Delta (including its wholly owned subsidiary [[Comair]], Inc. and regional service carriers), serves 240 domestic cities in 49 states. The airline also serves [[Puerto Rico]] and the [[U.S. Virgin Islands]], in addition to 57 countries.

*Delta is the only airline in the world to serve over 300 destinations--310 in total.<ref name=300destinations />

*Delta operates 1,632 flights per day.<ref name="delta_stats_facts" />

===Significant past route eliminations===

Airline routes occasionally change as the public's travel patterns change and if a route becomes unprofitable. Although Delta serves the most destinations of any US airline, it has also eliminated more destinations than any major US airline. Some routes that have been eliminated include:

*Delta served several cities in Asia, including [[Bangkok]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Seoul]], and [[Taipei]], from Portland and Los Angeles, using [[L1011]]s with stops in Anchorage for refueling. They also at one time served [[Ketchikan]] Alaska.

*With Delta's acquisition of [[Pan American World Airways|Pan Am's]] Frankfurt hub, a number of new routes started to the city, including San Francisco, Orlando, Los Angeles, and Dallas-Fort Worth. The hub at Frankfurt would eventually be closed.

*Services between medium sized cities in the Southeastern United States to the Atlanta and Dallas-Fort Worth hubs have been superseded by nonstop Delta Connection service to the hub cities. Discontinued services have included Shreveport-Monroe and Birmingham-Jackson, Mississippi.

*Closure of the Dallas-Fort Worth hub, created after Braniff Airlines ceased operations in 1982, in 2005.

*Closure of gateway facilities in Portland, Oregon (PDX) including a cargo facility, which served Delta destinations in Asia.

*Expansion of [[Western Airlines|Western Airlines']] Los Angeles hub service after acquisition of that airline, including the starting of a Tokyo-Los Angeles route using the then-new MD-11 aircraft. After 2000 flights were significantly reduced including elimination of Tokyo-Los Angeles. In 2006/2007, Delta started adding new routes out of LAX through its connection carriers, signaling a build up of LAX again. Most of the routes added have since been eliminated in 2008. Delta went from a high of 48 destinations at LAX to just 34, ending the build up and confirming Delta's presence at LAX as a focus city.

*Delta acquired several routes to Honolulu (HNL) with the purchase of Western Airlines. These services from Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Salt Lake City operated initially on Western's DC-10 aircraft, and later on the L-1011 and 767-400 including a nonstop from Atlanta. In 2007 Delta eliminated the San Francisco-Honolulu route and withdrew some 767-400 service Los Angeles-Honolulu in favor of smaller aircraft.

===Future destinations===
*Delta is focusing flying more direct routes overseas and will also target the business traveler. In addition to [[Shanghai]] and [[London-Heathrow]], Delta will seek routes to [[Hong Kong]], [[Singapore]], [[Sydney]] and another frequency to [[Japan]].<ref>{{cite web
|title = Delta celebrates a milestone and Atlanta ties
|url = http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2007/04/30/daily3.html?page=3
|publisher = [[Atlanta Business Chronicle]]
|firstname = Rachel
|lastname = Ramos
|date=2007-05-01}}</ref>

* Delta will begin direct service from ATL to [[Santiago de los Caballeros|Santiago]], [[Dominican Republic]], starting in [[December 20]], [[2008]].<ref name="Delta to ATL.">{{cite web | url=http://airlineroute.blogspot.com/2008/03/delta-to-add-new-dominican-republic.html | title = Delta Air Lines begins service to Atlanta in December 20| author = Airline route news| publisher =Airline Route News in Dominican Republic| date = [[March 25]] [[2008]] | accessdate = 2008-03-25}}</ref>

* Delta has begun inquiries with Boeing to find ways of increasing the range of the Boeing 777-200LR. The added range would allow Delta to pursue a non-stop flight from either Atlanta or JFK to [[Sydney, Australia]].<ref>[http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/03/17/222225/delta-pushes-boeing-to-squeeze-more-range-from-777-200lr.html FlightGlobal.com Delta pushes Boeing to squeeze more range from 777-200LR]</ref>

* Delta is reportedly expressing interest in restarting non-stop service to [[Warsaw]], [[Poland]]. Service would most likely be from [[John F. Kennedy International Airport|New York-JFK]].<ref>[http://www.polskieradio.pl/thenews/lifestyle/?id=79116 Polskie Radio - Two US giants Delta and Continental airlines plan to enter the Polish market]</ref>

* Delta will begin four weekly flights from ATL to [[Kuwait City]], [[Kuwait]], on [[November 7]] ,2008.<ref>[http://biz.yahoo.com/pz/080519/142995.html Delta Solidifies Position as Leading Carrier to the Middle East With New Nonstop Service Between Atlanta and Kuwait, Increased Service to Dubai]</ref>

* Delta announced flights from New York-JFK to Dakar and then on to [[Jomo Kenyatta International Airport]], which services Nairobi, Kenya. Due to political unrest, Delta now plans to inaugurate service in 2009. <ref>http://www.nationmedia.com/eastafrican/current/Business/biz160620085.htm</ref>

* Delta has received DOT approval to fly non-stop from ATL to Brazilian cities [[Recife]], [[Manaus]] and [[Fortaleza]]. Flights would begin in December 2008 using the new Boeing 737-700 (Manaus) and [[ETOPS]]-certified Boeing 757-200s (Recife/Fortaleza).

* Delta has announced new service from Atlanta to [[Tegucigalpa]], [[Honduras]], scheduled to begin [[December 18]] ,2008. The route will be served by the brand new [[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-700]] aircraft. <ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11116 Delta press release regarding Tegucigalpa] </ref>

* Delta has announced new service from New York-JFK to [[Bonaire]], operating Saturdays-only beginning [[December 20]] ,2008. <ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11119 Press release for JFK-Bonaire] </ref>

* Delta has announced new service from Atlanta to [[Mumbai]] beginning [[November 1]] ,2008. The route will be flown using the new Boeing 777-200LR. At the same time, JFK-Mumbai will be discontinued. <ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11134 Delta Adds First-Ever Nonstop Service between Atlanta and Mumbai] </ref>

* Delta has announced new service from Nashville to [[Cancún]] beginning [[December 20]] ,2008. <ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11139 Delta Announces New Nonstop Service between Nashville and Cancun] </ref>

* Delta has announced new service from New York-JFK to [[Bogota]], [[Colombia]], beginning [[December 18]] ,2008

* Delta has announced new service from New York-JFK to [[Buenos Aires]], [[Argentina]], beginning [[December 18]] ,2008

* Delta will restart service from New York-JFK to [[Punta Cana]], Santiago and [[Santo Domingo]], [[Dominican Republic]] beginning December 2008

* Delta has applied for a three times weekly service from Los Angeles to [[Sao Paulo, Brazil]], beginning December 14, 2008.

* Delta will resume their flights from Los Angeles to [[Guatemala City]], beginning December 6, 2008.

== Fleet ==
Delta Air Lines has an all-[[Boeing Commercial Airplanes|Boeing]] (including [[McDonnell Douglas]] aircraft) fleet. Delta was one of the last major airlines to operate the original [[Boeing 737#737-200|Boeing 737-200]] models, until the last of these aircraft retired in 2006. Delta has the largest fleets of [[Boeing 757]] and [[Boeing 767]] aircraft of any airline. It is the second largest operator of the [[McDonnell Douglas MD-80]] (behind [[American Airlines]]).

The Delta Air Lines fleet consists of the following aircraft and orders:
<center>
{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse"
|+ '''Delta Air Lines Fleet'''
|- bgcolor=lightblue
!Aircraft
!Total
!Passengers <br> <small>(First*/Economy)</small>
!Routes
![[In-flight entertainment|IFE]]
!Notes
|-
|[[Boeing 737#737-700|Boeing 737-700]]
|4 <br> (6 orders)
|124 (12/112)
|''Domestic/international medium haul''<br> US, Caribbean, Latin America and Mexico
|[[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic eFX]] AVOD <br> Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|All equipped with winglets
|-
|[[Boeing 737#737-800|Boeing 737-800]]
|71 <br> (34 orders)
|160 (16/144)
|''Domestic short-long haul'' <br> US, Mexico and Caribbean
|Overhead LCDs or <br/> [[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD <br> Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|28 aircraft equipped with winglets <br> Capacity increased by 10 seats
|-
|[[Boeing 757#757-200|Boeing 757-200]]
|134
| <small>'''Standard'''</small> <br> 183 (24/159) <br> <font color="lightgrey"> ————————</font color="lightgrey"> <br> <small>'''Transcontinental'''</small> <br> 184 (26/158) <br> <font color="lightgrey"> ————————</font color="lightgrey"> <br> <small>'''ETOPS/international'''</small> <br> 174 (16/158)
|''Domestic/international medium-long haul'' <br> US transcontinental <br> Caribbean, Latin America, Puerto Rico, <br> Transatlantic (ETOPS aircraft)
|Overhead CRTs <br/> <small>(Standard)</small> <br/> [[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD <br/> <small>(Transcontinental and ETOPS) </small></br> Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|17 leased [[ETOPS]] aircraft <br> formerly flown by [[TWA]]/[[American Airlines|AA]] <br> ETOPS aircraft feature winglets and BusinessElite <br> Largest operator of the Boeing 757
|-
|[[Boeing 767#767-300|Boeing 767-300]]
|21
| 262 (24/238)
|''Domestic medium-long haul'' <br> US transcontinental <br> Hawaii, Latin America, and Puerto Rico
|[[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD <br> Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|Capacity increased by 12 seats <br> 4 aircraft converted to [[ETOPS]] standards <br> Largest operator of the Boeing 767-300
|-
|[[Boeing 767#767-300|Boeing 767-300ER]]
|59
|<small>'''Standard'''</small> <br> 217 (36/181) <br> <font color="lightgrey"> ————————</font color="lightgrey"> <br> <small>'''Ex-[[Gulf Air]]'''</small> <br>216 (30/186)
|''Domestic/international medium-long haul'' <br> Transatlantic and South America
|[[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD <br/> <small> (BusinessElite) </small> <br/> Overhead LCDs <br/> <small> (Economy) </small>
|30 aircraft to be equipped with winglets (2009)<br> Largest operator of the Boeing 767-300
|-
|[[Boeing 767#767-400ER|Boeing 767-400ER]]
|21
| <small>'''Domestic'''</small> <br> 285 (36/249) <br> <font color="lightgrey"> ————————</font color="lightgrey"> <br> <small>'''International'''</small> <br> 246 (42/204)
|''Domestic/international medium-long haul'' <br> US transcontinental <br> Transatlantic and Hawaii
|[[Rockwell Collins]] PTVs <br/> <small> (First Class, domestic) </small> <br/> Overhead LCDs <br/> <small>(Economy, domestic)</small> <br/> [[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD <br/> <small>(all classes, international)</small>
|All to be converted to international <br> configuration by 2009 <br>Flat-bed BusinessElite seats to <br> be installed beginning Spring 2009 <br>Largest and one of only two operators of the Boeing 767-400ER
|-
|[[Boeing 777#777-200ER|Boeing 777-200ER]]
|8
|268 (50/218)
|''International long haul'' <br> Transpacific/ transatlantic/ transarctic
|[[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eFX AVOD
|Flat-bed BusinessElite seats to <br> be installed
|-
|[[Boeing 777#777-200LR|Boeing 777-200LR]]
|2 <br> (8 orders)
|<small>'''Ships 7101 & 7102'''</small> <br> 276 (43/233) <br> <font color="lightgrey"> ————————</font color="lightgrey"> <br> <small>'''7103 & Subsequent'''</small> <br>278 (45/233)
|''International ultra-long haul'' <br> Serving ATL-BOM
|[[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] eX2 AVOD
|Features flat-bed BusinessElite seats <br> US launch customer <br> BusinessElite capacity expanding to 45 on ship 7103 and <br/> subsequent; retrofits for ships 7101 and 7102 planned
|-
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-80|McDonnell Douglas MD-88]]
|117
|142 (14/128)
|''Domestic short-medium haul'' <br> US and Delta Shuttle
|Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|
|-
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-90]]
|16
|150 (12/138)
|''Domestic short-medium haul'' <br> US (all based in [[Salt Lake City International Airport|Salt Lake City]])
|Overhead LCDs <br> Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
|
|-
|}
<sup>*First class is offered on domestic flights. BusinessElite is offered on transatlantic and transpacific Flights.</sup><br>
<sup>**Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell will be fully installed on all domestic aircraft by Summer 2009. Wi-Fi will only be available on flights within the 48 contingious United States.</sup>
</center>

Delta's average fleet age is 14.0 years as of April 2008. Boeing reports 96 737-800s have been delivered. <ref>[http://active.boeing.com/commercial/orders/index.cfm?content=displaystandardreport.cfm&pageid=m25065&RequestTimeout=20000], [[Federal Aviation Administration]]</ref> Delta plans to sell all but 2 of its ordered 737-800's immediately upon delivery.<ref>[http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=71481&p=irol-SECText&TEXT=aHR0cDovL2NjYm4uMTBrd2l6YXJkLmNvbS94bWwvZmlsaW5nLnhtbD9yZXBvPXRlbmsmaXBhZ2U9NTQ3NDI3MSZkb2M9MSZudW09MTk%3d], 2007 Form 10-K</ref>

Delta Air Lines was one of three carriers ([[American Airlines]] and [[Continental Airlines]] being the other two) to sign an exclusivity agreement with Boeing in the late 1990s. When Boeing acquired [[McDonnell Douglas]], the [[European Union]] forced Boeing to void the contracts. However, both parties have been adhering to the terms under a [[gentlemen's agreement]]; thus Delta operates no Airbus equipment.

Delta will likely become the North American launch customer for the [[Boeing 787]] should the Northwest merger be finalized. Delta has made bids to become Boeing's provider for 787 maintenance through Boeing's GoldCare support program.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2006/10/17/209958/delta-united-bid-for-787-goldcare-deal.html | title=Delta, United bid for 787 GoldCare deal | accessdate=2006-10-17}}</ref>

===Retired fleet===
<center>
{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse"
|+ '''Delta Air Lines Retired Fleet'''
|- bgcolor=lightblue
!Aircraft
!Year Retired
!Replacement
![[In-flight entertainment|IFE]]
!Routes
|-
|[[Convair CV-880]]
|1973
|[[Douglas DC-8|DC-8-51]]
|None
|Short-medium haul domestic routes
|-
|[[Boeing 747|Boeing 747-100]]
|1976
|[[Lockheed L-1011]]
|Overhead projectors
|Medium-long haul international routes
|-
|[[McDonnell Douglas DC-10|McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10]]
|1977/1989*
|[[Lockheed L-1011]]
|Overhead projectors
|Medium-long haul international routes
|-
|[[Douglas DC-8|Douglas DC-8-71]]
|1991
|[[Boeing 757|Boeing 757-200]]
|None
|Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
|-
|[[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30]]
|1992
|[[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|Boeing 737-200]]
|None
|Short haul domestic routes
|-
|[[Airbus A310|Airbus A310-200/300]]<ref>"[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CEFDB1431F933A25750C0A964958260 COMPANY NEWS; Pratt Engines Are Selected For Delta's Big Airbus Order]." ''[[The New York Times]]''.</ref><ref>"[http://www.airbus.com/en/corporate/orders_and_deliveries/ Orders & Deliveries]." ''[[Airbus]]''.</ref>
|1994/1996**
|[[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-300ER]]
|Overhead projectors
|Medium-long haul international routes
|-
|[[Lockheed L-1011]]
|2001
|[[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-400ER]]
|Overhead projectors
|Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
|-
|[[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-200]]
|2003
|[[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-800]] <br> [[Boeing 757|Boeing 757-200]]
|None
|Short-medium haul domestic routes
|-
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-11]]
|2004
|[[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200ER]] (on Asian routes) <br> [[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-400ER]] (on European routes)
|[[Rockwell Collins]] PTVs <br/> <small>(BusinessElite)</small> <br/> Overhead CRTs <br/> <small>(Economy)</small>
|Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
|-
|[[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-200]]
|2006
|[[Boeing 757|Boeing 757-200]] <br> [[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-300]]
|Overhead projectors
|Medium-long haul domestic routes
|-
|[[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-200]]
|2006
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-80|McDonnell Douglas MD-88]]
|None
|Short-medium haul domestic routes
|-
|[[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-300]]
|2006
|[[Boeing 737|Boeing 737-800]]
|None
|Short-medium haul domestic routes
|}
{{Expand list|date=August 2008}}
</center>
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Delta operated the DC-10 twice, once on lease from United before the L-1011s could be delivered, and again when Delta acquired [[Western Airlines]] in 1987.

<nowiki>**</nowiki>Delta experimented with Airbus A310 aircraft for two to three years after acquiring the planes from [[Pan American World Airways|Pan Am]]. Initially Delta was impressed enough with the aircraft to order more of the same model, but these too were eventually withdrawn from service by the mid 1990s.

Delta Air Lines and [[Alaska Airlines]] are the only surviving U.S. airlines that operated the [[Convair 880]], still the fastest family of subsonic passenger aircraft ever, and only behind supersonic carriers such as the [[Concorde]] and the [[Tu-144]] in speed.

Delta sold several DC-9-30s to [[ValuJet Airlines|ValuJet]], forming ValuJet's initial fleet. ValuJet would eventually become Delta's main Atlanta-based rival, [[AirTran Airways]].

===Fleet prior to the jet era===
Up until the late 1960s, Delta Air Lines operated a fleet of propeller operated aircraft, including among others, the [[Convair 340]], [[Convair 440]], Curtiss [[C-46 Commando]], [[Douglas DC-3]], [[Douglas DC-4]], [[Douglas DC-6]], [[Douglas DC-7]], [[Fairchild Hiller FH-227]], [[Lockheed Constellation]], and [[Lockheed L-100 Hercules]]. The Curtiss [[C-46 Commando]] and [[Lockheed L-100 Hercules]] aircraft were operated as cargo aircraft.

== Cabin ==
[[Image:N3744F cabin1.jpg|thumb|right|The interior of a Delta Air Lines [[Boeing 737-800]] with in-flight entertainment and slimline seats.]]
On [[May 1]], [[2006]], the carrier adopted new uniforms from designer Richard Tyler.

Delta started the industry's first comprehensive in-flight recycling program on [[July 1]], [[2007]]. The initial program involved all domestic in-bound flights to its [[Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport|Atlanta hub]], and has since expanded to domestic in-bound flights arriving at New York ([[John F. Kennedy International Airport|JFK]]), Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky ([[Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport|CVG]]), Salt Lake City ([[Salt Lake City International Airport|SLC]]), Portland ([[PDX]]) and Seattle ([[Seattle-Tacoma International Airport|SEA]]) (Federal regulations require the incineration of international waste).{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

=== Wi-Fi ===
On August 5, 2008, Delta announced it will be installing the [[Aircell]] mobile broadband network, [[Gogo Inflight Internet|Gogo]]. This system will allow customers traveling with Wi-Fi enabled devices, such as laptops, smartphones and PDAs, to access the Internet, corporate VPNs, corporate and personal e-mail accounts, as well as SMS texting and instant messaging services.

[[Gogo Inflight Internet|Gogo]] will be available for $9.95 on flights of three hours or less, and $12.95 on flights of more than three hours.

[[Gogo Inflight Internet|Gogo]] will be offered initially on Delta's fleet of 133 MD88/90 aircraft and will expand to the remaining domestic fleet of Boeing 737, 757 and 767-300 aircraft throughout the first half of 2009. It is expected that more than 330 aircraft will have internet access by Summer 2009.<ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11127 Delta Air Lines To Offer In-Flight Wi-Fi On All Domestic Flights] (Official Press Release: August 5, 2008)</ref>

===In-flight entertainment===

In the beginning of the jet age when aircraft such as the deHavilland Comet IV and Boeing 707 were introduced, in-flight entertainment other than lounges and magazines was non-existent. Later in the 1960s, audio programming was introduced where passenger wore headphones consisting of hollow tubes piping in music. These were installed in some Delta aircraft. Some early wide-bodied aircraft, including the L-1011 fleet, had films projected on to the cabin bulkhead. The film projection system on the L-1011s were replaced by [[Cathode ray tube|CRT]]-based projectors in the early 1990s. Also during the same time period, CRT monitors over the aisles were added to the 757 fleet. The MD-90 introduced Delta's first IFE system with [[liquid crystal display|LCD]] monitors in 1995, and the 777 introduced Delta's first in-seat video system in 1999, initially using the [[Rockwell Collins]] [[Total Entertainment System]]. Delta's first all-digital IFE system with AVOD ([[Panasonic Avionics Corporation|Panasonic]] [[Panasonic eFX|eFX]]) was first introduced in 2003 on Delta's former low-cost subsidiary, [[Song (airline)|Song]]. The Rockwell Collins IFE system on the 777s was replaced by the Panasonic eFX system in 2007. The Panasonic eFX system is trademarked by Delta as Delta on Demand.

Audio and video are available on all aircraft except for the MD-88s and [[Delta Connection]] aircraft. BusinessElite on all aircraft except the 777-200LR uses the all-digital Panasonic eFX AVOD system. 48 Boeing 757s (Transcontinental 752), also using the Panasonic eFX system, feature live television via [[Dish Network]] in both first class and economy, while the remainder of the 757 fleet features ceiling-mounted CRT displays over the aisles. The Panasonic eFX with live satellite television has been installed on several aircraft in addition to the 48 757s already featuring the system, including 28 of the 737-800s, and all 21 domestic 767-300s. It is also featured on Delta's 737-700s, which entered service in August 2008. Delta's new 777-200LR aircraft feature the Panasonic eX2 system, which has a greater storage capacity over the eFX.<ref>{{cite press release | url=http://www.shephard.co.uk/Inflight/default.aspx?Action=-1000945703&ID=32c250df-e45e-42d1-9747-bac853a0dd69 | title=US majors get with the cabin-upgrade programme| accessdate=2006-12-16 | publisher=Shepard Group | date=[[2006-12-16]]}}</ref> The personal video screens on the 777-200LRs are also larger than those on Delta's other aircraft.

In economy class, Panasonic eFX system (without the satellite TV product) is also found on the 777-200ER and international 767-400ER fleet. The domestic 767-400ER fleet features the Rockwell Collins TES system, but only features in-seat video (non-AVOD) in the first class section of the aircraft; the economy class section only features LCDs over the aisles. As the 767-400ER fleet is gradually converted to international duties, the Rockwell Collins TES system will be phased out in favor of the Panasonic eFX system with in-seat video and AVOD in both economy class and BusinessElite.

Delta's 767-300 fleet (both domestic and international) originally featured CRT projectors in economy class, with the international 767-300ERs also featuring ceiling-mounted CRT displays over the aisles. The projectors and CRTs international 767-300ER fleet are in the process of being replaced by LCD displays, while the domestic 767-300 fleet has entirely been upgraded to the Panasonic eFX system with AVOD and live satellite television. The 737-800 (except those with winglets) and MD-90 fleet feature drop-down LCD displays below the overhead bins, while the wingleted 737-800 fleet has been upgraded to the Panasonic eFX AVOD/live satellite TV system.

When Delta's ex-[[Trans World Airlines|TWA]] [[ETOPS]] 757s were first delivered, they featured a system made by [[Sony Transcom]] (a former subsidiary of [[Sony]] now sold to [[Rockwell Collins]]) system that was factory installed for TWA. The system features overhead drop-down [[LCD]] monitors similar to Delta's non-wingleted 737-800s and MD-90s. Delta replaced the Sony Transcom system with the Panasonic eFX system featuring in-seat video and AVOD at the same time as the new BusinessElite seats and slimline economy class seats were installed.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.delta.com/2007/08/31/enhancing-the-entertainment-experience/#comment-122|title=Enhancing the Entertainment Experience author= Chris Babb|date=[[2007-09-02]]}}</ref>

===BusinessElite===

BusinessElite is Delta's international [[business class]], available on the Boeing 767-300ER, 777-200ER, 777-200LR, and select (eventually all) 767-400ER aircraft. It is also being introduced on the ex-AA/TWA ETOPS 757-200 aircraft. All BusinessElite seats (made by [[B/E Aerospace]]) on Delta's 767-300ER, 767-400ER, and 777-200ER have 60 inches of pitch, 160 degrees of recline, and either 18.5 (767) or 21 (777-200ER) inches of width. Passengers in the BusinessElite cabin receive free meals, refreshments, alcohol and an amenity kit. All seats are equipped with a personal, on demand In-Flight-Entertainment (IFE) system, universal power-ports, a moveable reading light, and a folding work table. On the ex-TWA/AA ETOPS 757s, a similar model of BusinessElite seat was introduced in 2008. These seats are made by [[Recaro]] and feature a built-in [[massage]] feature, 55 inches of pitch and are 20 inches wide.

[http://www.lindauer-fly.ch/fotogallerie_gross/Cockpit%20und%20Kabine/Delta%20Airlines/Boeing%20767-300/CK%20Delta%20Airlines%20Image.jpg]

On [[March 27]], [[2007]], Delta announced that it will convert its entire 767-400ER fleet to an international configuration, featuring a BusinessElite cabin. During the summer of 2007, 8 out of the 21 767-400ER aircraft were convereted and an additional 6 767-400ER aircraft were converted between December 2007 and May 2008.

Delta introduced full-flat sleeper suites made by [[Contour Premium]] in its [[777-200LR]] fleet upon delivery and will retrofit its 777-200ER fleet with the Contour full-flat product by 2010.<ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10528 Delta Newsroom<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On [[February 5]], [[2008]], Delta has also announced that they will be installing a sleeper suite product on the [[Boeing 767|767-400ER]] aircraft.<ref>[http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=10962 Delta Newsroom<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Designed by [[Thompson Solutions]] and manufactured by Contour Premium, these sleeper suites use a space-saving design, with the bottom ends of the seats extending under the armrests of the suites in front when in the full horizontal flat bed position. This allows for minimal reduction in capacity compared to most other sleeper suite products, particularly with the 767's narrower fuselage. The suites will be arranged in a 1-2-1 layout, with a total capacity of 40 BusinessElite suites (down from 42). Delta has stated that eventually all international 767 aircraft will feature some form of full-flat seat.

===Domestic First Class===
First Class is offered on domestic flights. It is available on Boeing 737-800, 757-200, MD-88, MD-90, and domestic 767-300 and 767-400 aircraft. Seats range from 18.5-20.75 inches wide, and have between 37-40 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals, drinks, and alcohol. All domestically-configured 767-400, wingleted 737-800s, and (Transcon) 757-200 aircraft have power-ports at each seat. Delta intends on replacing First Class with BusinessElite on all 767-400 aircraft.

When the ex-[[American Airlines|AA]]/[[TWA]] [[ETOPS]] 757s were first delivered, they initially featured 22 domestic First Class seats that were originally installed by TWA. On international routes, the aircraft were sold entirely as Economy class. All of the ETOPS 757s now feature the new [[Recaro]] BusinessElite seats.

===International Economy Class===
Economy Class is available on all international flights. Seats range from 17 to 18 inches wide, and have between 31 and 33 inches of pitch. A few of the newest 767-300ER and all 767-400ER, 777-200ER, and 777-200LR aircraft feature economy class seats with moveable headrests. The economy class seats on the 777-200ERs also feature mechanically adjustable [[lumbar support]]. The economy seats on the 777-200LRs are the new [[Weber Aircraft LP|Weber]] 5751 model slimline seats. These seats are better contoured than the seats on the 777-200ERs and 767-400ERs, allowing for greater passenger comfort, however, they do not feature adjustable lumbar support. The ex-TWA ETOPS 757s feature new Weber slimline seats, except without moveable headrests. Economy Class passengers receive free meals with one alcoholic beverage, refreshments, as well as a mid-flight snack. Additional alcohol may be purchased for $7.

Starting in 2010, Delta will be installing new staggered '''Cozy Suite''' seats from [[Thompson Solutions]] on their international 767 and 777 fleet.<ref>http://gizmodo.com/382292/delta-cozy-suite-seats-make-economy-class-semi+tolerable Delta "Cozy Suite" Seats Make Economy Class Semi-Tolerable</ref> These seats are arranged diagonally and feature padded sides for a comfortable resting position. These seats also feature a unique recline mechanism where the seat bottom moves down and forward instead of the seat back tilting backwards, thus resulting in more room for passengers behind when the seat is reclined. Due to their diagonal layout, these seats will also allow Delta to increase capacity on their widebody aircraft without significantly reducing seat width. The seats will be in a diagonal 2-4-2 layout on the 767s, and a diagonal 3-4-3 layout on the 777s.

===Domestic Economy Class===
Economy Class is available on all domestic flights. Seats range from 17 to 17.5 inches wide, and have between 30 and 33 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free drinks and snacks. Food is available for purchase on all flights 1500 miles or more (flights to [[Hawaii]] and [[Alaska]] continue to receive complimentary meal service<ref>"[http://www.delta.com/traveling_checkin/inflight_services/food/index.jsp Food]." ''Delta Air Lines''. Accessed October 11, 2008.</ref>). Alcohol may also be purchased for $7.00. Domestically-configured 767-400 aircraft feature in-seat [[EmPower]]. The domestic 767-400 fleet also features seats with moveable headrests, making them the only domestic aircraft in Delta's fleet to feature this amenity. The 737-800 and domestic 767-300 fleet have recently been refitted with new Weber slimline seats allowing for greater capacity while maintaining sufficient legroom. Unlike the slimline seats on the 777-200LRs, the new seats on the 737-700s, 800s, and domestic 767-300s do not feature moveable headrests.

Delta operates Delta EATS, a [[buy on board]] food program for economy class North America flights.<ref>"[http://www.delta.com/traveling_checkin/inflight_services/food/index.jsp Food]." ''Delta Air Lines''. Accessed October 11, 2008.</ref> Delta operated a previous buy on board starting in 2003 and ending by 2005.<ref>Alexander, Keith L. "[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/03/27/TRG1CBUD291.DTL Passengers find buy-on-board food hard to digest - Airlines are starting to feed fliers again]." ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]''. Sunday March 27, 2005.</ref><ref>"[http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/07/04/earlyshow/living/travel/main561770.shtml Buy On-Board Meals?]." ''[[The Early Show]]''/''[[CBS News]]''. July 7, 2003.</ref>

==SkyMiles==
[[Image:DeltaSkyMilesLogo.png|right]]
SkyMiles is Delta's frequent flyer program. Created in 1981<ref>[http://www.insideflyer.com/articles/o2_sidebar.php?key=4 InsideFlyer.com: The First Frequent Flyer Programs<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> as the "Frequent Flyer Program"; its name was changed to SkyMiles in 1995. When the frequent flyer program was first established in 1981, new members were awarded an enrollment bonus of 10,000 miles. In 2006, SkyMiles was picked as the "best frequent flyer program" in the Best in Business Travel Awards.

In addition to its [[Delta Connection]], [[Delta Shuttle]] and SkyTeam alliance partnerships, Delta offers frequent flyer partnerships with the following airlines:

{|
|- valign="top"|
|
* [[Alaska Airlines]]
* [[Avianca]]
* [[China Airlines]]
* [[Hawaiian Airlines]]<ref>{{cite press release | url=http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=11009 | title=Delta and Hawaiian Airlines Team Up On Frequent Flyer Benefits | publisher=Delta Air Lines | date=[[2008-03-17]] | accessdate=2008-03-17}}</ref>
* [[Singapore Airlines]]
* [[U.S. Helicopter]]
|}

On [[May 1]], [[1995]], Delta Air Lines modified its frequent flyer program, previously called "Delta Air Lines Frequent Flyer Program" and renamed it "SkyMiles". Miles from the old program would never expire but newly earned miles in the SkyMiles program would if there was no account activity for three years. However, effective [[January 1]], [[2007]], the rules for SkyMile accounts changed, with miles expiring after two years of no activity. At the same time, the old Frequent Flyer program miles were combined into SkyMiles, effectively negating their unlimited shelf-life.

On [[2008-07-31]], Delta adjusted the cost of award tickets by implementing a three-tier system that will cost last-minute fliers 60,000 miles for a domestic coach ticket.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/31/business/31delta.html Delta Redoes Mileage Plan for Its Fliers (NY Times)]</ref>

==Crown Room Club==
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Delta Crown Room Club logo.png|right|150px]] -->
Delta's airport lounge is the Crown Room Club. [[Crown Room Club Locations|Delta Crown Room Clubs are located in 27 airports]]. Membership can be obtained via an annual pass (purchased using money or SkyMiles) or purchasing a single-visit pass.

Membership benefits vary by location, but generally include free drinks (including alcoholic beverages) and reading material. Wi-Fi is not complimentary. It is mostly provided by T-Mobile. Other benefits for Crown Room Club members include reciprocal lounge access with other [[SkyTeam]] members and Delta's other partners. Some select Crown Room Clubs feature putting greens as a result of Delta Air Lines being the official airline of the PGA Tour.

== Codeshare agreements ==
Delta Air Lines has [[codeshare]] agreements with the following airlines as of August 2008:<ref>[http://www.delta.com/planning_reservations/plan_flight/flight_partners/codeshare_partners/index.jsp Delta Air Lines Codeshare Agreements]</ref>
<br>(''This list does not include [[SkyTeam]] airlines'')
* [[Alaska Airlines]]
* [[American Eagle]]
* [[Avianca]]
* [[China Airlines]]
* [[Royal Air Maroc]]

==Advertising==
Delta has had several different slogans throughout its history:
* In 1940, Delta adopted the [[slogan]]: "Airline of the South".
* In 1961, Delta adopted the slogan: "The Air Line with the Big Jets".
* In 1966, with the introduction of the first Series 61 [[DC-8]], Delta adopted the slogan "Fly big to Florida... Fly Delta!". [[Bob Hope]], known in ads as Bob "Super DC-8" Hope, was Delta's spokesperson at the time.
* In 1968, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is ready when you are".
* In 1972, Delta adopted the slogan: "Fly the best with Delta".
* In 1976, Delta adopted the slogan: "Celebrate the Bicentennial with Delta".
* In 1980, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is the Best".
* In the interim period between 1984 and 1986 Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta gets you there with care".
* In 1986, Delta became: "The Official Airline of [[Walt Disney World]]".
* In 1987, Delta adopted the slogan: "The Best Get Better", reflective of the airline's merger with [[Western Airlines]].
* In 1987, Delta adopted the slogan: "We Love To Fly, And It Shows".
* In 1989, Delta became: "The Official Airline of [[Disneyland]] and [[Walt Disney World]]".
* In 1991, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is your choice for flying."
* In 1994, Delta adopted the slogan: "You'll love the way we fly".
* In 1996, Delta adopted the slogan: "On top of the world". This slogan was launched at the [[1996 Summer Olympics]] in [[Atlanta]], for which Delta was the official airline.
* In 2000, Delta adopted the slogan: "Fly___", in which the blank was filled in according to the context of the slogan's usage. For example, on the airline's cocktail napkins, the slogan was "Fly 'refreshed'". For luggage tags, the slogan read "Fly 'for business'" or "Fly 'me home'".
* Immediately after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Delta adopted the slogan, "Delta remembers America".
* In 2004, Delta adopted a marketing scheme using "Secret Places - ___", in which the blank was filled in according to the picture being used in the advertisement (and coinciding with a major Delta destination). Several examples of this marketing remain in place on jetways and in gate waiting areas in Atlanta and New York-JFK.
* In 2005, Delta adopted the slogan: "Good Goes Around"<ref>[http://www.delta.com/about_delta/partnering_with_delta/affiliate_marketing/terms_conditions/index.jsp Delta Slogan "Good Goes Around"]</ref>
* In 2007, Delta Air Lines exited bankruptcy; to highlight surrounding changes, the airline chose "Change Is:__________" (in which the blank was filled according to the context of the slogan's usage) as its slogan. Other advertisements used the tagline "Change Is: Delta" in a play on the use of the Greek letter [[delta (letter)|delta]] to denote the [[difference operator]] in mathematics.
* In 2008, as part of the rebranding project and not a traditional advertising campaign, a new [[safety video]] featuring a flight attendant premiered on YouTube in early 2008 garnering over 1 million views and the attention of news outlets, specifically for the video's camp and cheek tones mixed with the serious safety message. The flight attendant, Katherine Lee, has been dubbed "Deltalina" by the media for her similar appearance to movie star [[Angelina Jolie]]. <ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgpzUo_kbFY Delta's New In-flight Safety Video]</ref> <ref>[http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2008/03/26/intv.youtube.lee.babb.cnn?iref=mpvideosview Delta's YouTube Star]</ref> <ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,340624,00.html Delta's Red-Headed Flight Attendant a Hit on YouTube in Airline's Safety Video]</ref> <ref>[http://www.ajc.com/services/content/business/delta/stories/2008/03/25/deltalina_0325.html 'Deltalina,' a real Delta employee, is loving the safety spotlight]</ref>

[[Karl Jenkins]]' [[Adiemus]] project began in 1994 as a music project for Delta Air Lines' European advertising campaign. The song was later released on the albums [[Pure Moods]] and [[Adiemus: Songs of Sanctuary]], and was also used in Delta's commercials in the United States from 1996 until 1999. {{Fact|date=September 2007}}

Delta awards the annual [[Delta Prize for Global Understanding]] in conjunction with the [[University of Georgia]].<ref>[http://www.uga.edu/news/deltaprize/ The Delta Prize for Global Understanding]</ref>

==Incidents and accidents==
The following are major incidents and accidents that occurred on Delta Air Lines mainline aircraft. For Delta Connection incidents, see [[Delta Connection#Incidents and accidents|Delta Connection incidents and accidents]].
<center>
{| class="toccolours" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse"
|+ '''Delta Air Lines Reported Incidents'''
|- bgcolor=lightblue
!rowspan="2"|Flight
!rowspan="2"|Date
!rowspan="2"|Aircraft
!rowspan="2"|Location
!rowspan="2"|Description
!colspan="5"|Casualties
|-
|-bgcolor=ivory
!Fatal
!Serious
!Minor
!Uninjured
!Ground
|-
|N/A [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19470422-0&lang=en]
|[[April 22]], [[1947]]
|[[Douglas DC-3|DC-3]]
|[[Columbus, GA|Columbus, Georgia]]
|A [[Vultee BT-13]], owned by the [[Tuskegee University|Tuskegee Aviation Institute]] landed on top of the DC-3, which was flying from [[Macon, Georgia|Macon]] to [[Columbus, Georgia|Columbus]].
|8
|
|
|
|1
|-
|705 <br> [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19480310-1&lang=en]
|[[March 10]], [[1948]]
|[[Douglas DC-4|DC-4]]
|[[Chicago Midway International Airport|Chicago Midway Airport]]
|Crashed near [[Chicago Midway International Airport|Chicago Municipal (Midway) Airport]] shortly after takeoff while en route to [[Miami, Florida|Miami]]. Officials determined that longitudinal control of the airplane was lost resulting in the crash. The cause for the loss of control remains undetermined.
|12
|1
|
|
|
|-
|318 <br> [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19530517-0&lang=en]
|[[May 17]], [[1953]]
|[[Douglas DC-3|DC-3]]
|[[Marshall, TX|Marshall, Texas]]
|Crashed 13 miles east of [[Marshall, TX|Marshall, Texas]]. The flight which originated from [[Dallas Love Field]] was on approach to [[Shreveport Regional Airport|Shreveport, Louisiana]]. The crash is was attributed to adverse weather conditions with a thunderstorm in the area at the time of the crash.
|19
|1
|
|
|1
|-
|1903
|[[May 23]], [[1960]]
|[[Convair 880]]
|[[Atlanta, GA|Atlanta]]
|Crashed during a training exercise in [[Atlanta, GA|Atlanta]]. The aircraft stalled and crashed killing all four crew members.
|4
|
|
|
|
|-
|9877 [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19670330-0&lang=en]
|[[March 30]], [[1967]]
|[[Douglas DC-8|DC-8]]
|[[New Orleans]]
|Crashed during a training exercise near [[Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport|New Orleans International Airport]]. The improper use of flight and power controls by both instructor and the Captain-trainee during a simulated two-engine out landing approach, resulted in the loss of control. The aircraft crashed into a residential area, destroying several homes and a motel complex, killing 13 civilians.
|6
|
|
|
|13
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 9570|9570]] <br> [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19720530-0&lang=en]
|[[May 30]], [[1972]]
|[[DC-9]]
|[[Greater Southwest International Airport]]
|Crashed during landing procedures in Fort Worth, TX. The probable cause of the accident was wake turbulence resulting from a [[touch-and-go landing]] moments before of [[American Airlines]] Flight 1114, operated using a [[DC-10]]. The right wing hit the ground causing a fire resulting in the aircraft being written off.
|4
|
|
|
|
|-
|954 [http://ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=66757&key=0]
|[[December 20]], [[1972]]
|[[Convair 880]]
|[[O'Hare International Airport|Chicago O'Hare Int'l Airport]]
|The Delta CV-880 taxied across runway 27L in bad weather. At the same time, a [[North Central Airlines]] [[Douglas DC-9|DC-9]] took off from the same runway. Both aircraft collided.
|
|
|
|94
|10
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 723|723]]
|[[July 31]], [[1973]]
|[[DC-9]]
|[[Boston Logan International Airport]]
|Crashed in seawall. Contributing to the accident was a defective flight deck instrument giving the crew misleading guidance during the instrument approach in visibility less than a half mile with 500 foot cloud ceilings. Initially 88 occupants died. One person, Leopold Chouinard [http://www.northeastern.edu/magazine/winter05/firstperson.shtml], died from burns months after the accident, leaving no survivors [http://www.airsafe.com/events/airlines/delta.htm].
|89
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 191|191]]
|[[August 2]], [[1985]]
|[[Lockheed L-1011]]
|[[Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport]]
|On a [[Fort Lauderdale]]-[[Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex|Dallas/Fort Worth]]-[[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] route, the plane crashed due to severe [[microburst]]-induced [[wind shear]]. One civilian was killed as the plane crossed a highway. The crash would later become the subject of a television movie. Numerous changes to pilot wind shear training, weather forecasting, and wind shear detection were made as a result of this crash and the subsequent investigation.<ref>When Weather Changed History - Delta 191; The Weather Channel</ref>
|134
|15
|12
|2
|1
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 810|810]]
|[[June 30]], [[1987]]
|[[Boeing 767]]
|[[Los Angeles International Airport]]
|Lost power immediately after takeoff when the captain, trying to remedy an engine alert indication, inadvertently cut the fuel flow to both engines<ref>Associated Press, [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE7DD123DF93AA3575BC0A961948260 Delta Pilot Loses License Over Plane's Power Loss], ''New York Times'', August 9, 1987.</ref>. Engine restart was accomplished at 500 ft AGL. The captain was suspended; after fighting revocation of his airline transport pilot certificate he died in 1992 in a crash at the Oshkosh Air Show<ref>[http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20001211X15342&key=1 NTSB Report CHI92FA223]</ref>.

|0
|0
|0
|197
|0
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 1141|1141]]
|[[August 31]], [[1988]]
|[[Boeing 727]]
|[[Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport]]
|Crashed after takeoff bound for [[Salt Lake City International Airport|Salt Lake City, Utah]]. Officials believe the crash was contributed by improper configuration of the flaps and leading edge slats.
|14
|26
|50
|18
|
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 1288|1288]] <br> [http://www.ntsb.gov/Publictn/1998/AAR9801.htm]
|[[July 6]], [[1996]]
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-88|MD-88]]
|[[Pensacola Regional Airport]]
|An uncontained engine failure of the port (left) engine on the aircraft which resulted in a fan hub piercing the cabin. The flight was scheduled to fly to [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport|Atlanta]]
|2
|2
|3
|135
|
|-
|[[Delta Air Lines Flight 1989|1989]] <br> [http://256.com/gray/thoughts/2001/20010912/delta_flight_1989_9_11/travel.shtml]
|[[September 11]], [[2001]]
|[[Boeing 767-300]]
|Enroute from [[Logan International Airport]]
|Flight 1989, bound for [[Los Angeles International Airport]] was caught in the path of [[United Airlines Flight 93]]. The two aircraft were so close that ATC were initially confused as to which plane had been hijacked. The Delta pilot managed to avoid [[United Airlines Flight 93|United 93]] and the flight was later diverted to [[Cleveland Hopkins International Airport]].<ref>http://www.gpoaccess.gov/911/pdf/fullreport.pdf The 9/11 Commission Report; Chapter 1.2 "Improvising a Homeland Defense"</ref>
|
|
|
|N/A
|
|}

</center>
===Hijackings===
''There have been over a dozen attempted hijackings which resulted in no injuries and the surrender of the often lone hijacker. These incidents are not included. The following are notable hijackings because of fatalities or success in forcing the aircraft to fly to another country''

*In 1968, a Delta DC-8 was hijacked to Havana, Cuba. This was the first successful hijacking to Cuba from the U.S. since 1961<ref>http://www.psepc.gc.ca/prg/ns/airs/rep1-app3-en.aspand</ref>, and was the start of multiple hijacking attempts to Cuba in the late 1960s. This coincided with the introduction of passenger screening using metal detectors in U.S. airports starting in the late 1960s.

*Additional hijackings which resulted in no injuries and the flight landing in Cuba include [[March 28]], [[1984]] (Delta 357 New Orleans-Dallas 727),<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19840328-0&lang=en ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> [[August 18]], [[1983]] (Delta 784 Miami-Tampa 727),<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19830818-0&lang=en ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> [[July 17]], [[1983]] (Delta 722 Miami-Tampa 727),<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19830717-0&lang=en ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> [[June 11]], [[1979]] (Delta 1061 New York LaGuardia-Fort Lauderdale L1011)<ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19790611-1&lang=en ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-1011 TriStar Havana<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

*[[July 31]], [[1972]], a Delta flight 841, a Detroit to Miami DC-8 flight, was hijacked to Algiers, Algeria by 8 hijackers. The aircraft stopped in Boston to pick up an international navigator, who was wearing only swimming trunks and a shirt. The flight was allowed to return with passengers to the U.S., stopping in Barcelona for refueling.<ref>[http://openweb.tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/1972-8/1972-08-01-NBC-10.html Delta Hijacking NBC News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19720731-0&lang=en ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-8 Algiers<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

*On [[February 22]], [[1974]], [[Samuel Byck]], an unemployed tire salesman from Pennsylvania, stormed aboard a Delta Air Lines Flight 523, [[DC-9]] flight at Baltimore Friendship Airport (now Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport) scheduled to fly to [[Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport|Atlanta]] and shot both pilots, killing the First Officer, Fred Jones. He intended to crash the plane into the [[White House]].<ref>[http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2006/06/patrick_smith_o.html Schneier on Security: Patrick Smith on Airline Security<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> After shooting the pilots, the hijacker grabbed a passenger and demanded that she fly the aircraft.<ref>[http://openweb.tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/1974-2/1974-02-22-CBS-5.html Hijack Attempt CBS News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

*On [[August 23]], [[1980]], a Delta Air Lines L-1011 on a San Juan to Los Angeles flight was hijacked to Cuba.<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,948993,00.html Havana-Bound - TIME<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The hijacker was jailed by Cuban authorities, and all passengers were released unharmed.

*On [[September 13]], [[1980]], a Delta Air Lines New Orleans to Atlanta flight was taken over by two hijackers and forced to fly to Cuba. The flight continued to Atlanta after stopping in Havana.<ref>[http://www.allbusiness.com/operations/shipping-air-freight/237282-1.html FBI agents arrest 1980 hijacker of Delta Air Lines aircraft. | Crime, Law Enforcement & Corrections > Law Enforcement from AllBusiness.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The hijackers were imprisoned by Cuban authorities. One hijacker was released and later sought US residency. The suspect was later arrested by US authorities in 2002<ref>[http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0CWU/is_2002_August_19/ai_90490911 FBI agents arrest 1980 hijacker of Delta Air Lines aircraft | Airline Industry Information | Find Articles at BNET.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and sentenced to prison the following year.

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==External links==
{{Commons|Delta Air Lines}}
{{Companies portal}}
*[http://www.delta.com/ Official site]
*[http://blog.delta.com/ Delta's official blog]
*[http://www.youtube.com/user/DeltaAirLines Delta's official] [[YouTube]] channel
*[http://www.airfleets.net/ageflotte/?file=calcop&opp=Delta%20Airlines Delta Air Lines Fleet Age]
*[http://www.airlineroutemaps.com/USA/Delta_Airlines.shtml Delta Air Lines Route Maps]
*[http://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Delta_Airlines/information.php Delta Air Lines Seat Maps]
*[http://www.deltamuseum.org/ Delta Air Transport Heritage Museum]
*[http://deltacargo.com/ Delta Cargo]
*[http://www.delta.com/business_programs_services/delta_cargo/cargo_flight_availability/cargo_products_services/delta_dash/index.jsp Delta DASH]
*[http://www.delta-sky.com/ ''Sky'', Delta's inflight magazine]
*[http://www.delta.com/about_delta/corporate_information/delta_stats_facts/delta_through_decades/index.jsp Delta Air Lines History]
*[http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-1302&sug=y New Georgia Encyclopedia]
*[http://www.chriscummings.cc/air/Timetables/Delta/index.html High quality images of historic Delta Timetables]
*[http://www.academicmind.com/unpublishedpapers/business/management/2008-06-000aao-delta-an-anyalytical-view.html Delta Company Analysis]

{{Template group
|list =
{{SkyTeam}}
{{Airlines of the United States}}
{{IATA members|northam}}
{{Air Transport Association}}
}}

<!--Categories-->
[[Category:Delta Air Lines| ]]
[[Category:Airlines of the United States]]
[[Category:IATA members]]
[[Category:Air Transport Association members]]
[[Category:Airlines established in 1928]]
[[Category:Companies based in Atlanta, Georgia]]
[[Category:Open Travel Alliance]]
[[Category:Companies that have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy]]

<!--Other languages-->
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[[fa:دلتا ایرلاینز]]
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Revision as of 02:37, 14 October 2008

Delta Air Lines
IATA ICAO Callsign
DL DAL DELTA
Founded1924
(as Huff-Daland Dusters) in Monroe, LA [1]
Commenced operationsJuly 17, 1929[1]
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programSkyMiles
AllianceSkyTeam
SubsidiariesComair
Delta Shuttle
Delta AirElite
Fleet size452 (+49 orders)
Destinations324
HeadquartersAtlanta, Georgia
Key peopleRichard Anderson (CEO)
Edward Bastian (President / CFO)
Websitehttp://www.delta.com

Delta Air Lines, Inc. (NYSEDAL) is a United States airline[3] based and headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.[4] Delta operates an expansive domestic and international network, spanning North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and the Caribbean. Delta flies to over 332 destinations in 57 countries (excluding codeshare), across 5 continents.[5] Delta is the only major U.S. carrier that flies to Africa.[6] On April 14, 2008, Northwest Airlines announced it would be merging with Delta to form the new Delta Air Lines[7]. Once in place, the "new" Delta would become the world's largest carrier. [8]

Delta operates hubs at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Salt Lake City International Airport, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, and New York's LaGuardia Airport; Delta's Atlanta hub is the largest/busiest airline hub in the world. Delta carries more passengers across the Atlantic than any other carrier worldwide. Its major transatlantic gateways are Atlanta, Cincinnati, and New York-JFK. Transatlantic service from Salt Lake City to Paris started in 2008. Its major Latin American gateways is Atlanta. The Los Angeles secondary hub was significantly reduced in 2008, ending the build up as Delta went from a high of 48 destinations from the airport to just 17. [9]

In terms of passengers carried (approximately 119 million in 2005),[10] Delta is the second-largest airline in the world (behind American Airlines). In terms of revenue passenger miles, Delta Air Lines is the third largest airline, after American Airlines and United Airlines. Delta Air Lines serves more destinations than any other airline in the world.[11] In terms of total operating revenues, Delta is the sixth-largest airline in the world.[12]

The company

File:N701DN 1.jpg
Delta Air Lines' flagship, the Boeing 777-200LR.

Airline operations

  • Comair a regional component of Delta Air Lines, Inc., - serves primarily domestic short-haul, low-density, high frequency flights.
  • Delta, the "mainline" component of Delta Air Lines, Inc., - serves primarily high-volume domestic flights and long-haul international services

Aviation business related operations, divisions, and subsidiaries

Former subsidiaries

Defunct airlines operated by Delta

  • Delta Express began service in October 1996 in an attempt by Delta to compete with low cost airlines on leisure-oriented routes. Its main base of operations was Orlando International Airport and it used Boeing 737-200 aircraft. It ceased operations in November, 2003 after Song was established.
  • Song began service on April 15, 2003 as a single-class airline operated by Delta to compete directly with JetBlue Airways from both airlines' hubs at New York-JFK. While the brand was considered a successful addition to the Northeast-to-Florida market, financially the airline suffered. As a result, on May 1, 2006, Song was folded into the Delta mainline brand. The "Song" entertainment system will remain in place on certain long-haul domestic flights. Additionally, all former "Song" aircraft have been reconfigured to accommodate 26 First/158 Economy passengers. These aircraft are now focused primarily on trans-continental flights from JFK and ATL. Song used Boeing 757 aircraft.

As a historical footnote, Western Airlines was acquired on December 16, 1986, and was operated as a separate airline by Delta for over three months.[13] In a case by a union to stop the workforce integration, the U.S. Supreme Court wrote "On December 16, 1986, shareholder approval of the merger was confirmed and Western Airlines became a wholly owned subsidiary of Delta."[14] The changeover date for discontinuation of the Western Airlines brand and the date for merger of the two airlines' workforce was April 1, 1987.

Merger with Northwest Airlines

On January 15, 2008, Delta Air Lines was reported to be in merger talks with Northwest Airlines and United Airlines.[15] Although each airline declined to comment officially, many notable newspapers, as well as industry analysts, expected an announcement as early as mid-February 2008 as to which airline the Delta Board of Directors would like to pursue a merger. Delta asserted that it would retain its name and its Atlanta hub in any merger, possibly as the surviving airline.[16] By late February 2008 the merger discussions with Northwest Airlines appeared to have broken down over pilot seniority issues.[17]

On April 14, 2008, both Delta and Northwest Airlines announced that they would merge to create the world's largest airline. The Atlanta-based combined airline will have $17.7 billion enterprise value. The company also stated on April 14, 2008 that it agreed with its pilot union to extend the existing collective bargaining agreement through the end of 2012. The agreement, subject to a vote by the pilots, provides Delta pilots a 3.5 percent equity stake in the created new airline.[18]

History

Early history

A Douglas DC-7 in Delta livery

The company has its roots in Huff Daland Dusters, which was founded on May 30, 1924 in Macon, Georgia, by several partners including Collett E. Woolman becoming the world's first aerial crop dusting company. Huff Daland moved to Monroe, Louisiana the following year. On September 13, 1928, Huff Daland Dusters was purchased by C.E. Woolman and renamed Delta Air Service after the Mississippi Delta, where its route connected Dallas, Texas to Jackson, Mississippi, via Shreveport and Monroe. The original directors of Delta Air Service were C.H. McHenry, Travis Oliver, and M.S. Biedenharn. This service was terminated in 1930 after the "Spoils Conference" and the Post Office awarded the route to American Airlines. Delta restarted passenger service in August 1934 with a route from Charleston, SC to Fort Worth, with stops in Columbia, SC, Augusta, Atlanta, Birmingham, and Meridian along the way.[19]

In 1941, Delta moved its headquarters from Monroe to Atlanta, to center itself along its new route network that now stretched to Chicago, Miami, and New Orleans. The logo for Monroe Regional Airport is based on the Delta logo, in honor of it being the airline's birthplace and the original headquarters for Delta.

In 1953, Delta purchased the Chicago and Southern Air Lines, and flew under the name Delta C&S for the next two years. [20]

Delta was the launch operator of the Douglas DC-8, which began service in 1959, and the Convair CV-880 in 1960. The DC-8's graceful swept-wing design inspired Delta to come up with a new red, white, and blue delta-shaped logo (the "widget"). Just a few years later, Delta became the launch operator of the Douglas DC-9. By 1970, Delta was an all jet airline.

1970s and 1980s

In 1970, Delta entered the "wide-body" jet era with the purchase of five Boeing 747s to service its new long-haul high density routes. The initial route was a Los Angeles-Dallas Love Field-Atlanta routing. Delta also had an interchange with Pan Am using Delta 747 to fly to London Heathrow Airport. However, with the economic slowdown of the early 1970s, Delta found the aircraft too large for its routes and it sold them a few years later. Shortly thereafter, Delta leased five DC-10s from United Airlines as a stopgap until its larger order of the new Lockheed L-1011 TriStars could be delivered.

A Delta L-1011

Delta purchased Northeast Airlines in 1972 to strengthen its market share in the northeastern United States. Through the purchase, Delta began its long Boeing 727 operation.

In 1973, the Lockheed TriStar entered service for Delta. Delta placed these aircraft in international service from Atlanta to London in 1978; Frankfurt was added the following year. Delta's fast growth showed in August 1979 when it became the first airline in the world to board one million passengers in one city in one month (Atlanta).

Delta launched Delta Air Express in 1975, the first "high-priority, guaranteed cargo service"[21].

Delta launched its first frequent flyer program in 1981 which became the SkyMiles program in 1995. In 1983, Delta took delivery of its first Boeing 767-200, named the Spirit of Delta, which was paid for "by voluntary contributions from employees, retirees and Delta's community partners." The effort, called Project 767, was spearheaded by three Delta flight attendants to show the employees' appreciation to Delta for solid management and strong leadership during the first years following airline deregulation."[22] The airplane remained the flagship of the Delta fleet until 2006, and was repainted in a commemorative paint scheme and toured the country to celebrate the airline's 75th anniversary in 2004.[23]

In 1984, the company established the Delta Connection partnership linking local "feeder" airlines that served mid-size population areas to Delta nodes. The same year, Delta began its first flight to Hawaii (Honolulu International Airport) with L-1011 aircraft. Also in 1984, Delta began to offer the nation's first public air-to-ground telephone system with Airfone, on the L-1011. Delta was named 'Official Airline of Walt Disney World' in 1986, and its official ride in the Magic Kingdom was Delta Dreamflight, and was discontinued in the late 1990s when Delta's partnership with Walt Disney World ended.

In 1987, Delta merged with Western Airlines of Los Angeles and absorbed its large hubs at Salt Lake City and Los Angeles. Through these acquisitions and expansions Delta became the fourth largest U.S. carrier and fifth largest world carrier. Also in 1987, Ronald W. Allen became chairman and CEO.

1990s

A Delta Air Lines Boeing 767-300ER in 1997-2000 livery. The last mainline aircraft in this livery was repainted to the current livery as of July 2008.

In 1990, Delta became the first U.S. airline to operate the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 aircraft [24], leasing two from Mitsui. Delta operated 15 MD-11s. Delta's most dramatic expansion (at that time) came with its purchase of Pan Am's European routes in 1991 which included all north Atlantic routes except Miami to London and Paris, and the Frankfurt, Germany hub, after Pan Am declared bankruptcy. The purchase gave Delta the largest transatlantic route network, a fleet of 21 Airbus A310 aircraft, and the Worldport (Terminal 3) at JFK. Due to these acquisitions, Delta became and remains today the largest U.S. transatlantic carrier, in terms of passengers carried and number of flights operated. Delta also acquired Pan Am's northeastern shuttle, inheriting of a number of Boeing 727s, and forming what is today Delta Shuttle.

In 1991, as one of the conditions for Delta's financial support of Pan Am, Delta had the rights to use the Pan Am name on flights across the Atlantic. Delta obtained all of Pan Am's remaining transatlantic rights, except Miami to Paris and London, in November, 1991, including the route from Detroit to London, despite Northwest Airlines' objections. It was an unusual route for Delta given its small presence in Detroit, and Northwest's correspondingly larger operations.[25] Northwest later attempted to buy US Air's (now US Airways) Baltimore-London route for $5 million and transfer the route to Detroit[26] but ended up buying the route from Delta in 1995[27] for a rumored $32 million. The naming right was never exercised even though the Pan Am name was a much more widely recognized name in Europe than Delta. Within weeks after the route and asset transfers were complete, Delta ended its financial support, which led to Pan Am ceasing operations on December 4, 1991.[28]

After withdrawing its agreed upon financial support, which would have allowed Pan Am to continue with a hub in MIA, Delta was sued for more than $2.5 billion on December 9, 1991 by the Pan Am Creditors Committee. [29] Shortly thereafter, a large group of former Pan Am employees also sued Delta. Delta was able to combine and move the cases from New York to Atlanta. Delta was also able to prevent a jury trial, which, according to Business Week magazine, its attorneys had stated it would likely lose. The Atlanta judge then dismissed the lawsuits.

In 1995, responding to Qantas and American Airlines innovation of codeshare agreements, Delta established its own code sharing arrangements with Swissair, Sabena, and Austrian Airlines, which launched Atlantic Excellence, disbanded in 2000, for codesharing with Air France which led to the Skyteam alliance.

By 1997, during which Leo Mullin was named CEO, Delta began large expansions into Latin America and in 1999 introduced the Boeing 777 into its fleet, for longer non-stop flights. During Mullin's tenure, Delta saw large expansions into Latin America and the Caribbean. This was also known as Delta's "technological growth period".[citation needed] Airport kiosks were introduced, Delta Technology was developed into an industry leading technology division,[citation needed] gate information display screens (GIDS) were rolled out, and internal software was thoroughly revamped. However, Mullin's legacy was ruined by labor woes, huge losses in the post-9/11 period, a major executive compensation scandal, and a bankruptcy filing months after he abruptly retired.

Throughout the 1990s, Delta maintained a secondary hub at Portland for its Asia operations. In addition to regularly scheduled flights to Delta's primary hubs during this time (Atlanta, Cincinnati, Dallas, and Salt Lake City), several of Delta's flights to Asia were routed from Portland and Los Angeles, using L-1011 and MD-11 aircraft. Destinations included Bangkok, Fukuoka, Hong Kong, Manila, Nagoya, Seoul, Taipei, and Tokyo. Delta was one of the airlines targeted in the failed Operation Bojinka plot: the conspirators planned to bomb a Delta MD-11 flying from Seoul to Bangkok via Taipei on January 21, 1995. Today, all Asia operations from Portland and Los Angeles have ceased. Asian service is offered from Delta’s Atlanta and New York – JFK hubs to Mumbai, India; Tokyo, Japan; Seoul, South Korea; and Shanghai, China (effective March 30, 2008).[30][31]

In 1996, Delta carried the Olympic Torch from Athens, Greece where it was lit, to Los Angeles, California for its traditional circuit to the Olympic Stadium in Atlanta, GA for the 1996 Summer Olympics, of which Delta was the official airline.

In 1998, Delta and United Airlines introduced a marketing partnership that included a reciprocal redemption agreement between SkyMiles and Mileage Plus programs and shared lounges.[32] This scheme allowed members of either frequent flier program to earn miles on both carriers and utilize both carriers' lounges. Delta and United attempted to introduce an even cozier codeshare relationship, but this was deal was effectively killed by ALPA.[33] The marketing partnership ended in divorce in 2003 and paved the way for an expansion of the SkyTeam alliance.

In 1999, Delta was a founding partner of the online travel agency Orbitz originally began by a group of several major U.S. airlines, which was purchased by Cendant in 2004. Earlier in that decade, Deltamatic Computer reservations system was deprecated in favor of Worldspan.

SkyTeam, a global alliance, was created in 2000 and Delta partnered with AeroMéxico, Air France, and Korean Air. Three years later, Delta implemented the largest domestic codeshare alliance with Continental Airlines and Northwest Airlines. Today SkyTeam now the second largest airline alliance in the world and continues to add members to its ranks.[citation needed]

Fleet transformation in the early 2000s

A Delta Boeing 767-300ER at Stuttgart, Germany

In an effort to simplify its fleet and capitalize on cross-platform compatibility not only in pilot training but also maintenance, the airline began to retire its trijets (three-engine planes) in favor of twinjets (two-engine planes). Delta's entire active fleet is now composed of twinjets, and the airline is the world's largest operator of 767 aircraft:

  • The Lockheed L-1011, for many years the workhorse of the Delta fleet, numbering as high as 56 aircraft in service. The last L-1011 (N728DA) was retired on July 31, 2001. The final flight operated as Flight #1949 from Orlando to Atlanta, and received a huge display of bittersweet fanfare from Delta employees, Hartsfield International Airport Fire/Rescue, and aviation enthusiasts, many of whom took the day off from work, or school to attend the historic final flight. The big Lockheeds were replaced with the Boeing 767-400.
  • The airline's many Boeing 727s were completely replaced with Boeing 737-800s in 2003.
  • Delta operated its last MD-11 flight on January 1, 2004, operating as Flight 56 from New Tokyo International Airport (now Narita International Airport) at 4:45pm. The aircraft arrived in Atlanta at 3:20pm. This concluded the MD-11s relatively short service in the fleet. MD-11 aircraft have been replaced with Boeing 777-200ERs. On September 23, 2004, a Delta spokesperson confirmed plans to sell eight MD-11s to FedEx Express. The remainder MD-11s were sold to World Airways for charter use, and some were converted to freighters for UPS Airlines.

Bankruptcy

File:Deltaairline-logo-1.png
Logo of Delta Air Lines from March 2000 to July 2007 - Based on Soft Widget

As early as 2004, in an effort to avoid bankruptcy, Delta announced a restructuring of the company that included job cuts, and an aggressive expansion of Atlanta operations by some 100 new flights, making it a 'super-hub' and requiring the airline to spread its flight schedule more evenly across the day.[34] This was known to all Delta employees as "Operation Clockwork". Further, by mid-2004 the airline had announced it would be closing its fourth busiest hub (Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport), which it did on January 31, 2005. In a huge concessionary move, the pilots at Delta agreed to across-the-board 32.5% reductions in hourly pay rates in order to help the company stave off a bankruptcy filing. The agreement also included numerous changes in work rules, granting the company efficiencies in staffing and scheduling.

On January 5, 2005, Delta introduced SimpliFares, a radical transformation of its fare structure, which cut its most expensive fares by as much as 50 percent nationwide and capped one-way domestic fares at $499 in coach class and $599 first class. However, due to continued high fuel costs, the company was forced to raise these fare caps by $100 in July, 2005, to $599 in coach class and $699 in first class. Airline fares are constantly in a state of flux, in addition to the constant change in fares due to the selling of seats allocated for lower fares. However, some claim that the SimpliFare is simply a marketing technique to alert the public that there is a maximum ceiling price for Delta's fares.[citation needed] Delta also launched a system of "same-day confirmed" whereby for $25, a passenger is able to confirm a seat on a different flight instead of standing-by. in August 2007, the "same-day confirmed" fee increased to $50.

Also in 2005, in an attempt to increase profitability, Delta applied to serve a daily non-stop flight from Atlanta to Beijing, China starting in March, 2006, but rights were instead awarded to American Airlines operating from Chicago to Shanghai and Continental Airlines operating from Newark to Beijing.

On August 15, 2005, in an SEC filing, Delta announced that it had finalized a deal to sell Delta Connection carrier Atlantic Southeast Airlines for $425 million in cash to SkyWest Airlines in an effort to obtain money to avoid bankruptcy. Analysts called the move a desperate one, estimating ASA's worth at around $700-$800 million — a price which SkyWest would not have been willing to pay.[35]

On September 7, 2005, Delta announced that it would cut 26% of its flights at its Cincinnati hub and redeploy aircraft to its hubs in Atlanta and Salt Lake City.[36] The move will ultimately eliminate up to 1,000 jobs in Cincinnati. In addition and in hopes of increasing profit yields, the airline announced further international expansion into Europe and Latin America.

On September 14, 2005, Delta filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for the first time in its 76-year history. The company cited high labor costs and record-breaking jet fuel prices as factors in its filing. At the time of the filing, Delta had $20.5 billion in debt, $10 billion of which accumulated since January 2001.

Reorganization during bankruptcy

Boeing 767-300ER in the livery used from 2000 to 2007

On September 22, 2005, Delta announced the acceleration of restructuring activities, targeting an additional $3 billion per year in cost reductions by 2007. $970 million of this amount was to come from debt relief, lease and facility savings, and previously commenced fleet modifications. Non-union workers' salaries were to be reduced by a minimum of 9% across the board, with a 15% reduction for executive officers and a 25% pay cut for CEO Gerald Grinstein. In December 2005, the Delta pilots agreed to an additional temporary 14% cut in pay, piggybacking onto the 32.5% taken at the beginning of 2005. This cut was made permanent with the ratification of an agreement in June 2006. Additionally, the company planned to lay off between 7,000 and 9,000 of its 52,000 employees.[37]

As for its route network, Delta planned to alter its structure by reinforcing hub presence in Atlanta, Cincinnati, New York, and Salt Lake City, while at the same time increasing point-to-point routes, reducing domestic capacity by up to 20% while growing more profitable international route (especially Asia, Caribbean and Europe) capacity up to 25%.

In 2006, Delta purchased rights to fly between New York and London from United Airlines.[38]

On February 24, 2006, Delta, along with Continental Airlines and FedEx Express, saw future operations to Venezuela severely affected by President Hugo Chávez's decision to restrict flights coming into that South American country from the United States.[39] As of March 23, 2006, U.S. and Venezuelan aviation authorities were able to negotiate a solution to their dispute, likely ensuring that Delta's operations to Venezuela would not be curtailed in the future.

On March 7, 2006, Delta announced expanded service from its prominent hub at New York-JFK. In addition to the expansion of mainline service at the airport, Delta would partner with Mesa Air Group to provide regional flights throughout the northeast under the Delta Connection banner. At the same time the airline announced an expansion to a number of new cities from its Salt Lake City hub.

Based on all of these new initiatives, Delta projected a return to profitability by late 2007, based on a crude oil price model of $66 per barrel, in contrast to other bankrupt carriers' restructuring modeled on $55 per barrel. Delta would eventually reach this goal of full year profitability in 2007[40].

Delta announced that coach travelers in the United States who have a flight longer than four hours will have on-demand programming on all those flights starting in 2007 at its main hubs in New York, Salt Lake City, and Atlanta. This was to counter entertainment offerings of other airlines like JetBlue Airways, and take place of Song Airlines' service. Delta claims to offer the leading in-flight entertainment system in the United States. Live programming and music are free, and movies will be available on demand for a nominal fee in coach and for free in first class.[41] Delta also intends to install an improved in-flight entertainment system on internationally-configured aircraft, featuring a personal selection of movies. The system will be installed in all classes on Boeing 767-400ER and 777-200ER aircraft, and in the BusinessElite section on Boeing 767-300ER aircraft.[42]

On November 9, 2006, the airline announced that it would recall 1,000 flight attendants that were previously laid off. In addition to the flight attendant recall, Delta announced in late December 2006 that it had exhausted its pilot recall list and was now accepting pilot applications for the first time in 5 years. They expected to take on close to 200 first officers through 2007.[43]

On January 4, 2007, the airline announced an order for 30 Bombardier CRJ-900 regional jets with an option for 30 additional aircraft, pending approval of the bankruptcy court judge.[44] On February 9, 2007, the airline received bankruptcy court approval to buy these aircraft as planned. These aircraft will be operated by Delta Connection.

Failed takeover attempt by US Airways

During the later part of 2006 and early 2007, US Airways Group, holding company for US Airways, proposed an acquisition of Delta Air Lines. The combined entity would have been operated under the Delta name. This attempt was withdrawn after failing to gain support from Delta's major creditors and opposition by Delta management.

On November 15, 2006, Bloomberg reported that US Airways Group, the parent of US Airways, proposed a takeover of Delta for $8 billion in cash and stock.[45] However, Delta's CEO reiterated that the best interests of Delta and its creditors were served by the company emerging from bankruptcy as an independent, stand alone carrier. In the ensuing days, Delta mounted an aggressive defense against the takeover attempt.

In addition to Delta management, Delta employees appeared to be extremely skeptical of US Airways management's claims that a merger would result in no job reductions and provide a more secure future for a combined entity. Employees had started wearing "Keep Delta My Delta" buttons and campaigning to raise public awareness of their opposition to the proposed takeover.[46]

On December 19, 2006, Delta announced (as expected) it rejected US Airways Group's proposed merger. Along with the announcement, it launched a media campaign against the merger to raise public support. The campaign, "Keep Delta My Delta", was picked up from the employee grassroots effort of the same name. The effort's website harbored an e-petition, quotes from prominent dissidents, and the effects the merger could have on selected localities. In its report, Delta cited many reasons for rejecting the bid, including it would lead to worse customer service, possible layoffs, an inefficient carrier, the carrier with the largest debt-load in the industry, and near-monopoly powers.[47]

On December 20, 2006, Delta and its financial advisor, the Blackstone Group, declared that Delta would be valued at between $9.4 billion and $12 billion after emerging from bankruptcy, which would (at the time of this writing) give it a market capitalization comparable to that of Southwest Airlines Co. or greater than that of American Airlines' AMR Corp. and Continental Airlines, Inc. combined. US Airways Group CEO Doug Parker stated that Delta's self-valuation lacked credibility and was unrealistic.[48] Delta CEO Gerald Grinstein retorted by stating that the Tempe-based airline was "the worst of all potential merger partners".[49]

On January 10, 2007, US Airways raised its bid by 20%, to $10.2 billion. The revised offer was set to expire by February 1 unless Delta's creditors opened the airline's books to US Airways and delayed a scheduled February 7 court hearing pertaining to Delta's reorganization plan.[50] Delta responded with a statement, claiming that "...the revised proposal does not address significant concerns that have been raised about the initial US Airways proposal and, in fact, would increase the debt burden of the combined company by yet another $1 billion."[51] That same day Delta Air Lines was speculated to be in talks with Northwest Airlines and United Airlines to fend off the US Airways bid.[52] CEO Gerald Grinstein, however, denied that any serious negotiatons were ongoing with Northwest or any other airline.[53]

On January 28, 2007, US Airways holding company raised its bid by another $1 billion according to the Wall Street Journal,[54] but company spokesmen denied any change.[55] On January 31, 2007, Delta's creditors rejected US Airways' hostile takeover attempt, and US Airways withdrew its offer to buy Delta. On the same day, executives and employees of the company gathered to celebrate the re-lighting of the historic "FLY DELTA JETS" sign at the company's main hub, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.[56][57]

Emergence from bankruptcy

File:Dal b777200er sm1.jpg
Delta Air Lines Boeing 777-200ER in new livery.

On April 25, 2007, the airline's bankruptcy plan was approved by the Bankruptcy Court. On April 30, 2007, Delta Air Lines emerged from bankruptcy protection as an independent carrier. Delta also unveiled a new logo, reminiscent of its logo from the 1970s and 1980s, and a new paint scheme. Delta's bankruptcy exit strategy was vastly different from that of United in that it expanded its way out of bankruptcy, rather than retrenching [citation needed].

Delta's previous stock was canceled as of Monday, April 30, 2007, and new shares are trading on a "when issued" basis on the New York Stock Exchange. These shares began trading normally on Thursday, May 3, 2007. The starting price was around $20.00 a share, and went up to as high as $23.35. But investors showed little confidence in the stock as the price fell to $19.00 later in the week. [58]

Upon exiting bankruptcy, Delta also announced a 50% increase in operations at Los Angeles International Airport[59], thus establishing Los Angeles as Delta's second Latin America hub and new potential Asian gateway with a total of 99 daily departures.

Post-bankruptcy

On May 10, 2007, Delta announced a partnership with US Helicopter, who provides service from John F. Kennedy International Airport to several helipads in downtown Manhattan.[60]

On July 12, 2007, Delta and its SkyTeam partners announced that they would forfeit slots in the European Union to relieve antitrust concerns.[61]

On August 21, 2007, Delta named Richard Anderson, former CEO of Northwest Airlines and executive at UnitedHealth Group, as a replacement for outgoing CEO Gerald Grinstein. Anderson assumed the post on September 1.[62]

On November 14, 2007, Pardus Capital Management LP, a hedge fund that owns 7 million shares of Delta and 5.6 million shares of United, called for the two carriers to merge. This action sent shares of both airlines up. However, the two airlines quickly denied official talks of any merger.[63] [64] [65]

Hub history

Former hubs:

  • Chicago O'Hare International Airport - Delta, until the early 1990s, operated a small hub at Chicago. It served thirteen non-stop destinations from its new Delta Flight Center, which opened in the summer of 1984. During this time Delta also maintained a flight attendant base in Chicago.
  • Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport - Delta at one time operated over 200 flights a day from DFW. At times, it was Delta's second largest hub. Delta closed the hub in February 2005.
  • Frankfurt International Airport - Delta's Frankfurt hub was acquired from Pan Am. Delta dismantled the hub in 1997.
  • Los Angeles International Airport - LAX is still a small Delta focus city. Delta has under 50 flights per day from LAX and has a market share of 7.7%, which is a distant fourth behind United Airlines, American Airlines, and Southwest Airlines. Delta had planned to make LAX a major hub, but those plans have since been reduced to just a focus city as Delta has significantly reduced the destinations served from the airport due to the 2008 energy crisis. [66]

Former secondary hubs:[67]

  • Memphis International Airport-MEM was a mini-hub in conjunction with regional carrier ASA. This operation ended in the mid-80's when competition became too stiff with then Republic and ASA shifted it to Dallas. (See www.flyasa.com History page for more information) Ironically, the two airlines are now considering merging which would mean a return of Delta Hub operations to Memphis on a substantially larger scale.
  • Portland International Airport - Portland, Oregon (PDX) was at one time Delta's premier Asian gateway. It was closed in 2001, further described in the 'route eliminations' section of this article.

Focus City history

Former focus cities:

Personnel

Between its mainline operation and subsidiaries, Delta employs approximately 48,000 people.

Delta's approximately 6,600 pilots are represented by the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). The union has represented Delta pilots since 1940.[68] Pilot domiciles are located in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, New York City, and Salt Lake City.

The company's approximately 180 flight dispatchers are represented by the Professional Airline Flight Control Association (PAFCA).

The rest of Delta's workforce, in contrast to other legacy air carriers, is nonunion.

On March 18, 2008, Delta announced that it was offering voluntary severance payouts for up to 30,000 employees (though the target headcount reduction is significantly less than that), and that it would cut domestic capacity by 5%.[69]

Destinations

  • Delta (including its wholly owned subsidiary Comair, Inc. and regional service carriers), serves 240 domestic cities in 49 states. The airline also serves Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, in addition to 57 countries.
  • Delta is the only airline in the world to serve over 300 destinations--310 in total.[5]
  • Delta operates 1,632 flights per day.[10]

Significant past route eliminations

Airline routes occasionally change as the public's travel patterns change and if a route becomes unprofitable. Although Delta serves the most destinations of any US airline, it has also eliminated more destinations than any major US airline. Some routes that have been eliminated include:

  • Delta served several cities in Asia, including Bangkok, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Taipei, from Portland and Los Angeles, using L1011s with stops in Anchorage for refueling. They also at one time served Ketchikan Alaska.
  • With Delta's acquisition of Pan Am's Frankfurt hub, a number of new routes started to the city, including San Francisco, Orlando, Los Angeles, and Dallas-Fort Worth. The hub at Frankfurt would eventually be closed.
  • Services between medium sized cities in the Southeastern United States to the Atlanta and Dallas-Fort Worth hubs have been superseded by nonstop Delta Connection service to the hub cities. Discontinued services have included Shreveport-Monroe and Birmingham-Jackson, Mississippi.
  • Closure of the Dallas-Fort Worth hub, created after Braniff Airlines ceased operations in 1982, in 2005.
  • Closure of gateway facilities in Portland, Oregon (PDX) including a cargo facility, which served Delta destinations in Asia.
  • Expansion of Western Airlines' Los Angeles hub service after acquisition of that airline, including the starting of a Tokyo-Los Angeles route using the then-new MD-11 aircraft. After 2000 flights were significantly reduced including elimination of Tokyo-Los Angeles. In 2006/2007, Delta started adding new routes out of LAX through its connection carriers, signaling a build up of LAX again. Most of the routes added have since been eliminated in 2008. Delta went from a high of 48 destinations at LAX to just 34, ending the build up and confirming Delta's presence at LAX as a focus city.
  • Delta acquired several routes to Honolulu (HNL) with the purchase of Western Airlines. These services from Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Salt Lake City operated initially on Western's DC-10 aircraft, and later on the L-1011 and 767-400 including a nonstop from Atlanta. In 2007 Delta eliminated the San Francisco-Honolulu route and withdrew some 767-400 service Los Angeles-Honolulu in favor of smaller aircraft.

Future destinations

  • Delta has begun inquiries with Boeing to find ways of increasing the range of the Boeing 777-200LR. The added range would allow Delta to pursue a non-stop flight from either Atlanta or JFK to Sydney, Australia.[72]
  • Delta is reportedly expressing interest in restarting non-stop service to Warsaw, Poland. Service would most likely be from New York-JFK.[73]
  • Delta announced flights from New York-JFK to Dakar and then on to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, which services Nairobi, Kenya. Due to political unrest, Delta now plans to inaugurate service in 2009. [75]
  • Delta has received DOT approval to fly non-stop from ATL to Brazilian cities Recife, Manaus and Fortaleza. Flights would begin in December 2008 using the new Boeing 737-700 (Manaus) and ETOPS-certified Boeing 757-200s (Recife/Fortaleza).
  • Delta has announced new service from New York-JFK to Bonaire, operating Saturdays-only beginning December 20 ,2008. [77]
  • Delta has announced new service from Atlanta to Mumbai beginning November 1 ,2008. The route will be flown using the new Boeing 777-200LR. At the same time, JFK-Mumbai will be discontinued. [78]
  • Delta has applied for a three times weekly service from Los Angeles to Sao Paulo, Brazil, beginning December 14, 2008.
  • Delta will resume their flights from Los Angeles to Guatemala City, beginning December 6, 2008.

Fleet

Delta Air Lines has an all-Boeing (including McDonnell Douglas aircraft) fleet. Delta was one of the last major airlines to operate the original Boeing 737-200 models, until the last of these aircraft retired in 2006. Delta has the largest fleets of Boeing 757 and Boeing 767 aircraft of any airline. It is the second largest operator of the McDonnell Douglas MD-80 (behind American Airlines).

The Delta Air Lines fleet consists of the following aircraft and orders:

Delta Air Lines Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers
(First*/Economy)
Routes IFE Notes
Boeing 737-700 4
(6 orders)
124 (12/112) Domestic/international medium haul
US, Caribbean, Latin America and Mexico
Panasonic eFX AVOD
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
All equipped with winglets
Boeing 737-800 71
(34 orders)
160 (16/144) Domestic short-long haul
US, Mexico and Caribbean
Overhead LCDs or
Panasonic eFX AVOD
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
28 aircraft equipped with winglets
Capacity increased by 10 seats
Boeing 757-200 134 Standard
183 (24/159)
————————
Transcontinental
184 (26/158)
————————
ETOPS/international
174 (16/158)
Domestic/international medium-long haul
US transcontinental
Caribbean, Latin America, Puerto Rico,
Transatlantic (ETOPS aircraft)
Overhead CRTs
(Standard)
Panasonic eFX AVOD
(Transcontinental and ETOPS)
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
17 leased ETOPS aircraft
formerly flown by TWA/AA
ETOPS aircraft feature winglets and BusinessElite
Largest operator of the Boeing 757
Boeing 767-300 21 262 (24/238) Domestic medium-long haul
US transcontinental
Hawaii, Latin America, and Puerto Rico
Panasonic eFX AVOD
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
Capacity increased by 12 seats
4 aircraft converted to ETOPS standards
Largest operator of the Boeing 767-300
Boeing 767-300ER 59 Standard
217 (36/181)
————————
Ex-Gulf Air
216 (30/186)
Domestic/international medium-long haul
Transatlantic and South America
Panasonic eFX AVOD
(BusinessElite)
Overhead LCDs
(Economy)
30 aircraft to be equipped with winglets (2009)
Largest operator of the Boeing 767-300
Boeing 767-400ER 21 Domestic
285 (36/249)
————————
International
246 (42/204)
Domestic/international medium-long haul
US transcontinental
Transatlantic and Hawaii
Rockwell Collins PTVs
(First Class, domestic)
Overhead LCDs
(Economy, domestic)
Panasonic eFX AVOD
(all classes, international)
All to be converted to international
configuration by 2009
Flat-bed BusinessElite seats to
be installed beginning Spring 2009
Largest and one of only two operators of the Boeing 767-400ER
Boeing 777-200ER 8 268 (50/218) International long haul
Transpacific/ transatlantic/ transarctic
Panasonic eFX AVOD Flat-bed BusinessElite seats to
be installed
Boeing 777-200LR 2
(8 orders)
Ships 7101 & 7102
276 (43/233)
————————
7103 & Subsequent
278 (45/233)
International ultra-long haul
Serving ATL-BOM
Panasonic eX2 AVOD Features flat-bed BusinessElite seats
US launch customer
BusinessElite capacity expanding to 45 on ship 7103 and
subsequent; retrofits for ships 7101 and 7102 planned
McDonnell Douglas MD-88 117 142 (14/128) Domestic short-medium haul
US and Delta Shuttle
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**
McDonnell Douglas MD-90 16 150 (12/138) Domestic short-medium haul
US (all based in Salt Lake City)
Overhead LCDs
Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell**

*First class is offered on domestic flights. BusinessElite is offered on transatlantic and transpacific Flights.
**Wi-Fi service offered by Aircell will be fully installed on all domestic aircraft by Summer 2009. Wi-Fi will only be available on flights within the 48 contingious United States.

Delta's average fleet age is 14.0 years as of April 2008. Boeing reports 96 737-800s have been delivered. [80] Delta plans to sell all but 2 of its ordered 737-800's immediately upon delivery.[81]

Delta Air Lines was one of three carriers (American Airlines and Continental Airlines being the other two) to sign an exclusivity agreement with Boeing in the late 1990s. When Boeing acquired McDonnell Douglas, the European Union forced Boeing to void the contracts. However, both parties have been adhering to the terms under a gentlemen's agreement; thus Delta operates no Airbus equipment.

Delta will likely become the North American launch customer for the Boeing 787 should the Northwest merger be finalized. Delta has made bids to become Boeing's provider for 787 maintenance through Boeing's GoldCare support program.[82]

Retired fleet

Delta Air Lines Retired Fleet
Aircraft Year Retired Replacement IFE Routes
Convair CV-880 1973 DC-8-51 None Short-medium haul domestic routes
Boeing 747-100 1976 Lockheed L-1011 Overhead projectors Medium-long haul international routes
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 1977/1989* Lockheed L-1011 Overhead projectors Medium-long haul international routes
Douglas DC-8-71 1991 Boeing 757-200 None Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 1992 Boeing 737-200 None Short haul domestic routes
Airbus A310-200/300[83][84] 1994/1996** Boeing 767-300ER Overhead projectors Medium-long haul international routes
Lockheed L-1011 2001 Boeing 767-400ER Overhead projectors Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
Boeing 727-200 2003 Boeing 737-800
Boeing 757-200
None Short-medium haul domestic routes
McDonnell Douglas MD-11 2004 Boeing 777-200ER (on Asian routes)
Boeing 767-400ER (on European routes)
Rockwell Collins PTVs
(BusinessElite)
Overhead CRTs
(Economy)
Medium-long haul international and domestic routes
Boeing 767-200 2006 Boeing 757-200
Boeing 767-300
Overhead projectors Medium-long haul domestic routes
Boeing 737-200 2006 McDonnell Douglas MD-88 None Short-medium haul domestic routes
Boeing 737-300 2006 Boeing 737-800 None Short-medium haul domestic routes

*Delta operated the DC-10 twice, once on lease from United before the L-1011s could be delivered, and again when Delta acquired Western Airlines in 1987.

**Delta experimented with Airbus A310 aircraft for two to three years after acquiring the planes from Pan Am. Initially Delta was impressed enough with the aircraft to order more of the same model, but these too were eventually withdrawn from service by the mid 1990s.

Delta Air Lines and Alaska Airlines are the only surviving U.S. airlines that operated the Convair 880, still the fastest family of subsonic passenger aircraft ever, and only behind supersonic carriers such as the Concorde and the Tu-144 in speed.

Delta sold several DC-9-30s to ValuJet, forming ValuJet's initial fleet. ValuJet would eventually become Delta's main Atlanta-based rival, AirTran Airways.

Fleet prior to the jet era

Up until the late 1960s, Delta Air Lines operated a fleet of propeller operated aircraft, including among others, the Convair 340, Convair 440, Curtiss C-46 Commando, Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-4, Douglas DC-6, Douglas DC-7, Fairchild Hiller FH-227, Lockheed Constellation, and Lockheed L-100 Hercules. The Curtiss C-46 Commando and Lockheed L-100 Hercules aircraft were operated as cargo aircraft.

Cabin

The interior of a Delta Air Lines Boeing 737-800 with in-flight entertainment and slimline seats.

On May 1, 2006, the carrier adopted new uniforms from designer Richard Tyler.

Delta started the industry's first comprehensive in-flight recycling program on July 1, 2007. The initial program involved all domestic in-bound flights to its Atlanta hub, and has since expanded to domestic in-bound flights arriving at New York (JFK), Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky (CVG), Salt Lake City (SLC), Portland (PDX) and Seattle (SEA) (Federal regulations require the incineration of international waste).[citation needed]

Wi-Fi

On August 5, 2008, Delta announced it will be installing the Aircell mobile broadband network, Gogo. This system will allow customers traveling with Wi-Fi enabled devices, such as laptops, smartphones and PDAs, to access the Internet, corporate VPNs, corporate and personal e-mail accounts, as well as SMS texting and instant messaging services.

Gogo will be available for $9.95 on flights of three hours or less, and $12.95 on flights of more than three hours.

Gogo will be offered initially on Delta's fleet of 133 MD88/90 aircraft and will expand to the remaining domestic fleet of Boeing 737, 757 and 767-300 aircraft throughout the first half of 2009. It is expected that more than 330 aircraft will have internet access by Summer 2009.[85]

In-flight entertainment

In the beginning of the jet age when aircraft such as the deHavilland Comet IV and Boeing 707 were introduced, in-flight entertainment other than lounges and magazines was non-existent. Later in the 1960s, audio programming was introduced where passenger wore headphones consisting of hollow tubes piping in music. These were installed in some Delta aircraft. Some early wide-bodied aircraft, including the L-1011 fleet, had films projected on to the cabin bulkhead. The film projection system on the L-1011s were replaced by CRT-based projectors in the early 1990s. Also during the same time period, CRT monitors over the aisles were added to the 757 fleet. The MD-90 introduced Delta's first IFE system with LCD monitors in 1995, and the 777 introduced Delta's first in-seat video system in 1999, initially using the Rockwell Collins Total Entertainment System. Delta's first all-digital IFE system with AVOD (Panasonic eFX) was first introduced in 2003 on Delta's former low-cost subsidiary, Song. The Rockwell Collins IFE system on the 777s was replaced by the Panasonic eFX system in 2007. The Panasonic eFX system is trademarked by Delta as Delta on Demand.

Audio and video are available on all aircraft except for the MD-88s and Delta Connection aircraft. BusinessElite on all aircraft except the 777-200LR uses the all-digital Panasonic eFX AVOD system. 48 Boeing 757s (Transcontinental 752), also using the Panasonic eFX system, feature live television via Dish Network in both first class and economy, while the remainder of the 757 fleet features ceiling-mounted CRT displays over the aisles. The Panasonic eFX with live satellite television has been installed on several aircraft in addition to the 48 757s already featuring the system, including 28 of the 737-800s, and all 21 domestic 767-300s. It is also featured on Delta's 737-700s, which entered service in August 2008. Delta's new 777-200LR aircraft feature the Panasonic eX2 system, which has a greater storage capacity over the eFX.[86] The personal video screens on the 777-200LRs are also larger than those on Delta's other aircraft.

In economy class, Panasonic eFX system (without the satellite TV product) is also found on the 777-200ER and international 767-400ER fleet. The domestic 767-400ER fleet features the Rockwell Collins TES system, but only features in-seat video (non-AVOD) in the first class section of the aircraft; the economy class section only features LCDs over the aisles. As the 767-400ER fleet is gradually converted to international duties, the Rockwell Collins TES system will be phased out in favor of the Panasonic eFX system with in-seat video and AVOD in both economy class and BusinessElite.

Delta's 767-300 fleet (both domestic and international) originally featured CRT projectors in economy class, with the international 767-300ERs also featuring ceiling-mounted CRT displays over the aisles. The projectors and CRTs international 767-300ER fleet are in the process of being replaced by LCD displays, while the domestic 767-300 fleet has entirely been upgraded to the Panasonic eFX system with AVOD and live satellite television. The 737-800 (except those with winglets) and MD-90 fleet feature drop-down LCD displays below the overhead bins, while the wingleted 737-800 fleet has been upgraded to the Panasonic eFX AVOD/live satellite TV system.

When Delta's ex-TWA ETOPS 757s were first delivered, they featured a system made by Sony Transcom (a former subsidiary of Sony now sold to Rockwell Collins) system that was factory installed for TWA. The system features overhead drop-down LCD monitors similar to Delta's non-wingleted 737-800s and MD-90s. Delta replaced the Sony Transcom system with the Panasonic eFX system featuring in-seat video and AVOD at the same time as the new BusinessElite seats and slimline economy class seats were installed.[87]

BusinessElite

BusinessElite is Delta's international business class, available on the Boeing 767-300ER, 777-200ER, 777-200LR, and select (eventually all) 767-400ER aircraft. It is also being introduced on the ex-AA/TWA ETOPS 757-200 aircraft. All BusinessElite seats (made by B/E Aerospace) on Delta's 767-300ER, 767-400ER, and 777-200ER have 60 inches of pitch, 160 degrees of recline, and either 18.5 (767) or 21 (777-200ER) inches of width. Passengers in the BusinessElite cabin receive free meals, refreshments, alcohol and an amenity kit. All seats are equipped with a personal, on demand In-Flight-Entertainment (IFE) system, universal power-ports, a moveable reading light, and a folding work table. On the ex-TWA/AA ETOPS 757s, a similar model of BusinessElite seat was introduced in 2008. These seats are made by Recaro and feature a built-in massage feature, 55 inches of pitch and are 20 inches wide.

[4]

On March 27, 2007, Delta announced that it will convert its entire 767-400ER fleet to an international configuration, featuring a BusinessElite cabin. During the summer of 2007, 8 out of the 21 767-400ER aircraft were convereted and an additional 6 767-400ER aircraft were converted between December 2007 and May 2008.

Delta introduced full-flat sleeper suites made by Contour Premium in its 777-200LR fleet upon delivery and will retrofit its 777-200ER fleet with the Contour full-flat product by 2010.[88]

On February 5, 2008, Delta has also announced that they will be installing a sleeper suite product on the 767-400ER aircraft.[89] Designed by Thompson Solutions and manufactured by Contour Premium, these sleeper suites use a space-saving design, with the bottom ends of the seats extending under the armrests of the suites in front when in the full horizontal flat bed position. This allows for minimal reduction in capacity compared to most other sleeper suite products, particularly with the 767's narrower fuselage. The suites will be arranged in a 1-2-1 layout, with a total capacity of 40 BusinessElite suites (down from 42). Delta has stated that eventually all international 767 aircraft will feature some form of full-flat seat.

Domestic First Class

First Class is offered on domestic flights. It is available on Boeing 737-800, 757-200, MD-88, MD-90, and domestic 767-300 and 767-400 aircraft. Seats range from 18.5-20.75 inches wide, and have between 37-40 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals, drinks, and alcohol. All domestically-configured 767-400, wingleted 737-800s, and (Transcon) 757-200 aircraft have power-ports at each seat. Delta intends on replacing First Class with BusinessElite on all 767-400 aircraft.

When the ex-AA/TWA ETOPS 757s were first delivered, they initially featured 22 domestic First Class seats that were originally installed by TWA. On international routes, the aircraft were sold entirely as Economy class. All of the ETOPS 757s now feature the new Recaro BusinessElite seats.

International Economy Class

Economy Class is available on all international flights. Seats range from 17 to 18 inches wide, and have between 31 and 33 inches of pitch. A few of the newest 767-300ER and all 767-400ER, 777-200ER, and 777-200LR aircraft feature economy class seats with moveable headrests. The economy class seats on the 777-200ERs also feature mechanically adjustable lumbar support. The economy seats on the 777-200LRs are the new Weber 5751 model slimline seats. These seats are better contoured than the seats on the 777-200ERs and 767-400ERs, allowing for greater passenger comfort, however, they do not feature adjustable lumbar support. The ex-TWA ETOPS 757s feature new Weber slimline seats, except without moveable headrests. Economy Class passengers receive free meals with one alcoholic beverage, refreshments, as well as a mid-flight snack. Additional alcohol may be purchased for $7.

Starting in 2010, Delta will be installing new staggered Cozy Suite seats from Thompson Solutions on their international 767 and 777 fleet.[90] These seats are arranged diagonally and feature padded sides for a comfortable resting position. These seats also feature a unique recline mechanism where the seat bottom moves down and forward instead of the seat back tilting backwards, thus resulting in more room for passengers behind when the seat is reclined. Due to their diagonal layout, these seats will also allow Delta to increase capacity on their widebody aircraft without significantly reducing seat width. The seats will be in a diagonal 2-4-2 layout on the 767s, and a diagonal 3-4-3 layout on the 777s.

Domestic Economy Class

Economy Class is available on all domestic flights. Seats range from 17 to 17.5 inches wide, and have between 30 and 33 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free drinks and snacks. Food is available for purchase on all flights 1500 miles or more (flights to Hawaii and Alaska continue to receive complimentary meal service[91]). Alcohol may also be purchased for $7.00. Domestically-configured 767-400 aircraft feature in-seat EmPower. The domestic 767-400 fleet also features seats with moveable headrests, making them the only domestic aircraft in Delta's fleet to feature this amenity. The 737-800 and domestic 767-300 fleet have recently been refitted with new Weber slimline seats allowing for greater capacity while maintaining sufficient legroom. Unlike the slimline seats on the 777-200LRs, the new seats on the 737-700s, 800s, and domestic 767-300s do not feature moveable headrests.

Delta operates Delta EATS, a buy on board food program for economy class North America flights.[92] Delta operated a previous buy on board starting in 2003 and ending by 2005.[93][94]

SkyMiles

File:DeltaSkyMilesLogo.png

SkyMiles is Delta's frequent flyer program. Created in 1981[95] as the "Frequent Flyer Program"; its name was changed to SkyMiles in 1995. When the frequent flyer program was first established in 1981, new members were awarded an enrollment bonus of 10,000 miles. In 2006, SkyMiles was picked as the "best frequent flyer program" in the Best in Business Travel Awards.

In addition to its Delta Connection, Delta Shuttle and SkyTeam alliance partnerships, Delta offers frequent flyer partnerships with the following airlines:

On May 1, 1995, Delta Air Lines modified its frequent flyer program, previously called "Delta Air Lines Frequent Flyer Program" and renamed it "SkyMiles". Miles from the old program would never expire but newly earned miles in the SkyMiles program would if there was no account activity for three years. However, effective January 1, 2007, the rules for SkyMile accounts changed, with miles expiring after two years of no activity. At the same time, the old Frequent Flyer program miles were combined into SkyMiles, effectively negating their unlimited shelf-life.

On 2008-07-31, Delta adjusted the cost of award tickets by implementing a three-tier system that will cost last-minute fliers 60,000 miles for a domestic coach ticket.[97]

Crown Room Club

Delta's airport lounge is the Crown Room Club. Delta Crown Room Clubs are located in 27 airports. Membership can be obtained via an annual pass (purchased using money or SkyMiles) or purchasing a single-visit pass.

Membership benefits vary by location, but generally include free drinks (including alcoholic beverages) and reading material. Wi-Fi is not complimentary. It is mostly provided by T-Mobile. Other benefits for Crown Room Club members include reciprocal lounge access with other SkyTeam members and Delta's other partners. Some select Crown Room Clubs feature putting greens as a result of Delta Air Lines being the official airline of the PGA Tour.

Codeshare agreements

Delta Air Lines has codeshare agreements with the following airlines as of August 2008:[98]
(This list does not include SkyTeam airlines)

Advertising

Delta has had several different slogans throughout its history:

  • In 1940, Delta adopted the slogan: "Airline of the South".
  • In 1961, Delta adopted the slogan: "The Air Line with the Big Jets".
  • In 1966, with the introduction of the first Series 61 DC-8, Delta adopted the slogan "Fly big to Florida... Fly Delta!". Bob Hope, known in ads as Bob "Super DC-8" Hope, was Delta's spokesperson at the time.
  • In 1968, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is ready when you are".
  • In 1972, Delta adopted the slogan: "Fly the best with Delta".
  • In 1976, Delta adopted the slogan: "Celebrate the Bicentennial with Delta".
  • In 1980, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is the Best".
  • In the interim period between 1984 and 1986 Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta gets you there with care".
  • In 1986, Delta became: "The Official Airline of Walt Disney World".
  • In 1987, Delta adopted the slogan: "The Best Get Better", reflective of the airline's merger with Western Airlines.
  • In 1987, Delta adopted the slogan: "We Love To Fly, And It Shows".
  • In 1989, Delta became: "The Official Airline of Disneyland and Walt Disney World".
  • In 1991, Delta adopted the slogan: "Delta is your choice for flying."
  • In 1994, Delta adopted the slogan: "You'll love the way we fly".
  • In 1996, Delta adopted the slogan: "On top of the world". This slogan was launched at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, for which Delta was the official airline.
  • In 2000, Delta adopted the slogan: "Fly___", in which the blank was filled in according to the context of the slogan's usage. For example, on the airline's cocktail napkins, the slogan was "Fly 'refreshed'". For luggage tags, the slogan read "Fly 'for business'" or "Fly 'me home'".
  • Immediately after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Delta adopted the slogan, "Delta remembers America".
  • In 2004, Delta adopted a marketing scheme using "Secret Places - ___", in which the blank was filled in according to the picture being used in the advertisement (and coinciding with a major Delta destination). Several examples of this marketing remain in place on jetways and in gate waiting areas in Atlanta and New York-JFK.
  • In 2005, Delta adopted the slogan: "Good Goes Around"[99]
  • In 2007, Delta Air Lines exited bankruptcy; to highlight surrounding changes, the airline chose "Change Is:__________" (in which the blank was filled according to the context of the slogan's usage) as its slogan. Other advertisements used the tagline "Change Is: Delta" in a play on the use of the Greek letter delta to denote the difference operator in mathematics.
  • In 2008, as part of the rebranding project and not a traditional advertising campaign, a new safety video featuring a flight attendant premiered on YouTube in early 2008 garnering over 1 million views and the attention of news outlets, specifically for the video's camp and cheek tones mixed with the serious safety message. The flight attendant, Katherine Lee, has been dubbed "Deltalina" by the media for her similar appearance to movie star Angelina Jolie. [100] [101] [102] [103]

Karl Jenkins' Adiemus project began in 1994 as a music project for Delta Air Lines' European advertising campaign. The song was later released on the albums Pure Moods and Adiemus: Songs of Sanctuary, and was also used in Delta's commercials in the United States from 1996 until 1999. [citation needed]

Delta awards the annual Delta Prize for Global Understanding in conjunction with the University of Georgia.[104]

Incidents and accidents

The following are major incidents and accidents that occurred on Delta Air Lines mainline aircraft. For Delta Connection incidents, see Delta Connection incidents and accidents.

Delta Air Lines Reported Incidents
Flight Date Aircraft Location Description Casualties
Fatal Serious Minor Uninjured Ground
N/A [5] April 22, 1947 DC-3 Columbus, Georgia A Vultee BT-13, owned by the Tuskegee Aviation Institute landed on top of the DC-3, which was flying from Macon to Columbus. 8 1
705
[6]
March 10, 1948 DC-4 Chicago Midway Airport Crashed near Chicago Municipal (Midway) Airport shortly after takeoff while en route to Miami. Officials determined that longitudinal control of the airplane was lost resulting in the crash. The cause for the loss of control remains undetermined. 12 1
318
[7]
May 17, 1953 DC-3 Marshall, Texas Crashed 13 miles east of Marshall, Texas. The flight which originated from Dallas Love Field was on approach to Shreveport, Louisiana. The crash is was attributed to adverse weather conditions with a thunderstorm in the area at the time of the crash. 19 1 1
1903 May 23, 1960 Convair 880 Atlanta Crashed during a training exercise in Atlanta. The aircraft stalled and crashed killing all four crew members. 4
9877 [8] March 30, 1967 DC-8 New Orleans Crashed during a training exercise near New Orleans International Airport. The improper use of flight and power controls by both instructor and the Captain-trainee during a simulated two-engine out landing approach, resulted in the loss of control. The aircraft crashed into a residential area, destroying several homes and a motel complex, killing 13 civilians. 6 13
9570
[9]
May 30, 1972 DC-9 Greater Southwest International Airport Crashed during landing procedures in Fort Worth, TX. The probable cause of the accident was wake turbulence resulting from a touch-and-go landing moments before of American Airlines Flight 1114, operated using a DC-10. The right wing hit the ground causing a fire resulting in the aircraft being written off. 4
954 [10] December 20, 1972 Convair 880 Chicago O'Hare Int'l Airport The Delta CV-880 taxied across runway 27L in bad weather. At the same time, a North Central Airlines DC-9 took off from the same runway. Both aircraft collided. 94 10
723 July 31, 1973 DC-9 Boston Logan International Airport Crashed in seawall. Contributing to the accident was a defective flight deck instrument giving the crew misleading guidance during the instrument approach in visibility less than a half mile with 500 foot cloud ceilings. Initially 88 occupants died. One person, Leopold Chouinard [11], died from burns months after the accident, leaving no survivors [12]. 89
191 August 2, 1985 Lockheed L-1011 Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport On a Fort Lauderdale-Dallas/Fort Worth-Los Angeles route, the plane crashed due to severe microburst-induced wind shear. One civilian was killed as the plane crossed a highway. The crash would later become the subject of a television movie. Numerous changes to pilot wind shear training, weather forecasting, and wind shear detection were made as a result of this crash and the subsequent investigation.[105] 134 15 12 2 1
810 June 30, 1987 Boeing 767 Los Angeles International Airport Lost power immediately after takeoff when the captain, trying to remedy an engine alert indication, inadvertently cut the fuel flow to both engines[106]. Engine restart was accomplished at 500 ft AGL. The captain was suspended; after fighting revocation of his airline transport pilot certificate he died in 1992 in a crash at the Oshkosh Air Show[107]. 0 0 0 197 0
1141 August 31, 1988 Boeing 727 Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport Crashed after takeoff bound for Salt Lake City, Utah. Officials believe the crash was contributed by improper configuration of the flaps and leading edge slats. 14 26 50 18
1288
[13]
July 6, 1996 MD-88 Pensacola Regional Airport An uncontained engine failure of the port (left) engine on the aircraft which resulted in a fan hub piercing the cabin. The flight was scheduled to fly to Atlanta 2 2 3 135
1989
[14]
September 11, 2001 Boeing 767-300 Enroute from Logan International Airport Flight 1989, bound for Los Angeles International Airport was caught in the path of United Airlines Flight 93. The two aircraft were so close that ATC were initially confused as to which plane had been hijacked. The Delta pilot managed to avoid United 93 and the flight was later diverted to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.[108] N/A

Hijackings

There have been over a dozen attempted hijackings which resulted in no injuries and the surrender of the often lone hijacker. These incidents are not included. The following are notable hijackings because of fatalities or success in forcing the aircraft to fly to another country

  • In 1968, a Delta DC-8 was hijacked to Havana, Cuba. This was the first successful hijacking to Cuba from the U.S. since 1961[109], and was the start of multiple hijacking attempts to Cuba in the late 1960s. This coincided with the introduction of passenger screening using metal detectors in U.S. airports starting in the late 1960s.
  • July 31, 1972, a Delta flight 841, a Detroit to Miami DC-8 flight, was hijacked to Algiers, Algeria by 8 hijackers. The aircraft stopped in Boston to pick up an international navigator, who was wearing only swimming trunks and a shirt. The flight was allowed to return with passengers to the U.S., stopping in Barcelona for refueling.[114][115]
  • On February 22, 1974, Samuel Byck, an unemployed tire salesman from Pennsylvania, stormed aboard a Delta Air Lines Flight 523, DC-9 flight at Baltimore Friendship Airport (now Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport) scheduled to fly to Atlanta and shot both pilots, killing the First Officer, Fred Jones. He intended to crash the plane into the White House.[116] After shooting the pilots, the hijacker grabbed a passenger and demanded that she fly the aircraft.[117]
  • On August 23, 1980, a Delta Air Lines L-1011 on a San Juan to Los Angeles flight was hijacked to Cuba.[118] The hijacker was jailed by Cuban authorities, and all passengers were released unharmed.
  • On September 13, 1980, a Delta Air Lines New Orleans to Atlanta flight was taken over by two hijackers and forced to fly to Cuba. The flight continued to Atlanta after stopping in Havana.[119] The hijackers were imprisoned by Cuban authorities. One hijacker was released and later sought US residency. The suspect was later arrested by US authorities in 2002[120] and sentenced to prison the following year.

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  89. ^ Delta Newsroom
  90. ^ http://gizmodo.com/382292/delta-cozy-suite-seats-make-economy-class-semi+tolerable Delta "Cozy Suite" Seats Make Economy Class Semi-Tolerable
  91. ^ "Food." Delta Air Lines. Accessed October 11, 2008.
  92. ^ "Food." Delta Air Lines. Accessed October 11, 2008.
  93. ^ Alexander, Keith L. "Passengers find buy-on-board food hard to digest - Airlines are starting to feed fliers again." San Francisco Chronicle. Sunday March 27, 2005.
  94. ^ "Buy On-Board Meals?." The Early Show/CBS News. July 7, 2003.
  95. ^ InsideFlyer.com: The First Frequent Flyer Programs
  96. ^ "Delta and Hawaiian Airlines Team Up On Frequent Flyer Benefits" (Press release). Delta Air Lines. 2008-03-17. Retrieved 2008-03-17. {{cite press release}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  97. ^ Delta Redoes Mileage Plan for Its Fliers (NY Times)
  98. ^ Delta Air Lines Codeshare Agreements
  99. ^ Delta Slogan "Good Goes Around"
  100. ^ Delta's New In-flight Safety Video
  101. ^ Delta's YouTube Star
  102. ^ Delta's Red-Headed Flight Attendant a Hit on YouTube in Airline's Safety Video
  103. ^ 'Deltalina,' a real Delta employee, is loving the safety spotlight
  104. ^ The Delta Prize for Global Understanding
  105. ^ When Weather Changed History - Delta 191; The Weather Channel
  106. ^ Associated Press, Delta Pilot Loses License Over Plane's Power Loss, New York Times, August 9, 1987.
  107. ^ NTSB Report CHI92FA223
  108. ^ http://www.gpoaccess.gov/911/pdf/fullreport.pdf The 9/11 Commission Report; Chapter 1.2 "Improvising a Homeland Defense"
  109. ^ http://www.psepc.gc.ca/prg/ns/airs/rep1-app3-en.aspand
  110. ^ ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana
  111. ^ ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana
  112. ^ ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 Havana
  113. ^ ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-1011 TriStar Havana
  114. ^ Delta Hijacking NBC News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive
  115. ^ ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-8 Algiers
  116. ^ Schneier on Security: Patrick Smith on Airline Security
  117. ^ Hijack Attempt CBS News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive
  118. ^ Havana-Bound - TIME
  119. ^ FBI agents arrest 1980 hijacker of Delta Air Lines aircraft. | Crime, Law Enforcement & Corrections > Law Enforcement from AllBusiness.com
  120. ^ FBI agents arrest 1980 hijacker of Delta Air Lines aircraft | Airline Industry Information | Find Articles at BNET.com

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