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AnanthMohanram Member

Joined: 16 May 2017 Posts: 48 Location: Bangalore, Ann Arbor
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Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2018 8:48 am Post subject: Monsoon 2018: A trip to Baltimore (Part 1) |
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Hi everyone,
Welcome to Part 1 of my trip to Baltimore. I had decided to fly over to visit a close friend from school in College Park, Maryland, and visit Washington DC nearby. With Baltimore being closer to College Park and also the cheaper way to fly to the Washington DC area, I turned to Skyscanner to look for tickets. I had decided to fly out of Detroit at night after work on Friday and planned to return by Sunday evening. Delta always has really cheap fares when you book early and was also the only airline that operated flights between Detroit and Baltimore with suitable times. My itinerary looked like this:
17AUG18: DL1436 DTW BWI 2205 2344 B738
19AUG18: DL1906 BWI DTW 1754 1933 MD90
This was a rather short flight, with a flying time of only 1 hour, so I'll try and let the pictures do most of the talking!
I booked a cab operated by Lyft from Farmington Hills, MI, to Detroit’s Wayne County International Airport in Romulus. Booking cabs on Lyft is one way you get points on Delta’s Skymiles Frequent Flyer program; you earn 1 mile per every dollar spent on a Lyft ride. With the monsoon being pretty intense thus far, the skies were overcast. Dark gray clouds were everywhere, and prospects of a smooth ride looked grim.
Gloomy, gloomy monsoon skies
Delta, along with its partner airlines, operates flights out of the DTW’s newer Edward McNamara terminal. The terminal has a 1.6km long Concourse A and a smaller “satellite” concourse B serving Delta Connection flights. With no bags to check-in, I headed over to a kiosk to print my boarding pass.
E. McNamara Terminal facade and check-in scenes
The TSA security check was one level below the departure/check-in area. The agents were efficient, and the fairly large crowd was processed quickly. A box of Haldiram’s Soan-Papdi that I had bought for my friend triggered the alarm on the X-Ray machine. An officer took the bag away for secondary inspection, and that set my heart racing. Mentally, I was prepared to forgo the box, but the friendly officer ran a swab through it, put it through a machine, and said it was ok for me to take it along. With security done, I walked towards concourse A.
Owing to the terminal's length, the airport operates a train running from one end of concourse A to the other. My gate, A2, was at the far eastern end of the terminal, and I decided to try the train. The gates at the eastern end were quiet; Delta had a few departures: DL2745, a Boeing 737-800 service to Raleigh, North Carolina, and DL2576 to Phoenix. With around an hour to depart, the captain and first-officer were at the Gate, which had been hanged to A3. The flight to Baltimore was to be operated by N380DA, a 19-year-old Boeing 737-800. The aircraft flew in as DL1634 from Baltimore & was at the Gate around 21:15 EDT. Last-minute gate assignments were being issued, and from the looks of it, the flight seemed full. Boarding was announced at 21:30 EDT, starting with first-class and Delta Medallion members, followed by economy class. I boarded the aircraft in Zone 4, as did other passengers who booked a Basic Economy fare.
Duty-free stores post TSA Security
The very popular fountain at McNamara terminal, almost a Terminal Symbol
This beautiful A330-300 would fly to Amsterdam later in the evening
The sky train helps weary passengers, especially those with tight connections
The Westin Hotel is a part of the terminal, going by videos on YouTube, this hotel offers awesome views of the tarmac
Mr. Racoon Eyes taking a break after a trip to Asia
Concourse A's food and beverage section
MD-88 that would later fly to Hartford-Bradley Intl
Airline: Delta Airlines
Origin: Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, Romulus, Michigan, United States (DTW/KDTW)
Destination: Baltimore Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Baltimore, Maryland, United States (BWI/KBWI)
Flight Number: DL1436
Aircraft Type: Boeing 737-832
Registration: N380DA
Scheduled Departure Time: 22:05 EDT, 17th August 2018
Actual Departure Time: 22:25 EDT, 17th August 2018
Scheduled Arrival Time: 23:44 EDT, 17th August 2018
Actual Time of Arrival: 23:33 EDT, 17th August 2018
Actual Flying Time: 1 hour and 7 minutes
My ride to Baltimore that night, N380DA
On the Aero-bridge, countdown in progress!
The aircraft could’ve been a lot cleaner than it was. There was a sock under my seat, not to mention pieces of peanuts here and there, and an orange peel, presumably from the previous flight. Most of the overhead bins were full, and passengers who boarded the aircraft later had trouble finding space to store the luggage. The Detroit-based flight crew were accommodating in this regard and helped passengers quite cheerfully. The captain then made his pre-departure announcement from the flight deck: The flight to Baltimore would take 1 hour, there was some cloud cover over the Baltimore area and rain showers while flying out of Detroit. Perfect ingredients for a bumpy ride. The boarding process took a while as a few passengers connecting to Baltimore from other flights were delayed due to the weather.
Boarding in progress
IFE Screens, not often do you get these on short domestic flight, just lucky this time
The aircraft had in-flight entertainment screens, which was wonderful, even though this was a very short flight. The safety video, an interesting one, was then played. Delta has changed the uniform of their cabin crew, and different sections of the video featured the various crew uniforms, right from the inception of the airline to the most recent one. As the video was played, we were pushed away from Gate A3 at 22:15 EDT, and the CFM engines were powered up. The aircraft also had in-flight WiFi. The basic option of the WiFi service was free and allowed you to send text messages. The other paid options allowed audio and video streaming as well.
Very interesting safety video
Taxiing to RWY 3L
After a 10 minute taxi, past the de-icing bay, we lined up with Runway 3L for takeoff. Takeoff was extremely smooth and offered some wonderful views of Detroit. We turned right, heading east towards Lake Erie after take-off. There was some pretty heavy turbulence as we made our way to cruising altitude flying through those monsoon clouds. As we bounced along to our cruising altitude of 30,000 feet, I looked at what the in-flight entertainment had to offer. There was a decent collection of movies, audio albums, Live-TV and several TV shows. I was not really in the mood for anything, so I stuck to an audio album and the flight tracker. Once we were at around 20,000ft, there was an announcement from the lead cabin crew that there would be no snack & beverage service on this flight as we were flying through rough air, and the seatbelt signs would stay on until we reached Baltimore. I decided to try an album from the Classical music section, very soothing indeed.
Lining up with 3L
Airborne!
Climbing out of Detroit
This is where the roller-coaster started
Was very pleasant to listen to!
Almost there
With around 30 minutes to go, there was an announcement from the flight deck informing all on board that we would be landing at Thurgood Marshall Airport soon. The weather around the airport had eased off quite a bit; the skies were expected to be clear. The cabin crew went around the cabin quickly for a once over, holding on to the overhead bins for support. The descent into Baltimore was anything but smooth. It was very cloudy to the west of Baltimore, where we had started descent, and turbulence was very heavy, worse than when we took off from Detroit. Credit to the pilots for flying us safely through all the weather! Things got much better as we got closer to Baltimore. There were some nice views of the city of Baltimore at night. We flew past BWI’s Thurgood Marshall heading east and then turned north-west for landing on Runway 33L.
More turbulence during descent
Things got much better at 8000ft
Touchdown!!
At our gate in concourse D
A very quiet Concourse D
It was an almost 10-minute taxi to Concourse D, which Delta uses at BWI, a Southwest Airlines hub. De-boarding took a while, too long for a Boeing 737-800, and I was finally out of the aircraft at 23:50. The airport was very quiet at this time, with very few arrivals and departures. I followed the Rideshare signs to the departure level to wait for my Lyft cab. The driver, a friendly native of Myanmar, gave me a wonderful ride to the town of College Park while describing his story of immigrating to the US several years ago. The experience on Delta was ok. Very efficient, friendly crew and an early arrival in Baltimore, but a cabin that was borderline nasty was not something I expected from Delta. This is something that I have noticed, in varying degrees of nastiness, on some of my flights. They really need to pull up their socks in this department.
I was looking forward to spending the next couple of days in the Washington DC area before returning to DTW. Part 2, with some pictures from a very enjoyable plane spotting experience, will be out soon!
I hope you enjoyed this one! _________________ Best regards,
Ananth
Last edited by AnanthMohanram on Thu Feb 18, 2021 12:36 pm; edited 4 times in total |
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sumantra Member
Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Posts: 4685 Location: New Delhi
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Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2018 9:54 am Post subject: |
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What a lovely TR!
The destination took me back to 2005. I had undertaken journeys from College Park to DTW through DTW, so reading this was quite memorable for me. And yes, I was in College Park till September, so the airport had not been renamed till then. It was simply Baltimore-Washington International.
The DTW terminal train is an interesting feature!
Haldiram's sweets triggering an alarm! Ha ha! Do they have marble powder detectors?
DL's IFE looks quite nice and informative, and text over WiFi is something nice. Nice pun about `pulling their socks' (out)
I look forward to rekindling my memories with more from you, on this trip.
Cheers, Sumantra. |
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stealthpilot Member

Joined: 19 Dec 2006 Posts: 2325 Location: BLR, DXB
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Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2018 12:35 pm Post subject: |
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Great TR thanks for sharing.
- Loved the 'monsoon' clouds at Detroit
- nice pics of the DL wide bodies.
- I really liked DTW and the skytrain, altho the last time I was there it was NW territory. _________________ eP007 |
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AnanthMohanram Member

Joined: 16 May 2017 Posts: 48 Location: Bangalore, Ann Arbor
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Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2018 5:17 am Post subject: |
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sumantra wrote: | What a lovely TR!
The destination took me back to 2005. I had undertaken journeys from College Park to DTW through DTW, so reading this was quite memorable for me. And yes, I was in College Park till September, so the airport had not been renamed till then. It was simply Baltimore-Washington International.
The DTW terminal train is an interesting feature!
Haldiram's sweets triggering an alarm! Ha ha! Do they have marble powder detectors?
DL's IFE looks quite nice and informative, and text over WiFi is something nice. Nice pun about `pulling their socks' (out)
I look forward to rekindling my memories with more from you, on this trip.
Cheers, Sumantra. |
Thanks for your reply Sir! Yes, the airport was renamed in Oct 2005, just a month after your stay in College Park. The DTW terminal train is very useful. Only a few stops, but pretty quick and convenient when your connecting flight is at the other end of the airport. The Haldiram's Box: Haha! Must've been the Aluminum seal on the box. The DL IFE system is good,good choice of movies, LiveTV etc. _________________ Best regards,
Ananth |
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AnanthMohanram Member

Joined: 16 May 2017 Posts: 48 Location: Bangalore, Ann Arbor
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Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2018 5:19 am Post subject: |
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stealthpilot wrote: | Great TR thanks for sharing.
- Loved the 'monsoon' clouds at Detroit
- nice pics of the DL wide bodies.
- I really liked DTW and the skytrain, altho the last time I was there it was NW territory. |
Thanks a lot for your reply . Glad you liked the pictures! Yes, the skytrain back in the NW days had the NW logo. Now everything's Delta. _________________ Best regards,
Ananth |
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