Hear, hear! Google is the best search engine out there... Thanks for the tips. -----Original Message----- From: damiross2@attbi.com [mailto:damiross2@attbi.com]=20 Sent: Friday, February 28, 2003 3:18 PM To: AIRLINE@LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU Subject: Re: Upcoming Asia trip "Give a hungry man a fish, he isn't hungry for a while. Teach a man how to fish and he's never hungry again." (or something like that. So, what does that have to do with your posting? Simple - I'm going to tell you how to look up the equipment on your LAX-BKK then you and others can apply this knowledge to other flights. 1. Low tech way: call the airline 2. high tech ways (at least two ways!) a. Go to the airilne's web page (use google.com or justplanes.com to locate the web page) b. use a reservations system such as orbitz.com or travelocity.com 3. lazy way - ask on this list, which, if you follow #1 or #2 above, you will never do. As for the photography question: that's a good question for this list, in addition to doing research on it by using google.com (use such terms as aircraft photography bangkok). Unfortunately, I don't know about photography in Thailand or Hong Kong There is also a site called planespotting.com that can help (located this through google.com) No, I don't work for google.com - I just find it is the best search engine available. If it's on the web, it's in google.com David R > Leaving next Friday for my first trip to Asia. Here are my flights: > > UA BOS-LAX > THAI LAX-BKK > > Bangkok Airways while in Thailand > > THAI BKK-HKK > UA HKK-SFO > UA SFO-BOS > > Anyone have details on what equipment Thai operates from LAX? Also,=20 > are there any good commercial aviation sights to see while in Thailand > or HK or restrictions on photography. > > Sick of the US shuttle after eight flights in the last six weeks. > > tyler