Airline Lounge Overcrowding
Airline lounges are experiencing severe overcrowding as credit‑card issuers oversell access, diluting the premium experience. Capital One now charges $45 per guest and has removed complimentary guest slots, while American Express restricts guests to those on the same flight. The surge in eligible members has led to long queues and diminished lounge exclusivity. Both airlines and card issuers are reevaluating capacity allocation to protect brand value.

Connecting Canals
Scotland’s Falkirk Wheel, completed in 1999, replaced a historic series of 11 locks linking the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. The rotating boat lift raises vessels 24 meters using only about 75 kWh per turn, making it one of...

Press Release: Aviointeriors Taps Salient Motion for Seat Actuation
Aviointeriors has partnered with Salient Motion to equip its Allegra and Allegra HD business‑class seats with a new Seat Actuation Control System. The modular, software‑defined solution reached qualification‑ready status in under a year, leveraging Salient Motion’s rapid certification process. The...

SpaceX Targets 150Mbps per User for Upgraded Starlink Direct-to-Cell
SpaceX announced it aims for peak download speeds of 150 Mbps per user on its next‑generation Starlink Direct‑to‑Cell service. The current satellite‑to‑phone offering, delivered with T‑Mobile under the T‑Satellite brand, tops out at roughly 4 Mbps and is limited to texting and...

Tesla Seeks Approval to Test FSD Supervised in New Swedish City
Tesla has submitted an application to the Jönköping municipality to conduct Full Self-Driving (Supervised) trials. The company already operates similar pilots in several Swedish towns and on the national road network. The proposed tests will involve a limited fleet of...
Midweek Roundup: Bill Comes Due
Washington’s Senate has introduced a $2 billion bond package to fund highway and bridge upkeep, marking a shift toward debt financing after years of regressive taxes. The proposal allocates modest resources to transit and ferries, sparking concerns among public‑transport advocates. Meanwhile,...

Tesla Begins Grok AI Chatbot Rollout to Australia and New Zealand Fleet
Tesla has begun rolling out its Grok AI chatbot to eligible vehicles in Australia and New Zealand via an over‑the‑air update. The assistant, built by Elon Musk’s xAI, is now live on Model S, 3, X and Y equipped with AMD processors...

Is Airport Meet & Assist Poised for Growth?
Airport meet‑and‑assist services, once a niche for premium travelers, are now priced for the mass market, with Al Maha in Doha charging as little as 325 Riyals. The article compares these services to high‑end offerings like Heathrow’s £4,060 Invitation package and highlights...

Kansas City Is Again Expanding Its Once-Mocked Streetcar
Kansas City’s Streetcar Authority announced an east‑west free‑fare line that will join the existing north‑south Main Street route, extending service to the historic 18th & Vine jazz district and crossing the segregating Troost Avenue. The plan follows a 1.2‑mile Riverfront...

Airlines UK Annual Dinner 2026: Industry Champions Growth but Warns on Rising Costs
At the Airlines UK Annual Dinner 2026, industry leaders praised strong government backing for airspace modernization, airport expansion and Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) development, while warning that rising costs threaten the sector’s competitiveness. Baroness Liz Sugg highlighted aviation’s contribution of...

Seeking Causality in Transport Research
David Levinson’s 2026 perspective highlights a chronic mismatch in transport research: policymakers ask causal questions while most studies rely on associative designs and still use causal language. The paper delineates causal, associational, and descriptive claims, then proposes a compact set...
UK Pilot: Training Boosts Disabled Access to Shared Micromobility | Cities Today
A Salford pilot led by Collaborative Mobility UK and delivered by Cycling UK trained 41 disabled participants on shared e‑bikes and e‑scooters. The hands‑on programme boosted confidence and practical skills, with more than half of the cohort riding independently within...

Rebuilding A Dream -- 1973 BMW Bavaria
Dan Cole rebuilt his 1973 BMW Bavaria after a head‑on crash that totaled his first car, reusing roughly 40% of the original parts. He upgraded the suspension with Bilstein components, installed E9 brakes, and plans an M30B35 engine swap to...

60,000 Forged Certificates — Only One Man to Blame?
A UK‑based individual forged more than 60,000 authenticity certificates for CFM56 engine components between 2019 and 2023, selling counterfeit parts valued at roughly $9.3 million. The parts entered the global aftermarket and were installed by multiple MROs and airlines without proper...

Tesla to Improve One of Its Best Features, Coding Shows
Tesla is set to roll out a software update (2026.2.xxx) that upgrades its Matrix Headlights with two‑stage pixel dimming and enhanced detection of highly reflective objects such as road signs. The new code will allow the system to dim individual...

Lufthansa Advances 787-9 Allegris Bookings
Lufthansa has moved the opening of bookings for its Allegris business‑class seats on Boeing 787‑9 aircraft forward to March 29, ahead of the previously announced April 15 date. At least ten 787‑9s, nine already fitted with the premium Allegris cabin,...

Dublin Based ACIA Delivers Third ATR 72-600 to PNG Air
ACIA Aero Leasing has delivered a third ATR 72-600 turboprop to PNG Air, expanding the carrier's domestic fleet. The aircraft joins two earlier ATRs under a lease agreement, reinforcing PNG Air's three‑year strategic plan to modernise with a single‑type fleet....

Press Release: Gilat Receives $39 Million in Orders for Sidewinder ESA
Gilat Satellite Networks announced $39 million in orders for its Sidewinder electronically steered antenna (ESA) in‑flight connectivity terminals from a leading satellite operator, with deliveries slated over the next 12 months. The orders cover both line‑fit and retrofit installations, underscoring airlines'...

FMCSA Proposes Extending State Emergency Exemptions to 30 Days
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has proposed extending state‑issued emergency exemptions from the current 14‑day limit to 30 days, aligning them with federal emergency timelines. The change does not broaden the scope of exemptions, which remain limited to...
Current and Proposed Overnight Service Along the Link 1 Line
Sound Transit’s 2026 Service Plan proposes an overnight bus corridor mirroring the Link 1 and 2 lines, with a pilot launching March 28 between downtown Seattle and SeaTac at roughly 30‑minute intervals. The full service, extending to Everett, Tacoma and Lakewood, is...
Mondays 186: Datamatize Pedestrian Data
The Overhead Wire’s Monday episode spotlights a new MIT‑backed model that maps foot traffic across New York City, highlighting how data‑driven insights are reshaping pedestrian planning. It also cites a Scientific American study showing that relocating to walkable cities can...

Spatial Patterns of Access-Density Mismatch Reveal Infrastructure Gaps and Strategic Opportunities for New Housing
Researchers Jantabadi, Ermagun, and Levinson analyze access‑density mismatch across the fifty most populous U.S. metropolitan areas. They find a statistically significant positive correlation between local residential density and both automobile and transit access, with automobile access exerting a stronger effect....

Streetcar and Interurban Deployment in the United States: 1894-1926
The study by Li, Hoang, and Lahoorpoor compiles operating track lengths for U.S. streetcar and interurban systems from 1894 to 1926, using McGraw American Street Railway Investments Directories. It aggregates data by state and metropolitan area, revealing a national peak...

Tuesday’s Headlines Went the Wrong Way
Urban planners are reversing 1950s one‑way street conversions, citing safety, pedestrian, pollution, and local business concerns. At the same time, cities from San Antonio to Boston are investing in bus rapid transit and extending fare‑free bus pilots to improve transit...
Tap to Pay Starts
Open payments, branded as Tap to Pay, launched today on Sound Transit and Metro, allowing riders to use credit cards and digital wallets alongside ORCA cards. Early adopters report ambiguous on‑board confirmations, making it unclear which card is charged and...
OTR Trucker-Songwriter Long Haul Paul's New 'After Party Sessions' Live Record
Long Haul Paul, the OTR trucker‑songwriter known from Overdrive Radio, is releasing two new records: the archival “1994: The Lost Tapes” and the live compilation “The After Party Sessions.” The live album captures performances from recent trucking events, many recorded...

Enter Overdrive's 2026 Trucker of the Year Competition
Overdrive has opened nominations for its 2026 Trucker of the Year competition, accepting entries until September 30, 2026. The contest targets independent owner‑operators who have run three or fewer Class 8 trucks and demonstrated strong profit and safety performance from 2022‑2025. Winners will...

Test Drive and Review of Mack Trucks Pioneer Model
Mack Trucks unveiled the Pioneer, a ground‑up redesign aimed at the long‑haul segment, replacing the Anthem with a wider, more aerodynamic cab and a new MP13 powertrain. The model promises up to 7% fuel‑efficiency gains from aerodynamics and an additional...

Aveva Buys First Green Jet Fuel Certificates Five Years Early
Aveva announced it has completed its first major purchase of sustainable aviation fuel certificates (SAFcs) five years ahead of its World Economic Forum First Movers Coalition commitment. The certificates were bought from British Airways, which sources the fuel from renewable...

Study: Most Of America’s Paint-Only Bike Paths Are On Our Deadliest Roads
A new Journal of Cycling and Micromobility Research study finds that 77% of America’s on‑road bike infrastructure consists solely of painted lines, and 61% of those paint‑only lanes are classified as high‑stress corridors on fast, multi‑lane arterials. The research links...

Monday’s Headlines Take a Walk on the Not-So-Wild Side
A wave of recent reports highlights the expanding link between pedestrian‑friendly design and mental health, while revealing stark funding imbalances in U.S. transportation. Federal allocations deliver just 16% of transit dollars to local jurisdictions despite most roads being locally managed,...
Monday's Friday Reads for 23 February
The Monday Friday Reads roundup highlights several transport developments on 23 February 2026. London’s Northern line upgrade may repurpose a former horse hospital into a new train depot, coinciding with the inaugural train arrival at Northumberland Park. High‑speed services across Europe...
Crosslake Simulated Service Suspended Indefinitely (Update: Service Has Resumed)
A power outage between Bel‑Red and Downtown Redmond forced Sound Transit to suspend simulated service on the 2 Line, halting trains across the Eastside corridor. The agency issued a series of five contradictory alerts, leaving riders uncertain about which segments...

FMCSA Announces Rapid Actions to Shut Down ‘Chameleon Carriers,’ CDL Mills, ELD Cheating
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration unveiled three rulemakings and a sweeping fraud‑crackdown targeting ghost offices, sham CDL schools, and fraudulent electronic logging devices. Carriers and training providers must now maintain a physical office inspectable within 48 hours, and drivers...
TNflygirl and the Beech Debonair
On 7 December 2023 a Beech 35‑C33 Debonair crashed in Tennessee, killing the private pilot known as “TNflygirl” and her father. The pilot, a YouTube creator documenting her flight‑training journey, had 390 total flight hours—about 200 in the Debonair—but had not demonstrated...

'Great News for Spot Rates'? Supreme Court Rules Against Trump Emergency Tariffs
In a 6‑3 ruling, the Supreme Court held that President Trump lacked authority under the International Emergency Economic Power Act to impose sweeping tariffs, invalidating duties that had reached 145% on certain Chinese imports. The decision dismantles a cornerstone of...

ATA Seeks Expanded Compliance Latitude for EPA 2027 NOx Rules
The American Trucking Associations (ATA) has asked the EPA to soften key provisions of the 2027 nitrogen‑oxide (NOx) emissions rule for heavy‑duty trucks, arguing that the required technologies are not yet proven in real‑world use. ATA’s letter cites ongoing freight...
Friday Roundtable: ORCA Tap to Pay Begins on Monday
Sound Transit announced that ORCA’s Tap to Pay system will launch on February 23, 2026, allowing riders to tap a credit or debit card—or a mobile wallet such as Apple Pay, Google Pay, or Samsung Pay—directly at fare readers. The...

Friday Reads for 20 February
London Reconnections’ Friday Reads roundup highlights a mix of transport heritage, major infrastructure projects and sustainability initiatives. It spotlights LA’s $25 billion subway expansion aimed at easing freeway congestion, Boston’s pilot of green‑roofed bus shelters, and Toronto’s 30 km downtown pedestrian tunnel...

Non-Domiciled CDL Drivers, Advocates Call for States to Fight DOT
Non‑domiciled commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs) for thousands of immigrant truckers are slated to expire on March 6, prompting advocacy groups to urge California, Pennsylvania and other states to defy the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). DOT has warned that non‑compliance could...

Detroit Diesel Unveils Gen 6 Engines for 2027 Compliance
Detroit Diesel unveiled its sixth‑generation DD13, DD15 and DD16 engines, slated for release in early 2027, to satisfy the EPA’s 2027 heavy‑duty NOx rule that trims tailpipe NOx by more than 80 % and particulate matter by 50 %. The Gen 6 platform...

Dry Van and Reefer Spot Rates Slip as Flatbed Spot Rates Climb
Dry van and refrigerated spot rates slipped week‑over‑week, with dry van down about 6 cents and reefer down roughly 17 cents, yet both remain 22‑33% above last year. Flatbed spot rates, by contrast, posted modest gains of just over 4 cents and are...
FMCSA Shuts Down 500 'CDL Mills' After Wave of In-Person Audits
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) announced the shutdown of 550 sham commercial driver’s license (CDL) training schools after a massive wave of in‑person audits. Over 1,400 investigations were carried out in December, contributing to a total of more...

Federation of Professional Truckers Explains ELD Exemption Push with FMCSA
The newly formed Federation of Professional Truckers (FOPT) has filed a petition with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) requesting an exemption that would let its members and other carriers use traditional paper driver logs instead of electronic logging...
Movement on Earth
The article highlights massive human mobility events, noting 9.95 billion trips across China during the Lunar New Year and 650 million pilgrims converging on India’s 2025 Kumbh Mela. It describes how temporary megacities are erected for such gatherings and contrasts them with centuries‑old...

Chicago Freight Bottleneck Named Worst in Nation, ATRI Reports
The American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI) has named the I‑294/I‑290/I‑88 interchange in Chicago the most congested truck bottleneck in the United States, overtaking Fort Lee, New Jersey. The 15th annual Top Truck Bottleneck List, based on 2025 GPS‑based truck data, shows...

AGX Freight Goes Bust, Stiffs Carriers, Starts New MC
AGX Freight abruptly shut down after a dispute with Huntington Bank, leaving an estimated hundreds to a thousand carrier partners unpaid. The broker pledged its receivables to the lender, effectively giving the bank first claim on any incoming payments. Within...

FMCSA Revokes Nine ELDs; Carriers Have 60 Days to Replace Noncompliant Devices
On February 12, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration revoked nine electronic logging devices—GTS ELD, UTruckin, ELD365 ELOG, Ironman ELD, Factor ELD, and four AirELD versions—after they failed to meet Title 49 CFR technical standards. Motor carriers have a 60‑day...
'She's the Rock': Owner-Operator Patrick White Leans on Solid Partner in Tough Times
Top Notch Transport owner‑operator Patrick White was named Overdrive Radio’s Trucker of the Month, highlighting his perseverance after a broken leg and multiple accidents. White credits his wife, Ashlyn, for managing dispatch, paperwork, and compliance, effectively running the business while...

Real-World Fuel Savings Vs. Fuel Economy: What’s the Difference?
Fleet managers often receive aerodynamic device claims of 5 % fuel‑economy improvement, but those figures stem from controlled tests that may not reflect daily operations. Real‑world fuel savings emerge when test results are combined with a fleet’s specific speed, mileage, load,...