AI chief Thulasidas has hinted at looking at the past scheme in bringing back the glory of AI when its new fleet arrives. Their brand consultant Alia is helping them on this. But here won;t be a radical change. Much like making the modifying the Centaur logo to point up a little.
The Connies had a simple scheme with straighforward style of lettering.
The 707 had the Centaur on the tail with a bit ofthe present red arrow head in the tail. The red arrown sah came first and then the Centaur.
What do you call the present AI scheme anyway?
And how can one forget that rather ghastly font of "Your Palace in the Sky"?
Disappeared from radar and believed to have hit the summit.
The main part of the wreckage was found about a year ago when a huge chunk of ice melted.
Incidentally, another Air India plane, a 707, on its way to Geneva -- Dr. Homi Bhabha, father of India's atomic energy programme was a passenger --- crashed at the same site and a few metres below where the Connie went down.
Major parts of this wreckage were also found recently by a French expedition.
Up to 117 people have been killed after an Air India Boeing 707 crashed near the summit of Mont Blanc in the Alps.
The plane was on a regular Bombay to New York flight when the accident happened at around 0800 local time.
All 106 passengers and 11 crew were killed on the aircraft as it prepared to land at Geneva airport in Switzerland.
One of the victims included chairman of the Indian Atomic Energy Commission Dr Homi Jehangir Bhabha, who was on his way to Vienna.
The remaining passengers were Indian nationals, 46 of whom were sailors. Six were British.
Gerard Devoussoux, a mountain guide who was one of the first to arrive at the disaster scene, said: "Another 15 metres (50ft) and the plane would have missed the rock. It made a huge crater in the mountain.
"Everything was completely pulverised. Nothing was identifiable except for a few letters and packets."
French authorities radioed back the news that there was virtually no hope of survivors shortly after landing in the area.
The search was eventually called off after bad weather and poor visibility hampered rescue efforts.
The plane was a few minutes behind schedule as it was preparing to make its descent.
But the captain of the Air India Boeing 707, who was one of the airline's most experienced pilots, had radioed the control tower a few minutes earlier to report that his instruments were working fine and the aircraft was flying at 19,000ft (5,791 metres) - at least 3,000ft (514 metres) higher than the Mont Blanc summit.
Shortly after, the plane crashed into the mountain.
Sixteen years ago an Air India Constellation flying from Cairo to Geneva crashed near the same spot, killing 48 passengers and crew .
What the French authorities said later: It is believed the most probable cause of the crash was that the pilot miscalculated his position as he was flying over Mont Blanc.
The radar controller picked up on the pilot's error and radioed back to ensure that he had corrected his position.
Unfortunately the correction was misunderstood by the captain who continued his descent after mistakenly thinking that he had passed the ridge leading to the summit.