President Obama is on a visit to India. Our photographer Uday Krishna caught the two VC-25A that transported the President, tail numbers 28000 and 29000 more commonly known as Air Force One on their approach to New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International airport.
The President is on one aircraft and the other serves as a back-up.
The two aircraft are maintained at the 89th Airlift Wing, Presidential Airlift Group (PAG) based at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland just outside Washington DC.
When the President is not on board, these aircraft normally use the call sign SAM 28000 or SAM 29000. SAM standing for Special Air Mission and then the tail numbers.
Two air force one aircrafts landed in New Delhi?
The president will always fly with two aircraft. One will be the one that he actually flies on and the other will serve as a spare in case of any problem with the first.
Actually the two VC-25’s are tail numbers 28000 and 29000 (as explained in the article). Any plane the President of the United States (POTUS) flies on is automatically given the call sign ‘Air Force One’.
That is correct. There are times when the President will not use either of these 747s but may choose a military aircraft (ex. many trips to Afghanistan) — then that military plane become AF1.
Air Force One are not two. The aircraft that the president occupies get the Air Force One call sign. The other one is called SAM = Special Air Mission.