Hi Folks, something I've noticed in one or two comments/TR's on this site is that people often use the phrase "Old 747" when talking about Virgin's 747 fleet.
I thought that was a bit of a misnomer, so checked out Google. Found http://www.airfleets.net which shows backs up my suspicion:
- the average VS 747 is 11.5 years old, compared to 7.9 on the A340 fleet. Of the 12 747's in operation, 6 were delivered less than 9 years ago, so are still very young. Even the oldest is 16 years old, so still has a lot of life left!
- compare this to BA's (admittedly much larger) 747 fleet. Average age 15.9 years. Oldest aircraft is of 1989 vintage (21 years old), and many of the fleet were delivered around the same time as Virgin's oldest 747. The youngest BA 747 was only received in '99, compared to '03 for Virgin.
So, after a bit of a plane-spotterish browse through the internet I guess this shows that people do wrongly perceive the 747's to be old, and actually they're a pretty young bunch! Wonder why people regard them as old? Perhaps the older IFE on some aircaft?
I thought that was a bit of a misnomer, so checked out Google. Found http://www.airfleets.net which shows backs up my suspicion:
- the average VS 747 is 11.5 years old, compared to 7.9 on the A340 fleet. Of the 12 747's in operation, 6 were delivered less than 9 years ago, so are still very young. Even the oldest is 16 years old, so still has a lot of life left!
- compare this to BA's (admittedly much larger) 747 fleet. Average age 15.9 years. Oldest aircraft is of 1989 vintage (21 years old), and many of the fleet were delivered around the same time as Virgin's oldest 747. The youngest BA 747 was only received in '99, compared to '03 for Virgin.
So, after a bit of a plane-spotterish browse through the internet I guess this shows that people do wrongly perceive the 747's to be old, and actually they're a pretty young bunch! Wonder why people regard them as old? Perhaps the older IFE on some aircaft?
Always planning a trip somewhere!