Does anyone know if Virgin still plan to press ahead with their order of six 380's or is this now being deferred to 2018 as they deal with the impending arrival of the Dreamliners ?
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RyanJW wrote:My guess is that it's likely they will use the deposits to buy A350-900's initially to replace the 747's as I believe there is another 6-7 odd years on the LGW 747's lease. They may not always look it but the LHR 747's are relatively young in terms of age, for example, VROC first was airborne in 2003 for example. I think we'll see VS move to an all Twin fleet as soon as humanly possible!
747heaven wrote:RyanJW wrote:My guess is that it's likely they will use the deposits to buy A350-900's initially to replace the 747's as I believe there is another 6-7 odd years on the LGW 747's lease. They may not always look it but the LHR 747's are relatively young in terms of age, for example, VROC first was airborne in 2003 for example. I think we'll see VS move to an all Twin fleet as soon as humanly possible!
Could well be, I have always been a 747 fan but I like the design of the A350, and they seem to be cheaper on the fuel economy as well if the reports I read are correct.
As for Mustang Sally being the oldest Heathrow based 747, isnt G-VROS which is in Manila the oldest of the entire of 747 fleet.
Just thinking that when the 747's go is it entirely possible the Barbados and St Lucia routes will become 330's every daythat they fly there ?
Blacky1 wrote:747heaven wrote:RyanJW wrote:My guess is that it's likely they will use the deposits to buy A350-900's initially to replace the 747's as I believe there is another 6-7 odd years on the LGW 747's lease. They may not always look it but the LHR 747's are relatively young in terms of age, for example, VROC first was airborne in 2003 for example. I think we'll see VS move to an all Twin fleet as soon as humanly possible!
Could well be, I have always been a 747 fan but I like the design of the A350, and they seem to be cheaper on the fuel economy as well if the reports I read are correct.
As for Mustang Sally being the oldest Heathrow based 747, isnt G-VROS which is in Manila the oldest of the entire of 747 fleet.
Just thinking that when the 747's go is it entirely possible the Barbados and St Lucia routes will become 330's every daythat they fly there ?
I don't think Ryan said mustang Sally was old did he ? He said she was first airborne in 2003
mitchja wrote:FAB is VS's oldest 744 as she was delivered to VS in April 1994.
edit to add - FAB is actually VS's oldest aircraft still in service.
Details here
RyanJW wrote:Anyone want to guess where the 744's came from that have a decent coffee machine onboard? The Boeing customer code will give you a hint
DrFlyer wrote:I think they could make the A380s work mostly due to the fact that they do draw in business and VS is the sort of airline that could promote the A380 effectively. They could easily use the capacity of the A380 to MIA, JFK, SFO, LAX and HKG (there's your six A/C), but whether they actually "want" to is a different matter. It's a shame.
747heaven wrote:Also not seen a lot of takers of the 747-8 passenger variant.
JCBR wrote:I agree. I love the 747 but it is from a golden era and not the future.
It will, however, be a long long time before they are no longer flying.
I would be surprised if VS get the 380. Their business model seems more suited to frequency rather than quantity.
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