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Thank you. I thought so too when I shot it just didn’t wanna sing me own praisesThat’s a great shot with that sky!
Thank you. I thought so too when I shot it just didn’t wanna sing me own praisesThat’s a great shot with that sky!
I have QF NZ registered QF737 seat maps from 2016. 7 aircraft. They were moved to Au VH rego.QF used to run a less Euro Business style cabin in 737’s to NZ, didn’t they?
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Have they bought anything since then that they’ve used for multiple roles, though?Can't see QF moving away from the "one aircraft, one config" rule they've applied on the newer aircraft (e.g 787s) onwards.
It would’ve been before that, if it was a Thing … would’ve been late noughties or earlier I guess.I have QF NZ registered QF737 seat maps from 2016. 7 aircraft. They were moved to Au VH rego.
NZ B737 were 12J 162Y. So the same as AU registered aircraft B737 of the same date (08-09-2016)
It’s likely that the next tranche of 787s for Qantas (delivery starting 2027) will have the same business, premium economy and economy class as the one on their A350-1000s. It would be a very uncompetitive choice to install the existing 787 seats on new 787s in 2027.Can't see QF moving away from the "one aircraft, one config" rule they've applied on the newer aircraft (e.g 787s) onwards.
I would suspect the same configuration, but couldn't it do something like DRW <> SIN or CNS <> SIN?No 220's will be operated by QF Mainline (it's a bone of contention with at least some 737 tech crew I've spoken with) and I rate as <1% chance any difference in config will occur with the next batch of aicraft and even less of changed J seating etc for international. Remember, QF are content to fly the 737 (and soon to be 321) on a route like MEL/SYD-DPS, so even if they deployed the 220 to a route like this, it's not going to see any big difference. I suspect the most international the 220 may do, like the E190, would be trans tasman most likely.
and as noted above - having differing subfleets becomes a nightmare for so many reasons. Heck, look at the pain points with the all Y 717's vs the 2 class ones, and there's a sub..... as one example.
I’m pretty sure that’s been asked and answered way up thread - yes it appears some seats will have extra leg room.Looking at that map, do Y seats A & C in rows 4-9 have extra legroom?
Honestly why bother upgrading the fleet to have a longer range at all. IFE and good J seating are what people fly premium airlines for, people can already get cheaper flights without either on other airlines to CNS PER DRW DPS NAN AKL.Quite boring TBH. No IFE, standard J seating. They'll come out soon enough though.
The a220 wasn't about the longer range. Its a new design clean sheet aircraft for regional market. It just so happens to also be able to do bigger distances that was not possible previously in this size aircraft. It just allows for future planning and flexibility.Honestly why bother upgrading the fleet to have a longer range at all. IFE and good J seating are what people fly premium airlines for, people can already get cheaper flights without either on other airlines to CNS PER DRW DPS NAN AKL.
Definitely not next week, probably in February.Haven't read every page of this thread, any word on when they expect to start flying them commercially? I suspect my flights next week will be too soon, but wondering when I can expect to board the new aircraft.
Quite boring TBH. No IFE, standard J seating. They'll come out soon enough though
Completely wrong. 100% no IFE.Also, Executive Traveller stated the contrary to your comment; “Qantas is expected to fit seatback video screens tip to tail”