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The current 75 strong 737 fleet got delivered over 13 years (2002-2014) which is pretty much 6 a year.will take about 20 years to replace the aging B737s
Think the aircraft were ordered before the operational issues became apparent.. but in Qantas's case this seems to be more an own goal on staff training and turnover.they were wooed by the potential savings to be had by an operations restructure coupled with shiny new technology while ignoring the pain other operators were going through.
Just published this morning.
Financially look pretty strong.
On some of the stuff us flyers care about.
New 737 Refurb program to commence this year (seemingly for 60 or so aircraft given the refurbs for 10 QF 333s and 11 JQ 787s already announced).
Lockers presumably for the non-BSI aircraft in this fleet
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Detailed press release however only says 42 aircraft (not clear where the gap of 20 or so is) and not due to commence until 2027
It's not mentioned, but neither are screen sizes, so suspect this means removal of IFE in the aircraft that have it.
Slight pushback of new deliveries on supplier delays.
First 321 XLR now June 2025.
First Sunrise 350 remains as second half of 2026
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Interestingly zero mention of inflight internet
From https://www.qantasnewsroom.com.au/m...nvestment-in-new-aircraft-and-cabin-upgrades/Still baffled by the A220 debacle, it seems they were wooed by the potential savings to be had by an operations restructure coupled with shiny new technology while ignoring the pain other operators were going through.
Translation: We (QF) have no idea what we are doing. It is utter chaosQantas’ fleet renewal is also underway with five A220s now in operation and performing well. However, as the fleet is still sub-scale, benefits were outweighed in the half by costs associated with transitioning to a new fleet type.
Possibly.Suspect the gap are the newer aircraft with IFE. They don’t need a refurb. Many only 11 years old (2014 build).
I think that retirement schedule is on indefinite hold given the refurb for the whole fleetPlus depending on 737 retirement schedule,
Possibly.
Albeit I thought the IFE/ non-IFE was roughly 50/50.
Maybe BSI + IFE.
And if that's the case then it probably means only 9 of the oldest 737s aren't getting a refurb.
Everything we heard points to that yes which is why I also hope they do an update on the IFE for J as well on thr refresh or you'll have very disconnected gap in technology upfront and down back. (Also miffed they're not installing PE on them).Did we know the A330 refurb was installing the sunrise Y seats (with the new larger screens)? That's pretty cool.
That was known - https://www.qantasnewsroom.com.au/m...-generation-cabin-upgrades-for-a330-aircraft/Did we know the A330 refurb was installing the sunrise Y seats (with the new larger screens)? That's pretty cool.
They are replacing seats. I'm pretty sure a basic seat with a tablet holder is going to be quite a bit cheaper (and lighter) than one with IFE in it, even if it costs you some $s to remove excess wiring.Either way they're not going to be ripping out IFE, cheaper to replace it.
My gap is from 80+ refurbs (per the slide at the top) less 10 QF 332s, less 11 JQ 788s = 69+ 737s.
To the 42 mentioned in the separate release - so a gap of 27.. (maybe accounted for with the IFE+BSI aircraft if someone switched an ~80 for 80+).
And if that's the case then it probably means only 9 of the oldest 737s aren't getting a refurb.
(And given refurbs don't commence until 2027, we might not see any 737 retirements until after that date)
So the financial benefit from running one type (737 to 321) will only kick in in about 2037(?), until then they will have to wear higher costs. Not great news for shareholders.I think that retirement schedule is on indefinite hold given the refurb for the whole fleet
Think that was always going to be the case.. remember the 737s were delivered over a 13yr period.So the financial benefit from running one type (737 to 321) will only kick in in about 2037(?), until then they will have to wear higher costs. Not great news for shareholders.
I mean that depends on how much the shareholders would've wanted QF to take the MAX family after all the Boeing issues. Otherwise no fleet renewal is NOT an option.So the financial benefit from running one type (737 to 321) will only kick in in about 2037(?), until then they will have to wear higher costs. Not great news for shareholders.