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"Common" sense from a PAX circulation perspective would say a toilet is required towards the front of Y, especially as these aircraft get stretched in the Y section. Hey, a front toilet would even provide a separator from J and divert those who might have thought about heading to the J cubicle as well. A bit of extra plumbing and a few lost inches of seat space, but seriously, how many flights have less than 3 empty Y seats in them that they couldn't fore go those 3 seats. Pretty similar issue with 9 across 787, load factors on QF flights would suggest that 8 across 787 y would actually cost very little in actual lost seat km revenue and would have provided a layout that was genuinely worth paying a premium for.Makes sense for passenger circulation, particularly during meals.
But equally a negative for visibility of pax and exits in a safety scenario..
Plus whatever impact extra plumbing/ tanking has.
Overall it seems less favoured among the airlines ordering 321s versus an extra toilet at the back.
As above, the error being that these initial XLRs were destined for JQ and meant to be delivered in 2024, before
And they could follow JAL as the only other airline using 8 across in a 787 as designed.Pretty similar issue with 9 across 787, load factors on QF flights would suggest that 8 across 787 y would actually cost very little in actual lost seat km revenue and would have provided a layout that was genuinely worth paying a premium for.
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Qantas have more A220s than A321XLRs on order
They have options for 90+ across the two families is what I thought (prior to converting those 20 to firm for the last XLR order). But yes I was under the same impression re the firm orders.Thought QantasLink had 29 220s on order (7 delivered) versus Qantas with 48 321 XLRs (2 delivered, with 16 flagged as a long haul config), though the group holds various options for at least 50+ more 32Xs.
My figures were excluding the 20 ordered in Aug as I am expecting them to be significantly delayed beyond the 2028 date.Thought QantasLink had 29 220s on order (7 delivered) versus Qantas with 48 321 XLRs (2 delivered, with 16 flagged as a long haul config), (and Jetstar with 12 firm XLRs) though the group holds various options for at least 50+ more 32Xs.
They are supposed be much quieter, lower pressure and yes the bigger OH bins.If maybe there's only one thing that marks this as a gamechanger, is that QF is starting its significant shift away from Boeing to Airbus, particularly of its workhorse domestic fleet.
That was just more yanks on the planeI just flew in an AA A321T for the first time today and it was noisy as… I don’t recall the BA planes being that bad.
Thanks RooFlyer.Welcome to AFF @BM7500 .
Good to get observations from someone who is actually on the aircraft, including the toilet situation, rather than from the usual ‘problem? What problem?’ QF cheerleaders we have on AFF.