justinbrett
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Sorry mis communication should have written South East Asia instead of SEA.
That makes much more sense!
Sorry mis communication should have written South East Asia instead of SEA.
Because airlines stopped ordering them.Why did Boeing stop production of the 757?
Most passengers only prefer only 3 thingsUnderstand that, but it does bring up a good point. Most passengers prefer a twin aisle but the current crop seem a bit on the large side for a thin route.
Maybe 0.01% or less
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I was also wondering this. The ideal players that would suit a A330neo, seem to going with the 787 in many cases, or A350 (which is significantly more expensive vs A330).I can't understand why the A330neo isn't selling like hotcakes because the sheer number of narrow-bodies in use and on-order is exceeding the capacity of airports and will run into slot & gate constraints, the other thing pushing this would be that the cheap endless supply of pilots will be coming to an end, and the crew costs will drive airlines back to larger aircraft because when you can't get pilots anymore - you may as well use the ones you do have flying as many seats as possible.
Sorry I meant I was agreeing with your “2nd point”, as in this is all just discussion … even though the hypothetical twin-aisle aircraft we were talking of has a higher cross-sectional area per passenger, the actual impact on fuel-economy would involve actual calcs of a real aircraft … which doesn’t exist.It means AFF speculation on a laptop vs fluid dynamic engineer and supercomputers.
No, but that’s what we were talking about, “what if someone made a twin aisle with the capacity of a single-aisle”.Currently there are no single aisles with the capacity of twin aisle.
Because airlines stopped ordering them.
Just as airlines stopped ordering B747's
Most passengers only prefer only 3 things
Nor when booking what the aircraft type is. (99% have no interest).
- low air fares
- low air fares
- low air fares
On AFF we are in the 1% who are interested in such information.
Some good points being made here, quite interesting to us amateurs (well to me anyway).Sorry I meant I was agreeing with your “2nd point”, as in this is all just discussion … even though the hypothetical twin-aisle aircraft we were talking of has a higher cross-sectional area per passenger, the actual impact on fuel-economy would involve actual calcs of a real aircraft … which doesn’t exist.
No, but that’s what we were talking about, “what if someone made a twin aisle with the capacity of a single-aisle”.
That's my point.
So on a per-passenger basis, the single-aisle still has less cross-sectional area per passenger. Admittedly, to your 2nd point, whatever that actually means ...
- If you're carrying the same number of people in the two single-aisle aircraft as you are in one double-aisle aircraft, then you have the current scenario - twin-aisle aircraft are twice as large.
- But if the aircraft have the same carrying-capacity as each other, then two single-aisle aircraft are carrying twice as many passengers as your one twin-aisle aircraft is ...
There's still the issue of carrying the weight (ie. including structure to support that aisle) of a seat-sized piece of aisle every 6 pax in a 737 vs every 4.5 or 5 pax (because 2 aisles for a 9 or -ick- 10-seat row) in a 787. That's gotta be a cost, in fuel as well as cost-to-build.
They could go with a A330-900 or could look at adding more 787-800s
I was also wondering this. The ideal players that would suit a A330neo, seem to going with the 787 in many cases, or A350 (which is significantly more expensive vs A330).
I assume it is headline price etc, higher fuel burn etc related? Wish Jetstar went with the A330Neo vs the 787. A330 seems to be very reliable.
How?. Most of these flights use one JetBridgetwin-aisle aircraft to be viable in the 737 or A220 or A320 capacity, I agree, considerably quicker to exit!
Once the door’s open & pax are flowing, the hold-ups I’ve observed tend to be people stuffing-around with getting luggage out of overhead bins etc; blocking people behind them in that aisle.How?. Most of these flights use one JetBridge