North Eastern Airways: Difference between revisions
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'''North Eastern Airways''' (IATA: ''''NE''', ICAO: '''NEA''', Callsign: ''' | '''North Eastern Airways''' (IATA: ''''NE''', ICAO: '''NEA''', Callsign: '''North East''') is an American based airline that was founded by its current CEO Tyler Pinkerton on October 8th, 2007. Our first flight, NEA 75, was from Pittsburgh to Chicago with a leased 737-800 from Manchester International Airways. North Eastern Airways has since grown from a small airline based at Pittsburgh Intl Airport with one leased plane to an airline group with over 220 fully owned aircraft, 9 subsidaries and 21 world wide hubs. Pittsburgh Intl Airport is North Eastern Airways largest hub with over 600 daily flights and is also North Eastern Cargo's largest hub with over 400 daily flights. | ||
North Eastern Airways is also a founding member of the World Alliance, the oldest airline alliance around and codes flights to the other 8 members of the alliance. | North Eastern Airways is also a founding member of the World Alliance, the oldest airline alliance around and codes flights to the other 8 members of the alliance. | ||
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==North Eastern Airways== | ==North Eastern Airways== | ||
North Eastern Airways is the main part of our airline group and it has three branches to it; North Eastern Airways, North Eastern Express and North Eastern Cargo. | |||
*'''North Eastern Airways''' (ICAO: '''NEA''') is the mainline part of the airline. It flys to over 500 destinations worldwide with a fleet of 82 aircraft. NEA uses 16 hubs worldwide and provides all the Hub-Hub services. | |||
*'''North Eastern Express''' (ICAO: '''NEX''') is the regional part of the airline. It flys to most of the cities in the US that NEA does for added capacity but also serves the smaller community airports that are too small for mainline service. NEX flys out of all the same hubs as NEA does. | |||
*'''North Eastern Cargo''' (ICAO: '''NEC''') is the cargo part of the airline. It flys to all of the cities that both NEA and NEX do with its own fleet of Boeing freighters. | |||
===Subsidiaries=== | ===Subsidiaries=== | ||
North Eastern Airways has 7 wholey owned subsidiaries around the world. All aircraft used come from NEA's or NEX's fleet and are counted as a part of NEA's or NEX's fleet. All aircraft are painted in the subsidiaries livery that they fly for. | |||
====Air Italia==== | ====Air Italia==== | ||
====Fly Hawaii==== | '''Air Italia''' (ICAO: '''AIT''') is a small regional airline that is Based in Naples Italy. It serves all of the domestic airports of Italy with Domestic flights to one another and International flights throughout Europe through four hubs. It uses Boeing 717 and Bombardier Q400 aircraft from North Eastern Express' fleet. The 717s are used on Hub-Hub flights along with all of the International Flights while the Q400's are used for only domestic flights. | ||
====Fly Hawaii Express==== | |||
'''Fly Hawaii Express''' (ICAO: '''FHE''') is a small airline based In the Hawaiian Islands that provides intra-island services along with flights to certain mainland cities. It uses Boeing 717 and Bombardier Aircraft from NEX. Every major airport in the Hawaiian Islands have direct flights to one another but Maui is the main hub for the airline with all flights to/from the mainland coming here. | |||
====Fly Dubai Airways==== | ====Fly Dubai Airways==== | ||
'''Fly Dubai Airways''' (ICAO: '''FDA''') is a Luxory airline that is based in Dubai, United Arib Emirates. It uses Boeing 777-200LRs and 777-300ERs along with an Airbus A380 on flights to the major cities of the world. | |||
====Fly Tahiti Airways==== | ====Fly Tahiti Airways==== | ||
'''Fly Tahiti Airways''' (ICAO: '''FTA''') is a small airline that is based in Tahiti. It flys Bombardier Q400s and a sole Q402PF(Package Freighter) aircraft throughout all of the small islands of the South Pacific. North Eastern Airways provides flights from FTA's hub to its Auckland Intl Hub in New Zealand for flights out of the region. | |||
====Galaxy Aviation==== | ====Galaxy Aviation==== | ||
'''Galaxy Aviation''' (ICAO: '''GAL''') is a small bush airline that is based Fairbanks International Airport and Lake Hoob Seabase in Alaska. It provides the remote people of alaska along with tourists with travel within the state and with the needed cargo for survival. It owns its own fleet of 5 Beech 1900Ds, 5 DHC-6-400, 2 Q200, 2 Boeing 737-200QC and 2 Cessna 208B Grand Caravans. | |||
====Historic NEA==== | ====Historic NEA==== | ||
Historic North Eastern Airways (ICAO: '''HNEA''') is a "Historic" verison of North Eastern Airways who operates Domestic and International flights just as North Eastern Airways would have if they were from the mid 20th centry time frame. This subsidiary flys only aircraft that came before the year 1980. Allegheny County Airport (ICAO: KAGC), Pittsburgh International Airport (Only International flights from the Pittsburgh region operate from here)(ICAO: KPIT) and Mrytle Beach International Airport (ICAO: KMYR) are the three hubs that HNEA flies out of. | '''Historic North Eastern Airways''' (ICAO: '''HNEA''') is a "Historic" verison of North Eastern Airways who operates Domestic and International flights just as North Eastern Airways would have if they were from the mid 20th centry time frame. This subsidiary flys only aircraft that came before the year 1980. Allegheny County Airport (ICAO: KAGC), Pittsburgh International Airport (Only International flights from the Pittsburgh region operate from here)(ICAO: KPIT) and Mrytle Beach International Airport (ICAO: KMYR) are the three hubs that HNEA flies out of. | ||
====UK Connect==== | ====UK Connect==== | ||
UK Connect (ICAO: '''UKC''') is a European Regional Airline that is based at London City Airport (ICAO: EGLC) | '''UK Connect''' (ICAO: '''UKC''') is a European Regional Airline that is based at London City Airport (ICAO: EGLC) in London, England that flies to cities throughout Europe. The fleet is made up of four Bombardier Q400s along with three Embraer E195s. UK Connect offers both Business and Economy classes on all flights and serves the business people of Europe with direct flights right into the heart of London. | ||
==Hubs== | ==Hubs== | ||
Line 81: | Line 95: | ||
|160 | |160 | ||
|'' All Domestic'' | |'' All Domestic'' | ||
| | |Once operated a fleet of over 30 aircraft | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Boeing 747-8I]] | |[[Boeing 747-8I]] | ||
Line 157: | Line 171: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''Total''' | |'''Total''' | ||
| | |82 (320 Orders) | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
Line 173: | Line 187: | ||
!Notes | !Notes | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Airbus | |[[Aerospatiale/BAE Concorde]] | ||
|2 | |||
|100 | |||
|''Trans-Atlantic, Supersonic International flights'' | |||
|Retired twice | |||
|- | |||
|[[Airbus A300|Airbus A300B2/B4]] | |||
|1 | |||
|247 | |||
|''Domestic Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
|[[Airbus A300|Airbus A300-600]] | |||
|3 | |||
|266 | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Aquired through SJA merger, Quickly Sold | |||
|- | |||
|[[Airbus A330|Airbus A330-200]] | |||
|1 | |||
|293 | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Aquired through BAVC merger, Quickly sold | |||
|- | |||
|[[Airbus A330|Airbus A330-300]] | |||
|1 | |||
|335 | |||
|''Domestic Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by 747SP | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 737NG|Boeing 737-900]] | |||
|5 | |||
|177 | |||
|''Domestic Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by 757-200 | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 747|Boeing 747-400ER]] | |||
|4 | |4 | ||
| | |416 | ||
| | |''Medium-Long Haul'' | ||
| | |Replaced by 777-300ER | ||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 747|Boeing 747SP]] | |||
|1 | |||
|331 | |||
|''Domestic Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by 777-200LR | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-400ER]] | |||
|2 | |||
|296 | |||
|''Domestic Short-Medium Haul, Trans-Atlantic'' | |||
|Retired Twice, Replaced by A330-300 and by 777-200LR Respectively | |||
|- | |- | ||
|[[ | |[[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200ER]] | ||
| | |2 | ||
|150 | |150 | ||
| | |''N/A'' | ||
| | |Retired twice, Aquired in SJA merger and BAVC merger, Replaced with 777-200LR | ||
|- | |||
|[[McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30]] | |||
|2 | |||
|277 | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Replaced with MD-11 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | |[[McDonnell Douglas MD-11]] | ||
| | |2 | ||
| | |322 | ||
| | |''Domestic Short-Medium Haul, Hub-Hub'' | ||
| | |Replaced with MD-11ER | ||
|} | |} | ||
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!Notes | !Notes | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[ | |[[Boeing 737NG|Boeing 737-700C]] | ||
| | |2 (25 Orders) | ||
| | |18.2K Kgs Freight | ||
|'' | |''Short-Medium Haul'' | ||
| | | | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[ | |[[Boeing 747|Boeing 747-8F]] | ||
| | |0 (23 Orders) | ||
| | |140K Kgs Freight | ||
|'' | |''Medium-Long Haul'' | ||
|Launch Customer, EIS: Q4-2009 | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 757|Boeing 757-200PF]] | |||
|7 (25 Orders) | |||
|39K Kgs Freight | |||
|''Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
| | | | ||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200LR]] | |||
|12 (33 Orders) | |||
|103K Kgs Cargo | |||
|''Medium-Long Haul'' | |||
|Launch Customer, Largest operator of the type and 777 family | |||
|- | |||
|[[Bombardier Q400|Bombardier Q402PF]] | |||
|5 (17 Orders) | |||
|7980 Kgs Freight | |||
|''Short Haul'' | |||
|Launch Customer, Largest operator | |||
|- | |||
|[[Embraer EMB-120|Embraer EMB-120F]] | |||
|12 | |||
|4000 Kgs Freight | |||
|''Short Haul'' | |||
|Eight to be retired by October 1st, 2009; remaining 3 will be based at KPIT, KDCA and KSLC | |||
|- | |- | ||
|'''Total''' | |'''Total''' | ||
| | |37 (104 Orders) | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
====Retired Cargo fleet==== | |||
{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" | |||
|+ | |||
|- bgcolor=lightblue | |||
!Aircraft | |||
!Total | |||
!Passengers | |||
!Routes | |||
!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[Airbus A300|Airbus A300B4F]] | |||
|3 | |||
|39K Kgs Freight | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Aquired through BVAC Merger, Quickly sold | |||
|- | |||
|[[ATR-72|ATR-72-500F]] | |||
|3 | |||
|8770 Kgs Freight | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Aquired through BVAC Merger, Quickly sold | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 727|Boeing 727-200F Adv]] | |||
|5 | |||
|28K Kgs Freight | |||
|''Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by the 757-200F | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 747|Boeing 747-400ERF]] | |||
|4 | |||
|113K Kgs Freight | |||
|''Medium-Long Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by the 777-200LRF | |||
|- | |||
|[[Boeing 767|Boeing 767-300F]] | |||
|1 | |||
|54K Kgs Freight | |||
|''Short-Medium Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by the MD-10-30F | |||
|- | |||
|[[McDonnell Douglas DC-10|McDonnell Douglas MD-10-30F]] | |||
|25+ | |||
|80K Kgs Freight | |||
|''Medium-Long Haul'' | |||
|Once largest operator of DC-10-30F and DC-10 Family, Replaced by the 777-200LRF | |||
|- | |||
|[[McDonnell Douglas MD-11|McDonnell Douglas MD-11F]] | |||
|3 | |||
|95K Kgs Cargo | |||
|''Medium-Long Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by the 777-200LRF | |||
|} | |||
===Express Fleet=== | ===Express Fleet=== | ||
{| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" | {| class="toccolours sortable" border="1" cellpadding="3" style="border-collapse:collapse" | ||
Line 234: | Line 380: | ||
|117 | |117 | ||
|''All Regional*'' | |''All Regional*'' | ||
| | |Largest operator of 717 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Bombardier Dash 8|Bombardier Q400]] | |[[Bombardier Dash 8|Bombardier Q400]] | ||
Line 240: | Line 386: | ||
|74 | |74 | ||
|''All Short Haul Regional'' | |''All Short Haul Regional'' | ||
| | |Largest operator of Q400 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Embraer ERJ Family|Embraer ERJ-145XR]] | |[[Embraer ERJ Family|Embraer ERJ-145XR]] | ||
Line 246: | Line 392: | ||
|50 | |50 | ||
|''All Regional*'' | |''All Regional*'' | ||
| | |Largest operator of ERJ-145XR | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Embraer E Series|Embraer E170]] | |[[Embraer E Series|Embraer E170]] | ||
Line 258: | Line 404: | ||
|106 | |106 | ||
|''All Regional*'' | |''All Regional*'' | ||
| | |Largest operator of E195 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''Total''' | |'''Total''' | ||
Line 283: | Line 429: | ||
|''N/A'' | |''N/A'' | ||
|Replaced by E195 | |Replaced by E195 | ||
|- | |||
|[[Bombardier CRJ Family|Bombardier CRJ-200]] | |||
|1 | |||
|50 | |||
|''Short Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by ERJ-145XR | |||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Bombardier CRJ Family|Bombardier CRJ-700]] | |[[Bombardier CRJ Family|Bombardier CRJ-700]] | ||
|3 | |3 | ||
|70 | |70 | ||
|''Short Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by Q400 | |||
|- | |||
|[[Bombardier CRJ Family|Bombardier CRJ-900ER]] | |||
|2 | |||
|88 | |||
|''N/A'' | |''N/A'' | ||
|Replaced | |Replaced by Q400 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[Bombardier Dash 8|Bombardier Q100]] | |[[Bombardier Dash 8|Bombardier Q100]] | ||
|2 | |2 | ||
|37 | |37 | ||
|'' | |''Short Haul'' | ||
|Replaced by Q200 | |Replaced by Q200 | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 299: | Line 457: | ||
|2 | |2 | ||
|37 | |37 | ||
|'' | |''Short Haul'' | ||
|Replaced by Q400, Now Operates with Galaxy Aviation | |Replaced by Q400, Now Operates with Galaxy Aviation | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 305: | Line 463: | ||
|1 | |1 | ||
|30 | |30 | ||
|''Short Haul'' | |||
|Replaced by ERJ-145XR | |||
|- | |||
|[[Embraer ERJ-145ER]] | |||
|1 | |||
|50 | |||
|''N/A'' | |||
|Replaced by ERJ-145XR | |||
|- | |||
|[[Embraer E-190]] | |||
|2 | |||
|94 | |||
|''N/A'' | |''N/A'' | ||
|Replaced by | |Replaced by E-195 | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 22:15, 7 September 2009
North Eastern Airways at a Glance | |
---|---|
CEO | Tyler Pinkerton |
Chief Officers | |
Salary Percentage | 12-47% |
Alliance Affiliation | World Alliance |
Founded | 9 October, 2007 |
Last updated on 7 September, 2009 | |
File:Airlines-North Eastern Airways.jpg |
North Eastern Airways (IATA: 'NE, ICAO: NEA, Callsign: North East) is an American based airline that was founded by its current CEO Tyler Pinkerton on October 8th, 2007. Our first flight, NEA 75, was from Pittsburgh to Chicago with a leased 737-800 from Manchester International Airways. North Eastern Airways has since grown from a small airline based at Pittsburgh Intl Airport with one leased plane to an airline group with over 220 fully owned aircraft, 9 subsidaries and 21 world wide hubs. Pittsburgh Intl Airport is North Eastern Airways largest hub with over 600 daily flights and is also North Eastern Cargo's largest hub with over 400 daily flights.
North Eastern Airways is also a founding member of the World Alliance, the oldest airline alliance around and codes flights to the other 8 members of the alliance.
North Eastern Airways is mainly a Boeing Aircraft group which includes MD and DC aircraft, but does have a small fleet of Airbus Aircraft that were aquired through mergers and will be kept. North Eastern Airways is the launch Customer for the Boeing 787 Family and 747-8 family of aircraft. EIS for North Eastern Airways' first 747-8F is Q4 2009.
History
North Eastern Airways was founded by Tyler Pinkerton on October 8th, 2007 as a low cost carrier that was to be based at the Pittsburgh International Airport near Pittsburgh, PA.
North Eastern Airways
North Eastern Airways is the main part of our airline group and it has three branches to it; North Eastern Airways, North Eastern Express and North Eastern Cargo.
- North Eastern Airways (ICAO: NEA) is the mainline part of the airline. It flys to over 500 destinations worldwide with a fleet of 82 aircraft. NEA uses 16 hubs worldwide and provides all the Hub-Hub services.
- North Eastern Express (ICAO: NEX) is the regional part of the airline. It flys to most of the cities in the US that NEA does for added capacity but also serves the smaller community airports that are too small for mainline service. NEX flys out of all the same hubs as NEA does.
- North Eastern Cargo (ICAO: NEC) is the cargo part of the airline. It flys to all of the cities that both NEA and NEX do with its own fleet of Boeing freighters.
Subsidiaries
North Eastern Airways has 7 wholey owned subsidiaries around the world. All aircraft used come from NEA's or NEX's fleet and are counted as a part of NEA's or NEX's fleet. All aircraft are painted in the subsidiaries livery that they fly for.
Air Italia
Air Italia (ICAO: AIT) is a small regional airline that is Based in Naples Italy. It serves all of the domestic airports of Italy with Domestic flights to one another and International flights throughout Europe through four hubs. It uses Boeing 717 and Bombardier Q400 aircraft from North Eastern Express' fleet. The 717s are used on Hub-Hub flights along with all of the International Flights while the Q400's are used for only domestic flights.
Fly Hawaii Express
Fly Hawaii Express (ICAO: FHE) is a small airline based In the Hawaiian Islands that provides intra-island services along with flights to certain mainland cities. It uses Boeing 717 and Bombardier Aircraft from NEX. Every major airport in the Hawaiian Islands have direct flights to one another but Maui is the main hub for the airline with all flights to/from the mainland coming here.
Fly Dubai Airways
Fly Dubai Airways (ICAO: FDA) is a Luxory airline that is based in Dubai, United Arib Emirates. It uses Boeing 777-200LRs and 777-300ERs along with an Airbus A380 on flights to the major cities of the world.
Fly Tahiti Airways
Fly Tahiti Airways (ICAO: FTA) is a small airline that is based in Tahiti. It flys Bombardier Q400s and a sole Q402PF(Package Freighter) aircraft throughout all of the small islands of the South Pacific. North Eastern Airways provides flights from FTA's hub to its Auckland Intl Hub in New Zealand for flights out of the region.
Galaxy Aviation
Galaxy Aviation (ICAO: GAL) is a small bush airline that is based Fairbanks International Airport and Lake Hoob Seabase in Alaska. It provides the remote people of alaska along with tourists with travel within the state and with the needed cargo for survival. It owns its own fleet of 5 Beech 1900Ds, 5 DHC-6-400, 2 Q200, 2 Boeing 737-200QC and 2 Cessna 208B Grand Caravans.
Historic NEA
Historic North Eastern Airways (ICAO: HNEA) is a "Historic" verison of North Eastern Airways who operates Domestic and International flights just as North Eastern Airways would have if they were from the mid 20th centry time frame. This subsidiary flys only aircraft that came before the year 1980. Allegheny County Airport (ICAO: KAGC), Pittsburgh International Airport (Only International flights from the Pittsburgh region operate from here)(ICAO: KPIT) and Mrytle Beach International Airport (ICAO: KMYR) are the three hubs that HNEA flies out of.
UK Connect
UK Connect (ICAO: UKC) is a European Regional Airline that is based at London City Airport (ICAO: EGLC) in London, England that flies to cities throughout Europe. The fleet is made up of four Bombardier Q400s along with three Embraer E195s. UK Connect offers both Business and Economy classes on all flights and serves the business people of Europe with direct flights right into the heart of London.
Hubs
North American
South American
European
Asian/Oceania
African
Fleet
Current NEA Fleet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Airbus A319 | 4 | 124 | Europe, KDCA | |
Airbus A320 | 3 (1 Orders) | 150 | Europe, KDCA | |
Airbus A380 | 6 | 525 | International Long Haul | |
Boeing 737-700ER | 6 (24 Orders) | 126 | All Domestic, Trans-Atlantic | |
Boeing 737-800 | 18 (21 Orders) | 160 | All Domestic | Once operated a fleet of over 30 aircraft |
Boeing 747-8I | 0 (22 Orders) | 465 | International Medium-Long Haul | EIS: 2011, Launch Customer |
Boeing 757-200 | 14 (29 Orders) | 186 | All Domestic, Trans-Atlantic, International Short-Medium Haul | All Fitted with Winglets and ETOPS certified |
Boeing 757-300 | 11 (31 Orders) | 243 | ALL Domestic, Trans-Atlantic | All Fitted with Winglets and ETOPS certified |
Boeing 767-300ER | 3 (21 Orders) | 269 | All Domestic, International Medium-Long Haul | All fitted with Winglets, To Be Replaced by 787-8 |
Boeing 777-200LR | 5 (22 Orders) | 301 | International Medium-Long Haul, Ultra Long Haul, Hub-Hub | Airline Flagship |
Boeing 777-300ER | 3 (1 Orders) | 376 | International Long Haul | Airline Flagship |
Boeing 787-3 | 0 (31 Orders) | TBA | All Domestic, Hub-Hub | Launch Customer |
Boeing 787-8 | 0 (17 Orders) | 225 | International Medium-Long Haul | EIS: Q1-2010, Launch Customer,
Replacement for 767-300ER |
Boeing 787-9 | 0 (35 Orders) | TBA | International Medium-Long Haul | Launch Customer |
McDonnel Douglas MD-83 | 5 (30 Orders) | 155 | All Domestic | |
McDonnel Douglas MD-90 | 1 (14 Orders) | 172 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul | |
McDonnel Douglas MD-11ER | 2 (9 Orders) | 342 | International Medium-Long Haul, Hub-Hub | To be retired by 2011 |
Total | 82 (320 Orders) |
Retired NEA FLeet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aerospatiale/BAE Concorde | 2 | 100 | Trans-Atlantic, Supersonic International flights | Retired twice |
Airbus A300B2/B4 | 1 | 247 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul | |
Airbus A300-600 | 3 | 266 | N/A | Aquired through SJA merger, Quickly Sold |
Airbus A330-200 | 1 | 293 | N/A | Aquired through BAVC merger, Quickly sold |
Airbus A330-300 | 1 | 335 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul | Replaced by 747SP |
Boeing 737-900 | 5 | 177 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul | Replaced by 757-200 |
Boeing 747-400ER | 4 | 416 | Medium-Long Haul | Replaced by 777-300ER |
Boeing 747SP | 1 | 331 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul | Replaced by 777-200LR |
Boeing 767-400ER | 2 | 296 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul, Trans-Atlantic | Retired Twice, Replaced by A330-300 and by 777-200LR Respectively |
Boeing 777-200ER | 2 | 150 | N/A | Retired twice, Aquired in SJA merger and BAVC merger, Replaced with 777-200LR |
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 | 2 | 277 | N/A | Replaced with MD-11 |
McDonnell Douglas MD-11 | 2 | 322 | Domestic Short-Medium Haul, Hub-Hub | Replaced with MD-11ER |
Cargo fleet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing 737-700C | 2 (25 Orders) | 18.2K Kgs Freight | Short-Medium Haul | |
Boeing 747-8F | 0 (23 Orders) | 140K Kgs Freight | Medium-Long Haul | Launch Customer, EIS: Q4-2009 |
Boeing 757-200PF | 7 (25 Orders) | 39K Kgs Freight | Short-Medium Haul | |
Boeing 777-200LR | 12 (33 Orders) | 103K Kgs Cargo | Medium-Long Haul | Launch Customer, Largest operator of the type and 777 family |
Bombardier Q402PF | 5 (17 Orders) | 7980 Kgs Freight | Short Haul | Launch Customer, Largest operator |
Embraer EMB-120F | 12 | 4000 Kgs Freight | Short Haul | Eight to be retired by October 1st, 2009; remaining 3 will be based at KPIT, KDCA and KSLC |
Total | 37 (104 Orders) |
Retired Cargo fleet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Airbus A300B4F | 3 | 39K Kgs Freight | N/A | Aquired through BVAC Merger, Quickly sold |
ATR-72-500F | 3 | 8770 Kgs Freight | N/A | Aquired through BVAC Merger, Quickly sold |
Boeing 727-200F Adv | 5 | 28K Kgs Freight | Short-Medium Haul | Replaced by the 757-200F |
Boeing 747-400ERF | 4 | 113K Kgs Freight | Medium-Long Haul | Replaced by the 777-200LRF |
Boeing 767-300F | 1 | 54K Kgs Freight | Short-Medium Haul | Replaced by the MD-10-30F |
McDonnell Douglas MD-10-30F | 25+ | 80K Kgs Freight | Medium-Long Haul | Once largest operator of DC-10-30F and DC-10 Family, Replaced by the 777-200LRF |
McDonnell Douglas MD-11F | 3 | 95K Kgs Cargo | Medium-Long Haul | Replaced by the 777-200LRF |
Express Fleet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing 717 | 14 (37 Orders) | 117 | All Regional* | Largest operator of 717 |
Bombardier Q400 | 29 (17 Orders) | 74 | All Short Haul Regional | Largest operator of Q400 |
Embraer ERJ-145XR | 5 (18 Orders) | 50 | All Regional* | Largest operator of ERJ-145XR |
Embraer E170 | 3 (11 Orders) | 70 | All Regional* | |
Embraer E195 | 8 | 106 | All Regional* | Largest operator of E195 |
Total | 61 (94 Orders) |
*Aircraft operates regional routes of all lengths
Retired Express Fleet
Aircraft | Total | Passengers | Routes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
BAE-146-300 | 7 | 100 | N/A | Replaced by E195 |
Bombardier CRJ-200 | 1 | 50 | Short Haul | Replaced by ERJ-145XR |
Bombardier CRJ-700 | 3 | 70 | Short Haul | Replaced by Q400 |
Bombardier CRJ-900ER | 2 | 88 | N/A | Replaced by Q400 |
Bombardier Q100 | 2 | 37 | Short Haul | Replaced by Q200 |
Bombardier Q200 | 2 | 37 | Short Haul | Replaced by Q400, Now Operates with Galaxy Aviation |
Embraer EMB-120 | 1 | 30 | Short Haul | Replaced by ERJ-145XR |
Embraer ERJ-145ER | 1 | 50 | N/A | Replaced by ERJ-145XR |
Embraer E-190 | 2 | 94 | N/A | Replaced by E-195 |