NEW YORK — Today at its annual Investor Day, Alaska Airlines announced plans to roll-out a Premium Class section. Beginning in late 2016, the new upgrade option will provide more legroom and other perks to customers.
Customers who upgrade to Premium Class will get priority boarding and enjoy three to four inches more legroom compared with a standard coach seat. In addition, Alaska Airlines plans to offer additional amenities to further enhance the Premium Class in-flight experience. This upgrade option will be available to Alaska Airlines elite Mileage Plan members on a complimentary basis at booking or day of travel dependent on status and fare purchased.
Upgrade pricing and details on the included amenities will be announced closer to customer availability.
“Premium Class will provide an opportunity for all customers to get an enhanced flight experience,” said Andrew Harrison, executive vice president and chief commercial officer at Alaska Airlines. “We are listening to our customers and they have told us that more personal space and extra perks are a priority.”
Alaska plans to retrofit up to 60 aircraft with the Premium Class section by the end of 2016 and the remainder of its 737-800, -900 and -900ER fleet by the end of 2017. The upgrade option will also be available on Embraer 175s, operated by SkyWest, which are configured with 12 seats in the Premium Class section. Preferred Plus seating , currently available for purchase at check-in for bulkhead and exit rows, will continue to be offered on Alaska 737-400s and -700s.
Seats in the Premium Class section will have at least 35″ of pitch, compared to 31″ to 32″ in the rest of the main cabin. To make room for the Premium Class while maintaining pitch in the main cabin, Alaska will reconfigure and reduce the number of seats available on some aircraft. Also, pitch in the First Class cabin will be increased from 36″ to 41″ providing a significantly enhanced experience for those customers.
737-800 goes from 16J/147Y to 12J/30Y+/117Y
737-900/-900(ER) goes from 16J/165Y to 16J/24Y+/138Y
E-175 goes from 12J/64Y to 12J/12Y+/52Y
Alaska Airlines
QANTAS reveals “Retro Roo II”
A newly reconfigured Qantas Boeing 737-800 painted in vintage 1960s livery has been unveiled in Sydney as the national carrier celebrates 95 years of flying.
Retro Roo II (VH-VXQ) has the same livery that featured on Qantas’ Boeing 707 jets from 1959 to 1961 – when the flying kangaroo helped revolutionise long-haul travel.
The B707 represented a step-change in aviation and Qantas was the first carrier outside the United States to operate the jet. In 1959, Qantas used it to become the first airline to operate regular passenger jet services across the Pacific Ocean, connecting Sydney and San Francisco.
Qantas was also the first airline to offer a round-the-world jet service with the B707. The flying time was 70 hours compared to 127 hours with the Super Constellation aircraft that the B707 replaced. Today a Qantas flight from Sydney to London stops just once, in Dubai, and takes 21 flying hours.
Welcoming the freshly-painted jet into a hangar with more than 300 employees, Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce described the vintage livery as a flying tribute to the airline’s history of innovation.
“None of the past 95 years would have been possible without all those who have worked for Qantas with such commitment and passion. Tens of thousands of people have dedicated their whole careers to the national carrier and many who work here today are the third or fourth generation in their family to do so,” he added.
“As we celebrate our 95th birthday today, I hope this livery inspires a sense of pride in what our national airline has achieved during all those years of taking Australians around the world and bringing them safely home again,” said Mr Joyce.
“A large part of the national pride people feel towards the flying kangaroo comes from the fact it has been responsible for so many innovations in global aviation.
“We were the first airline to introduce business class, we have operated record breaking endurance flights throughout our history and we’ve helped pioneer many breakthroughs in aviation technology.
“Innovation is still at the core of Qantas and we’re now looking to a new generation of aircraft with the arrival of Qantas’ first B787 Dreamliners in 2017. Like the 707 in 1959, these aircraft are at the cutting edge of aviation and we’re really excited about the opportunities they’ll open up for our customers.
The arrival of Retro Roo II, which was painted in Townsville, is part of Qantas’ 95th birthday celebrations. Events so far have included an Australia-wide Instameet and Qantas’ charity flight to Longreach, which raised over $110,000 for drought relief. A gala dinner for over 1,000 people in the airline’s A380 hangar in Mascot on Friday rounds out the activities.
Retro Roo II is the second Qantas 737 aircraft in vintage livery. Retro Roo I was launched last November, featuring the livery of 1971-1984, and regularly appears on social media as passengers photograph it at airports across the country.
Earlier this year, Qantas donated its record-breaking B747-400 (VH-OJA) to an aviation museum staffed largely by former Qantas employees. The aircraft was significant for operating the world’s longest non-stop flight from London to Sydney in 1989, and is now a big tourism draw for the Illawarra region.
QANTAS
Boeing drops 737MAX supplier GKN
Boeing Co. has canceled a contract with a supplier of a key engine part for its 737 Max, causing the aerospace giant to change its design for the planned jetliner and abandon a piece of new advanced technology.
GKN PLC was to supply part of the thrust reverser, which slows a jet on landing, but Boeing canceled the deal over concerns that the U.K.-based company couldn’t keep up with plans for a rapid increase in production.
The 737 Max, with 125 to 215 seats, is planned as a replacement for Boeing’s most popular single-aisle jets, and is scheduled to enter service with Southwest Airlines Co. in the third quarter of 2017.
“We made this decision to ensure we have a product that is not only maintainable and reliable but is producible at the high production rates of the 737 program,” Boeing said on Tuesday. The Chicago-based company said the move wouldn’t affect the performance of the 737 Max or the timeline for the first flight, certification and delivery of the jets.
Boeing has almost 3,000 of the jets on order, and needs to boost output quickly to meet its ambitious goals. That means avoiding the supplier kinks that afflicted its 787 Dreamliner and military refueling tanker, which together triggered billions of dollars in charges.
The Wall Street Journal reported in August that producing titanium parts for the 737 Max’s thrust reversers had emerged as a potential hurdle for the program.
Engineers have been wrestling with production problems linked to the inner wall of the thrust reverser, which is made from an exotic titanium rather than a composite material to save weight and withstand the high temperatures of the plane’s new engines.
Boeing had touted the titanium technology as a major contributor to cutting fuel consumption and maintenance costs. Boeing has promised airlines that the 737 Max will provide a 14% improvement in fuel burn over existing jets.
GKN declined to comment. The company makes a host of other parts for Boeing commercial and military jets, including windows and drag-reducing winglets.
A person familiar with the contract said GKN was notified Monday of the contract termination and will produce enough parts for the first 30 to 40 aircraft to avoid disrupting Boeing’s plan to certify the plane in 2017. It would then transition to a new design that was heavier with a yet to be determined supplier as it accelerates production. Boeing said the fix wouldn’t be heavier.
Boeing executives earlier this year acknowledged the difficulties producing the titanium inner walls, but the company said in August it had “every confidence” that GKN would be up to the task.
Yet, concerns over the summer elevated the inner wall to the top of the development challenges at Boeing’s commercial unit at the time, according to senior industry officials.
The twin Leap-1B engines on the 737 Max are made by CFM International, a joint venture between General Electric Co. and Safran SA, but Boeing contracted directly with GKN for the thrust-reverser parts.
Boeing started final assembly of the first 737 Max jets in its Renton, Wash., factory in September. It plans to boost monthly output from less than one to 52 before the end of the decade, an unprecedented ramp-up. Parts makers already have started accelerating production.
Investors are monitoring any problems that could slow Boeing’s expansion plan at a time when there is also concern the company may have to trim production of its profitable 777 wide-body jet as sales transition to the new 777X.
The Wall Street Journal
- « Previous Page
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- …
- 8
- Next Page »
