Norwegian Air International (NAI) has been finally granted a licence by US authorities that will enable to launch highly anticipated direct transatlantic routes between Ireland and American cities including Boston and New York.
Locker10a wrote: » Yay, looking forward to expensive fares, and less service.......just from Cork
Yay, looking forward to expensive fares, and less service.......just from Cork
Cookiemunster wrote: » Not just Cork. They're in negotiations with SNN as well.https://twitter.com/ShannonAirport/status/804968778681479168
Zonda999 wrote: » As a Cork man, I'm happy to see this go ahead but it really is hope rather than certainty I have that this will be a success. I just think that if you look at the existing capacity we have on Ireland to Boston (Including Delta entering DUB-BOS in 2017) as well as the new EI Hartford route, it feels like we are reaching a new high in terms of transatlatic connectivity and I just hope there is the market there to sustain it. More so, in the case of Cork, we already have WOW starting 5x weekly next year aiming for the same market. I really think more than half the demand for these new routes will have to be North American based pax because lets face it Cork based passengers are going to be price sensitive and I would have thought, more than willing to fly via LHR or AMS to get a decent all inclusive fare
kub wrote: » Going back to technicalities here, I know Ryanair deliveries fly direct from Settle to Dublin non stop, it being an empty plane. Will a 737-800 have the range and especially in the winter months with the Easterly winds when heading West to get all the way to Boston or NYC without stopping to top up?
Bsal wrote: » I presume they will have to limit the number of passengers to well below the standard 189 of the B738 due to the runway lenght at Cork being 2133m.
bkehoe wrote: » Yes, a ballpark of approx 100 pax max if getting airborne with full fuel tanks out of Cork on an average winters day (i.e. lower than standard QNH). I'd say this service will see regular west bound fuel stops, even if its at Shannon!
kub wrote: Going back to technicalities here, I know Ryanair deliveries fly direct from Settle to Dublin non stop, it being an empty plane. Will a 737-800 have the range and especially in the winter months with the Easterly winds when heading West to get all the way to Boston or NYC without stopping to top up?
dev100 wrote: » Years ago I seen a Ryan air plane sitting on the run way in Seattle . I asked the question how do they manage to get it home and I was told they can extra fuel bags or something to that affect maybe that could be wrong ?
basill wrote: » Cork was always a side show. This was about a non EU loco getting an EU AOC and gaining access to the US market. This will now be used as the springboard for flights across Europe to commence. Quite what Kenny and Co were up to in supporting it all along none of us can fathom. Sometimes you have to be careful for what you wish for.
This will now be used as the springboard for flights across Europe to commence.
basill wrote: » This was about a non EU loco getting an EU AOC and gaining access to the US market.
steve-o wrote: » basill wrote: » This was about a non EU loco getting an EU AOC and gaining access to the US market. How do you arrive at that conclusion? Noway has been a party to Europe-US open skies since 2011. It already operates EU-US, so Norwegian don't need an EU AOC for that.
Locker10a wrote: » Yes they do, thats why they set up a pigeon hole company based in Ireland(See Norwegian International), for access to an Irish AOC which allows them more market access and with lesser regulation and employment law...
billy few mates wrote: » I think it's just a way of getting their foot in the door while they overcome all the regulatory hurdles, start off with a ORK-BOS service (or any other fanciful route pairing that no one else already does) so they can get the whole operation up and running with little or no objections. Once this one starts they can announce an expansion with a whole series of new routes out of DUB and SNN (which is the real prize) and then after a while just quietly drop the ORK-BOS route citing lack of customer demand.
elastico wrote: » How is Shannon a prize? Aer Lingus seem to struggle to keep an operation going there, where will the passengers come from?
Bussywussy wrote: » that little,jesus
billie1b wrote: » max take off weight of 77,990kgs
bkehoe wrote: » While the a/c can be certified with a MTOW up to 79 tonnes depending on the operator, the problem in Cork in winter is that the runway length won't allow much more than 70 tonnes for the RTOW with the conditions on some days (e.g. low QNH typically found during wet windy days). Edit: Even today when the QNH is higher than STD (good), temperature lower than ISA (good), headwind component (good), with engine bleed supply for the air-conditioning packs off (not a normal SOP for most 737 operators, only used for extra performance), the RTOW is in the region of 76 tonnes. If we assume no wind credit (runway in Cork doesn't point into the prevailing wind so on a windy day there would be very little credit for headwind) and a QNH of 980 (by no means as low as it can go; I've flown when its in the 960s!) and make the runway WET then we're limited to approx 70 tonnes (71 ish if Norwegian have 27k engines).