Aviation2K16 wrote: » DUB - PHL is cancelled today. PHL - DUB isn’t cancelled so presume LRC will position to PHL from EWR to operate that.
EchoIndia wrote: » PHL-DUB tonight is cancelled, according to the DAA website and Flightaware.
trellheim wrote: » at the quietest time of the year and theres no spare frame to do the run ?
goingnowhere wrote: » Standard rule, anything bigger than a phone needs to be stowed. Aer Lingus are extremely diligent and consistent in applying the rules.
Safety is important but Aer Lingus must be starting to sound like a bossy headteacher to some passengers
This. A thousand times this.
trellheim wrote: » In addition the inflight magazine makes no mention of any of the above so the cabin crew seem to be operating from a different set of procedures
Noxegon wrote: » It could be worse — Scoot (a Singaporean airline) bans headphones outright during taxi, takeoff, and landing.
Idbatterim wrote: » Also there was a total exaggeration here , with regards to 3 3 3 being unbearable.
Noxegon wrote: » Try spending eight hours next to someone with broad shoulders and see if that changes your view.
trellheim wrote: » The noise-cancelling headphones ban with EI is very irritating the one time you really want the headphones. In addition the inflight magazine makes no mention of any of the above so the cabin crew seem to be operating from a different set of procedures Ref the IPAD as I have a keyboard on mine some cabin crew treat it as a pc and ask it be stowed so I just remove the keyboard and all is well
Time Magazine wrote: » Never understood the logic on the free drinks thing. It's like harking back to an age when people got dressed up to get on flights. Delta definitely offer a classier product, but they'll charge you €100-€500 more than Aer Lingus/United for the privilege. I'll pocket EI's cheaper flight and splurge the €6 on a Jameson with the savings, every time.
EI321 wrote: » Aer Lingus seems to be good value in the off season but usually the most expensive in the peak season.
Van.Bosch wrote: » Agree with this too -fares are nuts for next August to where I’m looking.
EI321 wrote: » I flew DUB-JFK return 6x times in 2019, roughly every 6-8 weeks between Feb and Oct.. Delta was the cheapest direct option on 3 of those dates. United (to EWR) on one. Aer Lingus on one. I flew Lufthansa via FRA on the last but I think United had cheaper fares on that occasion. Aer Lingus seems to be good value in the off season but usually the most expensive in the peak season. No idea why.
EI321 wrote: » I Aer Lingus seems to be good value in the off season but usually the most expensive in the peak season. No idea why.
Jack1985 wrote: » Yet they fill their flights with all due respect.
Jack1985 wrote: » Update with Long Haul fleet; B757: LBT will operate its last revenue service tonight EI128 YYZ-DUB, it’ll then position as EIN2111 DUB-SNN 0740/0835 tomorrow morning. EI-CJX then positions as EIN2110 SNN-DUB 0900/0955 to resume MSP operations from the 330 this will continue as DUB-MSP on Mon, Wed, Fri, Sun and CJX will also operate DUB-ORD EI125 service on Tue, Thu, Sat all effective from tomorrow 06/01. A332: EI-DAA positions as EIN2506 DUB-BOD 1630/1915 tomorrow 06/01. EI-GEY positions as EIN2505 BOD-DUB 1600/1645, Friday 10/01. Service resumption planned for EI109 Saturday 11/01. A333: EI-EDY positions as EIN2504 DUB-BOD 0615/0900 tomorrow 06/01 following its arrival tomorrow morning from JFK (EI104). EI-FNG positions as EIN2990 DUB-AUH 0800/2000 tomorrow 06/01 following its arrival tomorrow morning from ORD (EI122). All of course subject to change!
Jack1985 wrote: » It’s an IAA ban not EI. Cabin Crew operate to the procedures required of them by the operator.
IngazZagni wrote: » Yet it’s ok on Ryanair who are also under IAA rules. I remember these rules were amended by EASA a few years ago after the FAA changed them and most airlines in Europe changed to the new rules. Aer Lingus do indeed have the right to maintain stricter requirements however. I have noticed it being frustrating to certain passengers especially Americans who are used to the new relaxed rules.
Van.Bosch wrote: » Thanks - what is the diff between AUH and BOD from a maintenance point of view? Is certain things done at each or is it more likely it was due to slots? Also the seat map for EI109 suggests EI-GEY now has the EI business class layout with 23 seats.
Jack1985 wrote: » Being perfectly honest It's hilarious to see people ''get frustrated'' at being asked to put down a device for a period of minutes - for a small minority, It's like talking to children with temper tantrums. The vast majority have no issue in complying. The mandated policies should not be different for any Irish airline, if it's being noticed as relaxed on FR its a breach of the SOP. For instance here's a piece regarding headphones prior to an FR safety demo; .
IngazZagni wrote: » Yes. During the safety demo. That’s not the same as during taxi (unless taxiing during the safety demo) or takeoff and landing.
Jack1985 wrote: » Headphones for example need to be removed for the Safety Demo and for Taxi, Take-off and Landing phases of flight - That is exactly the IAA requirement. Fact is devices such as iPads, Laptops and coats etc when dropped become a tripping hazard. The same with wired headphones. The rules aren't there to p*ss you off, no crew member takes pleasure in having to argue with individuals to enforce it.