Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Qantas operated Airbus A300B4 aircraft after its acquisition of Australian Airlines. The airline also operated Boeing 737-300, Boeing 747-200, Boeing 747SP, Boeing 747-300 and Boeing 767-200ER aircraft. In February 2014, Qantas retired its fleet of Boeing 737-400 aircraft. [64]
The aircraft will allow Qantas to replace its Boeing 767-300 fleet, increase capacity and establish new routes. [48] This announcement came after a long battle between Boeing and Airbus to meet the airline's needs for fleet renewal and future routes.
Three 737-300 aircraft were formerly part of the Qantas passenger-carrying fleet and are still owned by Qantas. [4] Express Freighters Australia also formally operated a Boeing 767-300F and currently operates a pair of Airbus A330P2F on behalf of its parent company Qantas Freight.
Ironically, although the A300s were initially painted in full Qantas livery, they were phased out within a few years being replaced by previously international operated Qantas 767-238ERs, 767-338ERs and later supplemented by seven ex-British Airways 767-336ERs. Qantas revived the Australian Airlines brand between 2002 and 2006 to serve the low ...
The airline's aircraft were re-painted back into the Qantas livery and returned to Qantas short-haul for use on their domestic and trans-Tasman routes. Alternative Boeing 767-300 aircraft (in Qantas two-class configuration) were supplied to Australian Airlines by Qantas, for them to operate under a wet lease agreement in the interim.
It is a Boeing 767-338ER passenger aircraft, which formerly belonged to Australian Airlines and Qantas and was, at the time of its purchase by Israel, about 20 years old. [18] The plane arrived in Israel in 2016 and was converted by 2019 at a cost of $207 million.
A Boeing 767-300F at Sydney Airport in 2018, wearing the 2007 livery. A formerly leased Boeing 747-400F at Melbourne Airport in 2008, wearing the Atlas Air livery. As of November 2024, Qantas Freight subsidiary Express Freighters Australia operates the following aircraft: [7]
The following is a list of current commercial operators of the Boeing 767, and any of its variants. As of 2020, there were 764 Boeing 767 aircraft in service, comprising 68 767-200s, 657 767-300s and 37 767-400ERs, [ 1 ] as listed by variant in the following table.