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Ryanair historic fleet Aircraft Number Introduced Retired Notes Refs ATR 42-300: Unknown 1989 1991 [287] BAC One-Eleven 500: Unknown 1986 1994 [288] Convair 580: Unknown 1988 1988 Operated by Partnair. [citation needed] Boeing 737-200: 21 1994 2005 Replaced by Boeing 737-800.
Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary said the move was a "unique opportunity" to form an Irish airline. The "new" airline would carry over 50 million passengers a year. Ryanair said it had bought a 16% stake in Aer Lingus and was offering €2.80 for the remaining shares, a premium over the €2.20 the shares were trading for.
Ryanair#Fleet To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
The Independent asked British Airways, easyJet and Ryanair for the average age of their fleets. A spokesperson for Ryanair said: “Ryanair’s fleet remains one of the youngest fleets in Europe.
The DC-9 and 727 were to become the workhorses of the fleet from the late 1960s. [8] The DC-9s were phased out by the late 1970s (although the type reappeared after mergers in the 1980s with an example being Texas International Airlines DC-9s which were added to the CO fleet); the 727-200 was the mainstay of its narrow-body fleet until the late ...
Ryanair UK is a British low-cost airline. The airline is the UK subsidiary of the low-cost Irish airline group Ryanair Holdings and a sister airline to Ryanair, Buzz and Malta Air. It commenced operations in March 2019. [3] It operates only Boeing 737-800 aircraft.
As of February 2025, there were 426 Boeing 747 aircraft in active airline service, comprising 1 747-100, 2 747SPs, 16 747-200s, 1 747-300, 256 747-400s, and 150 747-8s.
In December 1999, AerFi acquired Indigo Aviation, a Swedish aircraft lessor, and by 31 March 2000 was managing a fleet of 104 aircraft and reporting a profit of $68 million. In November 2000, AerFi was acquired by debis AirFinance, an affiliate of DaimlerChrysler AG , for $750 million.