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Virgin Australia was launched as Virgin Blue, a low-cost airline, in August 2000, with two Boeing 737-400 aircraft, one of which was leased from then-sister airline Virgin Express. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] Initially offering seven return flights a day between Brisbane and Sydney, this was expanded to cover all major Australian cities and many holiday ...
Cable Beach, Virgin Australia's first A330-200. Bondi Beach, first Boeing 737-800 to wear Virgin Australia livery. Former ATR 72-500 in Virgin Australia livery. Virgin Australia (and Virgin Australia Regional Airlines) currently serve 33 domestic and 6 international destinations as of January 2024:
Views from the cockpit of a Boeing 737-800. The Wright brothers created and flew the first controlled, successful airplane in 1903, and since then air travel has become one of the most popular ...
Australia 4 4 Express Freighters Australia: Australia 3 1 4 Qantas: Australia 22 22 75 75 Rex Airlines: Australia 9 9 Royal Australian Air Force: Australia 8 12 20 Toll Priority: Australia 5 4 4 Virgin Australia: Australia 9 75 2 86 Bahamasair: Bahamas 17 1 1 1 3 4 Texel Air: Bahrain 1 2 2 5 US-Bangla Airlines: Bangladesh 8 8 Biman Bangladesh ...
Boeing is resuming production of its bestselling plane, the 737 Max, for the first time since 33,000 workers began a seven-week strike that ended in early November. The company said Tuesday that ...
A 737-800 of United Airlines in 2010. The 737-800 was a stretched version of the 737-700 launched on September 5, 1994, and first flew on July 31, 1997. [72] The -800 seats 162 passengers in a two-class or 189 passengers in a high-density, one-class layout. Launch customer Hapag-Lloyd Flug (now TUIfly) received the first one in April 1998. [73]
The 737-800 burns 850 US gallons (3,200 L) of jet fuel per hour—about 80 percent of the fuel used by an MD-80 on a comparable flight, while carrying more passengers. [54] The Airline Monitor, an industry publication, quotes a 737-800 fuel burn of 4.88 US gal (18.5 L) per seat per hour, compared to 5.13 US gal (19.4 L) for the A320. [55]