Exeter
Electric powered aeroplanes will be tested between Exeter and Newquay airports.
Looking forward to seeing the Electric EEL!
UK's first electric commuter flight will depart from Exeter Airport
Looking forward to seeing the Electric EEL!
UK's first electric commuter flight will depart from Exeter Airport
Loganair are to reinstate the Exeter to Norwich service from July the 12th.
4 times weekly during the summer then twice-weekly during the winter.
Loganair - Exeter to Norwich
4 times weekly during the summer then twice-weekly during the winter.
Loganair - Exeter to Norwich
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Brighton uk
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Looks like Blue Islands are terminating the Manchester link from February, so much for the 2x daily flight they had initially offered
TUI have dropped the weekly Tenerife flight for the summer , quite surprised as always a popular route
TUI have dropped the weekly Tenerife flight for the summer , quite surprised as always a popular route
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: London
Posts: 835
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Suspect they may have some information re a certain phoenix operation
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: BMA
Posts: 1,042
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 80
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
It was posted within the Flybe thred that Blue Islands has been offered to buy Flybe mk2, could be to do with that. Blue Islands could be in the process of buying the new flybe, operating them within the U.K whilst keeping the Blue islands brand for the channel islands where its strongest.
Flybe 1.0 operated EXT-MAN and return twice daily - on occasions three times daily. That enabled day return trips and built a loyal passenger following. It was probably their busiest route out of Exeter.
Blue Islands operated the service 3 days a week with only the one flight. That mean no chance of a day-return and the necessity for a couple of night's hotel accommodation adding to the expense.
I would imagine that such an unattractive offering from Blue Islands has lead to the service's demise.
Blue Islands operated the service 3 days a week with only the one flight. That mean no chance of a day-return and the necessity for a couple of night's hotel accommodation adding to the expense.
I would imagine that such an unattractive offering from Blue Islands has lead to the service's demise.
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Brighton uk
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
The same thing has happened to Southampton, it’s gone from one of the top performing routes to the worst since Covid and Flybe
A single Loganair J41 a day , even worse than Exeter
A single Loganair J41 a day , even worse than Exeter
Domestic flying for business remains on it's backside because of recent Govt Guidance to work from home which has only now been lifted again. Blue Islands can fly the route as you propose but cannot fill it until normality beckons and that will take time and encouragement. Unlike leisure travel with huge pent up demand, many business travellers have no pressing wish to get back on the road again.
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Sydney
Posts: 729
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I think the route was cut because:
1) We are still in a pandemic with 'work from home' still happening - this has totally changed the market. There is NO NEED OR DEMAND for a double daily return anymore even if it was Flybe
2) Pre-pandemic, this route offered onward connections on Flybe to Scotland, Blue Islands wouldn't have had the same pull
3) Blue islands in general would have suffered somewhat from a lack of awareness and must spend a lot more on marketing than perhaps Flybe in the past generating interest for such a route
4) Road travel has become quite important during the pandemic as it offers people the comfort of being secluded in their own bubble rather than forced to wear masks and sit next to people with all the social distancing still going on
1) We are still in a pandemic with 'work from home' still happening - this has totally changed the market. There is NO NEED OR DEMAND for a double daily return anymore even if it was Flybe
2) Pre-pandemic, this route offered onward connections on Flybe to Scotland, Blue Islands wouldn't have had the same pull
3) Blue islands in general would have suffered somewhat from a lack of awareness and must spend a lot more on marketing than perhaps Flybe in the past generating interest for such a route
4) Road travel has become quite important during the pandemic as it offers people the comfort of being secluded in their own bubble rather than forced to wear masks and sit next to people with all the social distancing still going on
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: UK
Posts: 536
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Lower Upham
Posts: 78
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I would echo much of what has been said so far, and I think we shall never see domestic air travel return to previous levels - except perhaps to/from Northern Ireland.
For people who routinely used domestic flights, a large amount of working from home will be a permanent 'new normal'. And with that, these same people have now realised what a complete faff it was to get up at some ungodly hour of the night/morning, and drive in the freezing rain to an airport, hang-around and grab a tasteless luke-warm beverage (is this a coffee, or just the wastewater from the dishwasher?), possibly queue to get on a hot stuffy bus to be taken the remote area where the turbo-props are hidden from public gaze, endure an hour or more of tooth-rattling vibration, followed by the frustration of finding the booked hire car is not available, and has been substituted with some tinny contraption resembling a cartoon car with all the power of an asthmatic donkey, through which one has to do battle with heavy traffic on the way to the client all for a two-hour meeting.
Rinse and repeat in reverse on the way home. I know, I've done it hundreds of times!
Thank goodness those days have ended - and I, and my colleagues, hope we never have to endure this utter waste of time again.
For people who routinely used domestic flights, a large amount of working from home will be a permanent 'new normal'. And with that, these same people have now realised what a complete faff it was to get up at some ungodly hour of the night/morning, and drive in the freezing rain to an airport, hang-around and grab a tasteless luke-warm beverage (is this a coffee, or just the wastewater from the dishwasher?), possibly queue to get on a hot stuffy bus to be taken the remote area where the turbo-props are hidden from public gaze, endure an hour or more of tooth-rattling vibration, followed by the frustration of finding the booked hire car is not available, and has been substituted with some tinny contraption resembling a cartoon car with all the power of an asthmatic donkey, through which one has to do battle with heavy traffic on the way to the client all for a two-hour meeting.
Rinse and repeat in reverse on the way home. I know, I've done it hundreds of times!
Thank goodness those days have ended - and I, and my colleagues, hope we never have to endure this utter waste of time again.
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Brighton uk
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Bit of a mixed bag going on at Exeter for next summer
Ryanair
There routes to Alicante and Malaga are continuing both 2 x week same as this summer , no news of any new routes yet ( they launched with high hopes to Malta and Naples pre Covid )
TUI
Looks like they have pulled both the Ibiza and Tenerife routes as both now off sale for summer 23
Looks to be a gap though on Wednesday to fill with the TUI based aircraft , possibly the Palma flight could be a fit rather than use Alba Star again ( very poor timekeeping this summer)
Tenerife also pulled for the second time , was using Aer Europa
Extra flights next summer to Antalya 2 x week new for 23 , probably using Freebird A320
Ryanair
There routes to Alicante and Malaga are continuing both 2 x week same as this summer , no news of any new routes yet ( they launched with high hopes to Malta and Naples pre Covid )
TUI
Looks like they have pulled both the Ibiza and Tenerife routes as both now off sale for summer 23
Looks to be a gap though on Wednesday to fill with the TUI based aircraft , possibly the Palma flight could be a fit rather than use Alba Star again ( very poor timekeeping this summer)
Tenerife also pulled for the second time , was using Aer Europa
Extra flights next summer to Antalya 2 x week new for 23 , probably using Freebird A320