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-   -   BELFAST CITY AIRPORT (BHD) (https://www.pprune.org/airlines-airports-routes/474930-belfast-city-airport-bhd.html)

CabinCrewe 8th Feb 2015 16:41

I dont think a A319 is 'very heavy' isnt just they have a mix of less fuel capacity and lower rated engines?

CabinCrewe 8th Feb 2015 16:42

Its normally the inbound from Canaries thats the issue with headwinds (in normal weather patterns)

flying officer kite 8th Feb 2015 17:42

The Easyjet ones are, with all the seats and extra set of overwing exits. The thing that always amazed me is that an A319 and A320 both weigh nearly the same when empty, despite the 320 being a much more capable aircraft in most circumstances.


I can't vouch for this, but perhaps restricted takeoff weights are an issue with Aer Lingus or Easyjet? I was once told by the operating crew on a flight to Malta that that 319 used on the route was certified to carry more weight than the others..

El Bunto 8th Feb 2015 20:03


I was once told by the operating crew on a flight to Malta that that 319 used on the route was certified to carry more weight than the others..
All the EZY 319s have the same structural limits but there are a couple of 'paper' MTOWs; let's say High and Low as I don't know what they are.

For short-range and near-Europe most of them are paper-rated at Low.

For the longer-hauls a smaller number are paper-rated at High and can load more fuel.

There is no change to the airframe to swap between ratings but it saves them in per-tonne charges to use Low where possible.

Edit: this airliners.net thread suggests 64 tonnes and 73.5 tonnes. Quite a difference!

http://www.airliners.net/aviation-fo...d.main/266167/ ( reply 5 )

owenc 8th Feb 2015 20:37

Well its 2000 miles to St Johns and it is an aircraft with a range of 5,000 miles so there would be no reason for a fuel stop.

flying officer kite 8th Feb 2015 21:02

Very true, El Bunto. Many airlines will reduce their weight limits as a paperwork exercise to keep the landing fees down. Some airlines do raise and lower them to suit operational needs.


In the case of Westjet, the likes of a 4 hour oceanic flight looks to be quite easy compared to some of the 6+ hour transcontinental and Pacific flights they put their 737s through!


OwenC, for a standard 737-700 or 800 you are talking closer to 3000 miles, then take winds, ETOPs etc. into account. Sometimes when charter airlines send aircraft across to Canada for the winter they still fuel stop in Iceland, and that's when empty too!

Una Due Tfc 8th Feb 2015 22:15

You can be talking 200kts plus of headwinds westbound in the winter if you wanna go the shortest route. A detour over Iceland is a regular occurance for the heavies to JFK etc. It would be a real struggle to get a 737 or a319 to Newfoundland. Sure the Air Canada A319 LHR-YYT flight had to refuel in Shannon a few times westbound this year, and they had 4,000 meters of runway on departure. There were 757s stopping in Gander, Bangor etc westbound for fuel this winter.

BFS Dude 11th Feb 2015 12:35

Lufthansa for BHD?
 
Rumors going around other websites that there is going to be a German route announced by Lufthansa from BHD. Any idea what route and when it starts?

EI-BUD 11th Feb 2015 19:41

BFS Dude,

This is an interesting suggestion. Safe as to say if it is Lufthansa, it would be Frankfurt, otherwise if Eurowings, likely to be another German destination. Perhaps a return of a previous route from Belfast, to Berlin.

Let hope. Frankfurt would be a great hub airport to add to the map. With KLM coming in the addition of say a 3/4 times per week Frankfurt would be a welcome addition....

EI-BUD

stab3.5up 11th Feb 2015 21:29

I understand from the people that know the Ams is double daily for w15/16

flying officer kite 11th Feb 2015 21:44

Speak to the refuellers..they know all ;)

carlrsymington 11th Feb 2015 22:25

Well if AMS goes double daily... "Well I f**king never" or maybe "Would u Adam & Eve it"

In case anyone reads this as a negative comment... it isn't

mart901 11th Feb 2015 23:14

In some respects KLM be daft not to in terms of the connections they can sell.

OneBellEnd 12th Feb 2015 05:19

Lufty were looking around earlier this week, at both BFS airports. Then announced new record year of performance in Dublin! Make of it what u will. :rolleyes:

El Bunto 12th Feb 2015 16:38

06:30 ( 07:30 Amsterdam time ) should *just* make it for the mid-morning wave of westbound departures.

Most of the KLM heavies are still coming over NI at that time, inbound from the Americas. So the little F70 will be pacing along beneath them...

owenc 12th Feb 2015 19:44

Actually the Amsterdam atlantic flights arrive rediculously early. Around about 3am they start flying over my house.

El Bunto 13th Feb 2015 06:00


Actually the Amsterdam atlantic flights arrive rediculously early. Around about 3am they start flying over my house.
One swallow does not a Summer make.

Over-Belfast times for Thursday 12th February. Inbound to Amsterdam.

KLM48 04:49 CHICAGO
KLM672 05:18 MONTREAL
KLM18 05:27 DULLES
KLM24 05:50 HOUSTON
KLM32 06:29 TORONTO
KLM602 07:25 LOS ANGELES
KLM214 08:30 VANCOUVER

owenc 13th Feb 2015 14:36

Um? A United flight for Amsterdam was over my house last night at 2am.

They DO come in rediculously early..

AirportPlanner1 13th Feb 2015 15:55

There might have only been seven flights over Belfast but there are certainly a lot more than that to AMS and yes they do go in very early.

Bit too far south here for N American KLM (I do get S American/Carribean though) but I do get three Lufthansa a shade after 3am so would be somewhere in the Irish skies between 2-2:45 I would guess

owenc 13th Feb 2015 16:02

Where I live we get constant flights from the NYC/Chicago area from 2am onwards.

The Flights from continential Europe come through seriously early!! Basically the middle of the night here..


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