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Originally Posted by boeing_eng
(Post 11853413)
Restricted free seat selection - very vague!
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Originally Posted by bjones4
(Post 11853384)
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Have FR fully released their winter 24/25 schedules yet? If not, anyone know when this will happen?
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24/25 schedule is nearly finished !!!!!
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Originally Posted by ericlday
(Post 11853989)
24/25 schedule is nearly finished !!!!!
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Irish restaurant charge Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary with ‘priority seating’ fee
An Irish restaurant turned the tables on Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary adding charges for “extra leg space” and “priority booth seating” to the airline boss’s food bill. Luvida in Navan, Co Meath, joked in a Facebook post on Friday evening: “Thank you to Michael O'Leary for choosing to dine with us tonight! It was a pleasure to host you. “Hope you don't mind us adding some additional charges to your bill for extra leg space, priority booth seating and quiet area reservation.” The Meath restaurant gave Mr O’Leary a bill with €37.85 (£32) in additional charges, including €7.95 for “extra leg space”, €9.95 for “priority booth seating” and a €19.95 “quiet reservation area” fee. Luvida even added “terminal 1” to the top of the Ryanair CEO’s mock receipt, alongside his order – a bottle of pinot grigio, battered prawns, mushroom toast and sea bass dishes that came to a total of €142.30. |
Originally Posted by cuthere
(Post 11853999)
Haha! My bad! Winter 25/26 is what I meant.
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Originally Posted by CelticRambler
(Post 11854187)
I have a related question : there are no flights loaded beyond the end of October for Basel. Has the Basel-Dublin route fallen victim to Ryanair's protest against changes and limits at the Dublin end, or are they giving up their Basel operations entirely ?
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Originally Posted by Harold77
(Post 11854286)
No routes are on sale yet for the winter timetable yet. I think last year they started loading them about May time.
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First Challenger 3500, registered M-ABSU, arrived at STN yesterday. Heading up to EMA and back later today.
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Ryanair winter 25/26
Don't know if anyone is in the know but I'll ask anyway. Ryanair have loaded some schedules for winter up until March 26 mainly from their biggest base Stansted, however there's nothing loaded as yet for many destinations from Birmingham and Manchester after October 25, making it impossible to plan anything for the winter, anyone know what's taking them so long?
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Hello chizlit and welcome to PPRuNe. There is a dedicated thread for RyanAir and I am going to move your enquiry there. Please stay around in the 'cabin' of PPRuNe.
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Originally Posted by S.o.S.
(Post 11856638)
Hello chizlit and welcome to PPRuNe. There is a dedicated thread for RyanAir and I am going to move your enquiry there. Please stay around in the 'cabin' of PPRuNe.
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Originally Posted by chizlit
(Post 11856476)
Don't know if anyone is in the know but I'll ask anyway. Ryanair have loaded some schedules for winter up until March 26 mainly from their biggest base Stansted, however there's nothing loaded as yet for many destinations from Birmingham and Manchester after October 25, making it impossible to plan anything for the winter, anyone know what's taking them so long?
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Originally Posted by Matt995
(Post 11857562)
a bit of "googling" shows the time frame for the announcement of Winter 2025/6 flights to be April or May.
In contacting Ryainair they've said schedules are published 6 months before who h would mean early April at the latest, however that doesn't explain why some routes are already available until March 2026 while many are still not on place, coupled with the fact the likes of easyJet and Jet 2 already have routes in place. |
Originally Posted by chizlit
(Post 11857748)
Do you not think I've tried that?
In contacting Ryainair they've said schedules are published 6 months before who h would mean early April at the latest, however that doesn't explain why some routes are already available until March 2026 while many are still not on place, coupled with the fact the likes of easyJet and Jet 2 already have routes in place. You'll find @Matt995 to be a very helpful person who, I'm sure, was not trying to "teach you how to suck eggs". Anyway, welcome to Pprune. |
Originally Posted by Sioltach Dubh Glas
(Post 11858097)
I'm afraid FR are very much a "speciality" company who do things there own way.
You'll find @Matt995 to be a very helpful person who, I'm sure, was not trying to "teach you how to suck eggs". Anyway, welcome to Pprune. Yes I know they do things their own way, and if their way is risking losing business to other airlines then that's on them 😄. |
Schedule release
Originally Posted by chizlit
(Post 11857748)
Do you not think I've tried that?
In contacting Ryainair they've said schedules are published 6 months before who h would mean early April at the latest, however that doesn't explain why some routes are already available until March 2026 while many are still not on place, coupled with the fact the likes of easyJet and Jet 2 already have routes in place. BHX to has Alicante (LS & U2), BCN (LS, U2 & VY), FUE (LS, U2 & TOM), LPA (LS, U2 & TOM, ACE (LS, U2 & TOM), TFS (LS, U2 TOM) are all released but the ones with no or little competition PMI, RMU, FAO are not released, the same for the cities bar Beauvais which of course competes heavily with U2 and AF. I was surprised at Verona, which is released but this of course counts as ski (TOM is the only competitor) and all the other ski routes are on sale as already, as they tend to also be early bookers. Another route that I would doubt gets many early bookers which is on sale is Dublin but of course that is another highly competitive route. Pete |
Originally Posted by OltonPete
(Post 11858168)
It is fairly straightforward when it comes to BHX (can't say I have checked other airports), the flights on sale are the ones their competitors have had on sale for ages and they seriously run the risk of losing bookings as these can be traditional earlier bookers in most cases.
BHX to has Alicante (LS & U2), BCN (LS, U2 & VY), FUE (LS, U2 & TOM), LPA (LS, U2 & TOM, ACE (LS, U2 & TOM), TFS (LS, U2 TOM) are all released but the ones with no or little competition PMI, RMU, FAO are not released, the same for the cities bar Beauvais which of course competes heavily with U2 and AF. I was surprised at Verona, which is released but this of course counts as ski (TOM is the only competitor) and all the other ski routes are on sale as already, as they tend to also be early bookers. Another route that I would doubt gets many early bookers which is on sale is Dublin but of course that is another highly competitive route. Pete |
Absolutely Ryanair will know the booking curve for each destination. Those that are earlier they'll have released now for sale but will make the relevant time/frequency changes later along with other routes.
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Posted on another forum relating to a Liverpool departure:
Quote Commotion on the Ryanair flight to Palma last night! The aircraft should have been operated by a 737MAX but a 737-800 operated the flight instead. A total of 194 were booked on the flight, there were 2 no-shows, so 192 turned up at the gate to board a, 189-seater.Three passengers were told, on check-in, that seats would be allocated at the gate. On arrival at the gate the passengers were then denied boarding as the flight was overbooked. One of the ladies denied boarding was travelling with her family but she was left behind. When the daughter of the lady left behind challenged the cabin crew she was told to return to her seat and sit down as she was delaying the flight. |
Most tricky collection due to the amount of bases and aircraft in fleet. For sure cannot be correct but I hope I got it more or less to provide overview of current bases:
93 bases London (Stansted) 50 Dublin 34 Milan (Bergamo) 24 Vienna 18 Malaga 18 Alicante 18 Charleroi 18 Palma de Mallorca 16 Manchester 16 Barcelona 14 Madrid 13 Porto 12 Krakow 12 Faro 11 Bologna 11 Edinburgh 11 Budapest 10 Rome (Fiumicino) 9 Pisa 9 Wroclaw 9 Katowice 8 Milan (Malpensa) 8 Malta 8 Birmingham 8 Marseille 7 Berlin 7 Marrakech 7 Valencia 7 Dusseldorf (Weeze) 7 Rome (Ciampino) 7 London (Luton) 7 Stockholm (Arlanda) 6 Naples 5 Gdansk 5 Athens 5 Catania 5 Palermo 5 Seville 5 Bristol 5 Liverpool 5 East Midlands 5 Paris (Beauvais) 5 Cologne 4 Tenerife 4 Venice 4 Poznan 4 Munich (Memmingen) 4 Prague 4 Sofia 4 Warsaw (Modlin) 4 Lisbon 4 Paphos 4 Karlsruhe 4 Cork 4 Zagreb 4 Girona 4 Copenhagen 4 Lanzarote 3 Fez 3 Leeds 3 Bari 3 Kaunas 3 Cagliari 3 Frankfurt (Hahn) 3 Shannon 3 Dubrovnik 3 Zadar 3 Bratislava 2 (eff October) Trieste 2 Reggio Calabria 2 Tangier 2 Belfast 2 Newcastle 2 Nuremberg 2 Funchal 2 Riga 2 Torino 2 Agadir 2 Corfu 2 Toulouse 2 Treviso 2 Bucharest (OTP) 2 Vilnius 2 Santiago de Compostela 2 Gothenborg 2 Thessaloniki 2 Lamezia Terme 2 Pescara 2 Brindisi 2 Bournemouth 2 Glasgow (Prestwick) 2 Chania 1 Ibiza 1 Please approach me, in case of any wrong information. |
London Luton is 7 planes now
Originally Posted by Seljuk
(Post 11870443)
Most tricky collection due to the amount of bases and aircraft in fleet. For sure cannot be correct but I hope I got it more or less to provide overview of current bases:93 bases
London (Stansted) 50 Dublin 34 Milan (Bergamo) 24 Vienna 18 Malaga 18 Alicante 18 Charleroi 18 Palma de Mallorca 16 Manchester 16 Barcelona 14 Madrid 13 Porto 12 Krakow 12 Faro 11 Bologna 11 Edinburgh 11 Budapest 10 Rome (Fiumicino) 9 Pisa 9 Wroclaw 9 Katowice 8 Milan (Malpensa) 8 Malta 8 Marseille 7 Berlin 7 Marrakech 7 Valencia 7 Dusseldorf (Weeze) 7 Rome (Ciampino) 7 Stockholm (Arlanda) 6 Birmingham 6 East Midlands 6 London (Luton) 6 Naples 5 Gdansk 5 Athens 5 Cologne 5 Catania 5 Palermo 5 Seville 5 Bristol 5 Liverpool 5 Tenerife 4 Venice 4 Poznan 4 Munich (Memmingen) 4 Prague 4 Sofia 4 Warsaw (Modlin) 4 Lisbon 4 Paphos 4 Karlsruhe 4 Cork 4 Zagreb 4 Girona 4 Lanzarote 3 Bratislava 3 Fez 3 Leeds 3 Bari 3 Kaunas 3 Cagliari 3 Frankfurt (Hahn) 3 Shannon 3 Dubrovnik 3 Zadar 3 Trieste 2 Reggio Calabria 2 Tangier 2 Copenhagen 2 Belfast 2 Newcastle 2 Nuremberg 2 Funchal 2 Riga 2 Torino 2 Agadir 2 Corfu 2 Toulouse 2 Treviso 2 Paris (Beauvais) 2 Bucharest (OTP) 2 Vilnius 2 Santiago de Compostela 2 Gothenborg 2 Thessaloniki 2 Lamezia Terme 2 Pescara 2 Brindisi 2 Bournemouth 2 Glasgow (Prestwick) 2 Chania 1 Ibiza 1 Please approach me, in case of any wrong information. |
Originally Posted by Seljuk
(Post 11870443)
Most tricky collection due to the amount of bases and aircraft in fleet. For sure cannot be correct but I hope I got it more or less to provide overview of current bases:93 bases
London (Stansted) 50 Dublin 34 Milan (Bergamo) 24 Vienna 18 Malaga 18 Alicante 18 Charleroi 18 Palma de Mallorca 16 Manchester 16 Barcelona 14 Madrid 13 Porto 12 Krakow 12 Faro 11 Bologna 11 Edinburgh 11 Budapest 10 Rome (Fiumicino) 9 Pisa 9 Wroclaw 9 Katowice 8 Milan (Malpensa) 8 Malta 8 Marseille 7 Berlin 7 Marrakech 7 Valencia 7 Dusseldorf (Weeze) 7 Rome (Ciampino) 7 Stockholm (Arlanda) 6 Birmingham 6 East Midlands 6 London (Luton) 6 Naples 5 Gdansk 5 Athens 5 Cologne 5 Catania 5 Palermo 5 Seville 5 Bristol 5 Liverpool 5 Tenerife 4 Venice 4 Poznan 4 Munich (Memmingen) 4 Prague 4 Sofia 4 Warsaw (Modlin) 4 Lisbon 4 Paphos 4 Karlsruhe 4 Cork 4 Zagreb 4 Girona 4 Lanzarote 3 Bratislava 3 Fez 3 Leeds 3 Bari 3 Kaunas 3 Cagliari 3 Frankfurt (Hahn) 3 Shannon 3 Dubrovnik 3 Zadar 3 Trieste 2 Reggio Calabria 2 Tangier 2 Copenhagen 2 Belfast 2 Newcastle 2 Nuremberg 2 Funchal 2 Riga 2 Torino 2 Agadir 2 Corfu 2 Toulouse 2 Treviso 2 Paris (Beauvais) 2 Bucharest (OTP) 2 Vilnius 2 Santiago de Compostela 2 Gothenborg 2 Thessaloniki 2 Lamezia Terme 2 Pescara 2 Brindisi 2 Bournemouth 2 Glasgow (Prestwick) 2 Chania 1 Ibiza 1 Please approach me, in case of any wrong information. |
I think Luton is now 7 rather than 6.
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A number of UK bases appear to have been swapped over, at least in part, to Maltese-registered airframes for S25, having until now been operated exclusively by the mainline Irish fleet. I doubt there are any real operational differences but still noteworthy - perhaps this is O'Leary's way of enacting his supposed "cuts" to the UK network..!
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Originally Posted by amyisraelchai
(Post 11870498)
A number of UK bases appear to have been swapped over, at least in part, to Maltese-registered airframes for S25, having until now been operated exclusively by the mainline Irish fleet. I doubt there are any real operational differences but still noteworthy - perhaps this is O'Leary's way of enacting his supposed "cuts" to the UK network..!
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The Maltese government quietly returned its single "golden" share in Malta Air to Ryanair's Gulliver Holdings on September 26th - I wonder whether their agreement only covered the first 5 years of operation?
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I could point out a few corrections to the based aircraft list posted above but too many to go through. Whilst broadly correct there's a few odd ones likes CPH is actually 4 rather than 2 based whilst KTW is currently only 3 based, certainly not the 8 listed above.
Of course for Ryanair in particular, number of based aircraft is only a small part of the story. Since they have so many bases across Europe, the proportion of based vs non-based flying across particular airports varies considerably. Add to that average sector lengths in some markets compared to others also has a considerable impact. Take for example EMA, which has five based aircraft currently, there's 19 Ryanair departures from there today. BVA on the other hand, also five based, has 57 departures by comparison. |
Originally Posted by FRatSTN
(Post 11870778)
I could point out a few corrections to the based aircraft list posted above but too many to go through. Whilst broadly correct there's a few odd ones likes CPH is actually 4 rather than 2 based whilst KTW is currently only 3 based, certainly not the 8 listed above.
KTW: FR mentioned 3 based but also additional 5 aircraft for charter activities (same like for other e.g. Polish bases where Sun/Buzz operates) https://corporate.ryanair.com/inform...wic/?market=pl |
Looks like the CAA have run out of patience with Ryanair
Flight RK1265 had departed on schedule from Agadir. But an hour after take-off, as the Boeing 737 was off the southwest coast of Portugal, the captain declared a diversion to Faro so that a disruptive passenger could be offloaded. After police removed the passenger, the aircraft was refuelled to continue the journey to Manchester. But a technical issue came to light that required the attention of an engineer. The aircraft is operated by a subsidiary, Ryanair UK, which flies routes that do not serve points in the European Union. It was set up after Brexit to allow flights between the UK and countries outside the EU, such as Morocco and Albania, to continue. Ryanair UK engineer was not available in Faro. So the airline's main operating unit, Ryanair DAC, offered to provide an identical aircraft and crew to fly the 177 passengers home without further delay. But the CAA refused to give permission, according to Ryanair’s Eddie Wilson: “Here’s the important thing: they could have said ‘yes’. They actually said ‘yes’ earlier that day from a flight from Girona.” A UK Civil Aviation Authority spokesperson said:“The UK CAA plays a key role protecting passengers as well as enabling growth in the UK aviation sector. We encourage UK operators to create strong resilience plans for when planes have to be grounded to minimise the impact on passengers. These plans need to be consistent with the legal framework that applies to UK aviation following EU Exit, which requires UK based companies to have sufficient UK registered aircraft to operate their schedule. “Ryanair has been well aware of this position for a considerable period of time. Ryanair UK has chosen to operate a flight schedule that requires 18 aircraft, but has only allocated 15 aircraft to its UK registered business to fulfil this schedule. Ryanair has prioritised the placement of aircraft within their other EU based business over the UK, leaving UK passengers at a higher risk of disruption.” |
Originally Posted by SWBKCB
(Post 11873563)
Looks like the CAA have run out of patience with Ryanair
https://www.independent.co.uk/travel...-b2739524.html I bet there is no way on earth the EU would allow this like a G- aircraft doing an intra-EU leg. |
Originally Posted by pabely
(Post 11873575)
Good, others like Easyjet UK keep to the rules at extra cost.
I bet there is no way on earth the EU would allow this like a G- aircraft doing an intra-EU leg. Ryanair rode their luck and it now appears to have run out. There is no "Ryanair eceptionalism" and the UK has been very patient, some may say lax. |
Unfortunately the Brexiteers have ruined a very good working relationship.
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Originally Posted by pabely
(Post 11873575)
Good, others like Easyjet UK keep to the rules at extra cost.
I bet there is no way on earth the EU would allow this like a G- aircraft doing an intra-EU leg. |
Brexit was Brexit and we follow the new rules. Thank You.
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The pros and cons of Brexit on ownership and operational matters could be long debated and probably has been already, but the Ryanair thread isn’t really the place for it.
But for the Ryanair pax of this flight Brexit has specifically disadvantaged them. It has extinguished possibility of just shifting them into a different plane, something that was possible until Jan 2021. The leavers got what they voted for. That is fact. 261 compensation would be interesting in this scenario. A tech issue which has arisen only after a no-fault diversion. |
Perhaps Ryanair should comment and focus on how a drunk passenger was onboard their aircraft in the first place. Problem avoided then
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Just putting a question out there to the PPRuNe talent pool ... I don't purport to know the solution!
We know that MOL has been understandably voicing concerns over the potential impact of new US tariffs affecting aircraft orders and deliveries from Boeing. There have been suggestions that some early deliveries could be refused, in order to ensure that tariffs are not incurred. I've just been thinking about potential solutions to circumvent this problem; whether or not either of them would be in any way feasible is open to conjecture. Just putting some ideas out there to consider ways in which the impasse could be circumvented. 1) A wide-ranging new trade deal between the US and the UK was announced earlier this week. Would allocation of new B38M's to Ryanair UK (and delivering direct to them) bypass reciprocal tariffs imposed against the US by the EU? Would allocating these aircraft to the Ryanair UK subsidiary come with extra costs anyway, over and above what would be routinely anticipated? In the short term, the 15 Boeing 737-8AS units currently operating for Ryanair UK could be cascaded back to the EI-, SP-, 9H- fleets without tariffs to offset the first fifteen tariff-impacted deliveries? 2) Would it be an option to sell the outstanding B38M orders to a US leasing company with an agreement to lease them and buy them back at a later date (subject to tariff renegotiations at government level)? Do aircraft coming across from the US on lease themselves incur tariffs, even if the aircraft is not being purchased by an entity domiciled within the EU? I don't know whether these options are feasible, or whether some of you can suggest better ideas (or further obstacles), but a solution which means no backlog of undeliverable Ryanair B38M's going to storage in a desert would be beneficial all round. Only competitors will benefit from a hamstrung Ryanair, unable to expand beyond it's present fleet size for months or years ahead. Any thoughts? |
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