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Buster the Bear
25th Jan 2004, 22:33
As reported by ABTN:

HOP AIRWAYS is the name of a new British start-up with a targeted July launch and based at Cambridge. CEO is Tony Camacho, formerly of KLM and commercial director of Buzz. The plan is to use a fleet of ATR 72 aircraft on shortish sectors mainly within the UK offering very low fares. The last attempt at this style of operation was by Australian entrepreneur Neil Hansford with Euro Direct employing BAe ATPs.

jethro15
25th Jan 2004, 23:00
Is there any conection with the proposed 'Oniva' here?.

Jethro
UK and Ireland Airline Fleet Listings
http://www.jethros.i12.com

Findo
25th Jan 2004, 23:25
A couple of the many stories today -

Source: Sunday Times

Short hop airline launches

BRITAIN's first American-style commuter airline is to be set up by a
group of former Buzz executives and Kit Malthouse, deputy leader of Westminster City Council.

Hop Airways will fly short routes between regional centres. About
one-third of fares will be under £10 one-way, and no one-way trip
will cost more than £80.

Malthouse, chairman, and Tony Camacho, chief executive, have
recruited Cavendish Corporate Finance to raise money. The company was looking to obtain about £5m from a mix of wealthy individuals and institutions, but will consider raising more if sufficient interest is generated.

Malthouse, who runs a construction-plant financing business, said
Britain's poor road, rail and air travel had been one of the
inspirations behind the move. "I do about 45,000 miles a year and I have for a long time thought there was a great opportunity for a low-cost domestic airline," he said.

Hop plans to start flights this summer using a fleet of ATR-72
turboprops. A base airport has not yet been chosen, but Camacho, a former commercial director of KLM UK and Buzz, said Hop would avoid the large London airports.

"I would not rule out flying to one of the smaller London airports,
but we do not want to go head-to-head with either the big network airlines or Ryanair or Easyjet," he said.

The average flight time would be just one hour and 15 minutes, he said, and each aircraft would do 10 flights a day.



Source: Scotland on Sunday

DOUGLAS FRIEDLI

A NEW no-frills airline is to target Scottish passengers flying to
regional centres in England and Wales after claiming that existing
services are "rubbish".

Hop, led by former Buzz chief executive Tony Camacho and backed by entrepreneur Kit Malthouse, plans to run flights to 20 destinations across the UK by July.

Malthouse, the company's chairman, said: "Scotland is key for us
because the transport links there are rubbish. We are looking at
Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen initially."

Dundee, the least-used of Scotland's city airports, could also
feature in the company's plans. Malthouse said: "Dundee is an
interesting one. It is good for a number of places such as the area
to the south of Aberdeen and part of Silicon Glen. At the moment, if you want to fly from Dundee to, say, Cambridge, you have to go via London."

Malthouse, the deputy leader of Westminster City Council, said the airline would deliberately avoid London's crowded airports. He said: "London is well served already."

The airline is close to raising more than £5m from private
investors, institutions and transport groups to get its plans in
motion. It will buy three Airbus aircraft, and plans to build up a
fleet of 20 within three years. Each aircraft will fly 10 times per
day, high by industry standards.

Malthouse compared the airline to the low-cost Greyhound bus network which connects the US. The company will entice customers with 20-minute check-in times, £10 advance fares and an £80 one-way maximum tariff.

Malthouse and Camacho have recruited former CityFlyer airline
director Keith Luxton as chief operating officer. The company plans
an advertising campaign in central and north-east Scotland once its final route plan is announced later this year.

Hop, which currently has a registered office in Lutterworth,
Leicestershire, is looking for a permanent base for its operations.
Malthouse said the company was sizing up five locations across the UK for its headquarters.

In reply to Malthouse's comments on Scotland's transport links, a
spokeswoman for the Scottish Executive said: "We are encouraging more direct air links through the Executive's £6.8m Route Development Fund, which has offered assistance to a total of 17 new direct routes since March last year."

FEBA
26th Jan 2004, 00:35
Has anyone got any contact details. Can't find anything on google.
Thanks
FEBA

Hop (BBC News) (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cambridgeshire/3428241.stm)

lowfaresbuster
26th Jan 2004, 01:35
to speculate, and maybe answer FEBA & jethro15, i did a whois lookup for flyhop.com and got:


Registrant:
Oniva Ltd (GTCGEXKZKD)
20 School Crescent
Kedington, Suffolk CB9 7NF
UK

Domain Name: FLYHOP.COM

Administrative Contact:
Johansson, Sally (35340659P) [email protected]
Oniva Ltd
20 School Crescent
Kedington, Suffolk CB9 7NF
UK
07785 332 430

lowfaresbuster
26th Jan 2004, 17:44
just to contradict myself; i did a whois on flyhop.co.uk and....

Domain Name:
flyhop.co.uk

Registrant:
skyblue aviation

Registrant's Address:
Skyblue Aviation Unit 5 Merlin
Business Park
Exeter Airport
EX5 2BD
GB

PAXboy
26th Jan 2004, 20:53
The report in The Independent on Sunday also stated ATRs, so I think a jouno has got confused after counting A for Airbus and B for Boeing ...

If they aim at some of the 'diagonal' routes, then they might get somewhere. It is the cross-county routes that are difficult both by car and by rail. Places like Kent, Cornwall and Devon could benefit, as much as the places already mentioned.

LTNman
27th Jan 2004, 23:49
For a London Airport Southend must be the first choice seeing that they don't want to use the big four.

bacardi walla
28th Jan 2004, 02:45
There's always CBG - ideal for Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, Essex and even North London.....

Buster the Bear
28th Jan 2004, 04:34
There's always LTN - ideal for Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Northamptonshire, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex and even North London.....

So how about NowHop airlines or even HopNow airways?

As our American friends are replacing props with jets because thier customers prefer them, are folk going to be impressed with noisey French stretched Handley Page Herald's?

Manston
Southend
Norwich
Humberside
Dundee
Oxford
Bruntingthorpe
Biggin Hill
Kemble
Gloucestershire
Filton
Farnborough
Cranfield

All must be prime candidates, after all, you do not need a completed terminal for your customers, just ask ThomsonFly!

Oscar Duece
28th Jan 2004, 15:05
Buster

We can rule out Biggin, due to the planning restiction on no scheduled traffic and Farnborough don't want the lower classes on their soil.

We could see
Shoreham-By-Sea
Carlisle
York (Elvington)
North Weald (Better than Luton)

:uhoh:

Jamesair
26th Feb 2004, 00:14
There seems to have been absolute silence about HOP Airways since the initial announcement of a July start.

Anyone heard any more news?

LTNman
4th Jul 2004, 07:35
TURMOIL in the budget airline sector has been blamed by the UK’s newest operator for its failure to raise £5m and launch its first flights this month.

Cambridge-based Hop was launched in January with the promise of £10 standard fares for an ultra-basic service similar to the US Greyhound bus network. Timetables for up to 20 routes were due to be published by May but have yet to appear.

Full story here http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/business.cfm?id=764032004