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a330pilotcanada
27th Apr 2019, 00:41
Good Evening All:
Apparently the 24 Max's handled 9000 to 12000 passengers a day. Can you imagine the scheduling headaches??
Article is from the CBC

https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/air-canada-boeing-737-max-1.5112015


Air Canada has adjusted its route schedule and cancelled flights through to the end of July as a result of the grounding of its fleet of two dozen Boeing 737 Max jets.The airline and its passengers were thrown for a loop in March when Transport Canada ordered the grounding of the jets following two deadly crashes. (https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/boeing-737-max-canadian-passengers-1.5053882) The problem appears to be with the plane's software, and safety authorities around the world have ordered the planes can't fly until the jet maker fixes it.

That was a major headache for Air Canada, which had 24 of the jets in its fleet and was expecting another dozen this summer. Roughly 75 of the airline's 1,600 flights a day were supposed to be on Max jets, so the impact has reverberated widely.Finding alternative planes to replace those flights has proved challenging, but the airline has extended leases on six planes it was getting set to remove from its fleet. It has also sped up the integration of six planes it was in the process of buying from defunct Icelandic airline WOW Air (https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/wow-air-shut-down-1.5074662) and moved other passengers onto other airlines.Earlier this month, it laid out a number of adjustments (https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/air-canada-boeing-1.5082594) it said would be in place until the end of June — including delaying the launch of several seasonal summer routes — and on Thursday the airline says those measures will be in place until the end of July.It also laid out a few new changes, including:

A Montreal to Frankfurt flight May will be now be a Lufthansa flight.
Starting June 15, Qatar Airways will operate daily flights between Montreal and Barcelona, and between Montreal and Paris.
Starting June 2, Omni Air will fly a daily route between Vancouver and Honolulu and Maui.
Air Canada Rouge will take over three flights a week between Montreal and Bordeaux, France.
Air Canada Rouge will take over one flight a day between Montreal and Los Angeles.
Air Canada Rouge will operate flights to Iceland from Toronto and Montreal.
A daily flight between Toronto and Charlottetown will now be on Air Canada Rouge.

"Air Canada is prudently adjusting its schedule and is finalizing arrangements for additional aircraft to transport customers to their destinations," the airline's chief commercial officer Lucie Guillemette said in a release.

"Through these measures, we are giving customers certainty to book their summer travel plans on Air Canada with full confidence. We understand the importance our customers attach to their summer travel and through the actions we are announcing today, Air Canada now has in place a schedule and the capacity to meet travellers' needs."

rog747
27th Apr 2019, 06:56
Well AC are of course, not the only ones -
Here in the UK TUI (Thomson/Britannia of old) have 6 new grounded MAX plus 2 more were due for their Summer IT flights, which are usually 3, or can even be 4 rotations a day to the Med, Canaries/Cape Verde, and Egypt.

The TUI Europe brands (Holland, Belgium, Nordic, and Germany) have a load more grounded MAX, plus those with Enter Air Poland that fly for TUI, and the Smartwings fleet.
TUI also had charter contracts with Norwegian who also have many MAX on the deck.

All of these charter aircraft are a 189 seat config, so that is a lot of seats to replace.

TUI UK have just leased in three A321's from Olympus (ex Monarch) and also use Titan, plus they have some 738's due back from winter leases to Sunwing.
Several B757 leases have been extended too. (Most 757's were due for disposal end 2019/20 but this may now not happen)

Rx7man
6th May 2019, 04:51
I'm sure glad I don't need to fly as often as I used to, I had enough headaches with connections as it was.. certainly a nightmare for any carrier with Max's in their fleet, though from what I can see it's the prudent thing to do!

masonlim
13th May 2019, 08:59
That was a major headache for Air Canada, which had 24 of the jets in its fleet and was expecting another dozen this summer. Roughly 75 of the airline's 1,600 flights a day were supposed to be on Max jets, so the impact has reverberated widely.Finding alternative planes to replace those flights has proved challenging, but the airline has extended leases on six planes it was getting set to remove from its fleet.