The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

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Stratofreighter
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The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012 ... s-boarding
Ryanair plans to increase width of plane doors to speed up boarding

Budget airline says bigger doors will help slice minutes off turnaround times at airports

guardian.co.uk, Monday 30 July 2012 14.57 BST

Noah loaded them on two by two and it will be the same for Ryanair passengers, if Europe's largest budget airline gets its way.

The Dublin-based carrier's latest idea is a radical change to basic aeroplane design: it has revealed that a Chinese aviation business is working on a prototype budget-carrier jet with extra-wide doors.

Howard Millar, Ryanair's deputy chief executive, said bigger doors would allow people on and off more quickly, slicing minutes off the quick turnaround times that are a keystone of any low-cost carrier.

"We want two people to walk through the door.

If the door is wider you can load people on and off the aircraft quicker.

We want a low-cost plane that suits our business model," said Millar.

The Ryanair executive added that the airline had got off to a good start with its design agreement with Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (Comac),
a state-owned business that has not batted an eyelid at Ryanair's more progressive suggestions.
On the other hand Boeing and Airbus, said Millar, were not interested in a bespoke aircraft.

"Boeing and Airbus will look at you as if you have two heads if you have a bigger door," :mrgreen:
said Millar, whose airline operates nearly 300 Boeing 737 jets but is now looking for a new aircraft order that will start deliveries towards the end of 2020.

Ryanair is interested in Comac's planned 200-seater C919 aircraft, which is being developed to rival the Boeing 737 and the Airbus A320, the dominant players in the commercial aircraft market.
The 737 carries 189 passengers, so the C919 offers the potential for more lucrative flights for Ryanair.

The airline is notorious for squeezing out costs and raising cash via cunning ruses such as baggage check-in fees,

and its passengers are used to hearing fanciful suggestions for plane adaptations from Millar's chief executive, Michael O'Leary,

but Millar listed a series of pragmatic suggestions that have been delivered to Comac.
They include smaller galley sections and a redesigned hold, to accommodate the fact that Ryanair does not serve meals on flights and carries fewer bags than traditional carriers owing to its baggage fee policy.

"Why do we need to carry all this additional weight in galley areas that we don't use? We don't really use the hold very much, so can we make it a bit lighter?" said Millar.

The deputy chief executive added that a Ryanair C919 would have the "normal toilet quota",
referring to O'Leary's request for fewer toilets in Boeing 737s and the chief executive's suggestion
– not acted on – of charging passengers to use them.
Other mooted O'Leary innovations include removing one pilot from flights, having standing seats and,

in one brainstorming session that was never heavily publicised, putting passengers in the hold. :roll:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012 ... s-boarding
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Le Addeur noir
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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by Le Addeur noir »

You fly with this bunch of cowboys at your peril.

YOU have been warned...............
Drink treble
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Act single

and the Emir called up his jet fighters
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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by Bjorn van der Flier »

Funny that they are complaining about the galley weight, when you want to make doors that big, huge structure streghtening has to be done, because of the pressure on the door frames will rise significantly. So it's not just a bigger door, is a complete re design of you airframe, which in the end does not make your turnaround any faster.
Persoanlly I think that the time "won" by these bigger doors is about 5-10 mins
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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by ehusmann »

I would estimate it a 0 minutes (5 to 10 would actually be a huge win!). I mean, as long as they do not make the aisles wider, widening the doors will have simply no effect. Now already the doors are not smaller than the aisles, so the door cannot be the issue.

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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by Bjorn van der Flier »

True, but the off loading will be a bit quicker, I was very optimistic, it was best case scenario...
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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by ehusmann »

Offloading quicker? How? Also there the waiting is because people cannot get to the door quickly, not because they cannot get through the door quickly. Also when exiting the plane the aisle is still smaller than the door.

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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by Stefan »

If you do not think about future, you cannot have one.
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Re: The latest Ryanair publicity stunt...

Post by RogierV »

To me it looks as if the narrow aisle and slow packing passengers are the bottleneck in both the boarding and the offloading process. The overhead lockers are so small that everybody stores his/hers luggage in any available space, no matter how far from his/her seat. This causes people to delay each others movements. A smaller hold and larger hand luggage storage could make the offloading quicker in my opinion.
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