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Writer's pictureRainbow Travel inc

Inside Air Transat's New Airbus.

French expat, Hortense des Dorides is an Ottawa based travel and lifestyle writer.

On May 3, Air Transat welcomed its first Airbus A321neoLR, a single-aisle aircraft with 199 long-range seats.

Air Transat announced that it would be an all-Airbus fleet by 2022. It will acquire 15 of these next-generation aircraft in total, largely in part because of the improved onboard experience they promise their passengers.

The Airbus A321neoLR has undeniable qualities, specific to the latest generation aircraft.

First, the cabin, which includes 12 seats, three rows in Class Club, and 187 seats in Economy class, is very quiet. You can watch movies with basic headphones, not noise-cancelling ones, and you don't have to crank the volume up all the way to block out surrounding noise from the cabin.

The comfort has also been enhanced:


In the Club Class, the seats are more ergonomic and have an adjustable leg rest

Economy class seats are wider, for a total of 46 cm (18 inches), or 3.8 cm more than in the A310).

The aircraft is equipped with the industry's widest single-aisle cab, allowing easier movement, boarding and unloading for passengers.

In terms of entertainment, the individual screens in economy class are also larger (25.7 cm against 22.6 cm) and have a USB port.

An all-Airbus fleet

The first commercial flight was made on May 15, on the Montreal-Nantes route.

It was the first transatlantic commercial flight for an Airbus A321neoLR, Air Transat is the only North American airline to operate this aircraft, for the moment.

The Quebec airline, crowned for the second consecutive year as the World's Best Leisure Airline at the Skytrax awards ceremony, wants to operate an all-Airbus fleet, and is slowly transitioning its aircraft to achieve that goal by 2022.

The A321neoLR responds very well to the commercial reality of Air Transat's needs, since they are planes offering a wide range of action (up to 7,400 kilometers, the longest range of all single-aisle aircraft) with a capacity of less than 200 seats, adapted to many destinations offered by Air Transat, in the South as in Europe.

The second A321neoLR will be delivered by June 30. Then, two more will follow in February 2020, as well as two others by May 2020.

The delivery dates of the last nine aircraft are not yet known, but they should be delivered by the end of 2021, so to have a modernized fleet that is 100 per cent Airbus by 2022 is there goal.

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