Last edit by: Prospero
AA Fleet: Legacy AA Airbus A319
The discussion here is about the The newer LAA Airbus A319-115(WL) with two CFMI CFM56-5B7/3 engines and Sharklets wingtip devices (the "WL" designation - renders increased fuel economy / range).
Seat configuration is 8 F, 18 MCE, 102 Y seats.
At seat power is available.
In flight entertainment is served to your device using WiFi.
All AAA319s offer ATG4 (or, some offer 2ku) WiFi.
Note: For Legacy A319-112 and A319-132s, see AA Fleet: LUS A319 CIP; F 8, 18 MCE - completed (master thd)
NOTE: Seat rows 3 - 7 are no longer used in refitted aircraft; those seated rows 4 - 7.
Link to the FlyerTalk Airbus A319 seating guide for the latest seat maps
Note: Legacy US A319s have undergone a CIP (cabin improvement program) to reconfigure to the LAA cabin configuration.
AA Fleet: LAA Airbus A319 - (consolidated)
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Apr 2012
Programs: AAdvantage Platinum 3 Million Miler, Alaska MVP Gold
Posts: 24
AA Fleet: LAA Airbus A319 - (consolidated)
Just took my first trip aboard a new AA319 yesterday on AA1582 DFW-CLE and I must say I was disappointed. First the good news: the aircraft looks great on the inside, there is in-seat video and power at every seat, and the new plane smell is awesome. But alas, there are problems: the first of which was a plane that went mechanical with a steering issue and caused us a 2+ hour delay. This plane has been in service for less than 10 days and already has problems ?? Also, no one from AA Maintenance seemed to have a clue what to do - they had to call Airbus, who determined to take the plane out of service. My biggest gripe is the seats in First Class: they hardly recline and are flat and slippery. I flew back from CLE today on a Mad Dog (MD-80) in 4F and was much happier. I could see the 319's being OK for short hops, but AA plans to fly them on DFW-BOG and DFW-YYZ - both too long to be stuck on this uncomfortable plane.
#4
Join Date: Feb 2004
Programs: AA 'kettle', Marriott Gold, ICH Gld, Hertz 5*
Posts: 5,258
Having flown a fair amount of transcons on the A319 on UA, mainly SFO/SMF-IAD, my recollection is that it was the most common UA mainline aircraft which went MX on me over the years. I flew mainly red-eyes on it and leaving at 2am (2-3 hours late) wasn't uncommon. If I could have a choice with what AA replaces the mad dogs out of my local with, it would be the 738. 16 vs 8 F seats might have something to do with that
#5
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Rio de Janeiro, Miami, Nice
Programs: Marriott Titanium, AA Concierge Key, Delta, United, Emorates, and others
Posts: 4,694
For comparison if anybody has the stamina for it, check out the history of introduction for 747-400 when upgraded from 747-300, or A321 vs A320 or any other two similar types. Then check out the initial three month dispatch reliability for a mature type newly introduced in a carrier such as 737-800 soon to be introduced at Delta. We'll see initial dispatch reliability suffer. It always happens.
Overall, these events are largely meaningless except when there are new type airplanes with totally new technological approach, such as the B747-100 almost fifty years ago, the B787-8 now. Those have and have had immature technologies that are very challenging to introduce. just as with the initial B747-100, the B787-8 will be a great advance, even if it does not seem so now. The A320, which introduced fly-by-wire for airliners, had similar early service problems, but now every new Boeing and Airbus airliner is FBW. When the A320 was introduced Boeing fanatics screamed "unsafe!", but the B777 proved Boeing also learned. The same will be true for the B787 once the furor abates.
As for AA introducing the A319 and equipping it as a MD80 replacement; I do not think they really had much of a choice given operating economics. They might have paid more attention to passenger comfort (check out the EK A319 as an irrelevant comparison of what could be done).
All things considered I don't much like being a passenger in any narrow body other than the EK A319, but that, after all, is a really big executive jet, not a normal scheduled flight.
#6
Join Date: Nov 2010
Programs: AA PLT 3MM
Posts: 1,135
#7
Join Date: Jun 1999
Location: NYC/LA
Programs: DL Plat, AA Plat Pro, Marriott Titanium, IHG Diamond Amb
Posts: 7,487
http://www.aa.com/i18n/aboutUs/ourPlanes/airbus319.jsp
I'm not sure of the reason for this-- I believe all the new seats are articulated, so I don't think that is the explanation.
#8
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: IND (Fishers Actually)
Programs: Delta GM, Hilton HHonors Gold, Amex Plat, F9 Summit
Posts: 99
I flew it last week and all flights were delayed due to mx. When i left ICT i was on an s80 and the a319 was sitting broken at the gate. The seat pitch in regular coach was terrible! IFE was limited and the airport guide spelled ORD O'Hara.
#9
Moderator: American AAdvantage
Join Date: May 2000
Location: NorCal - SMF area
Programs: AA LT Plat; HH LT Diamond, Maître-plongeur des Muccis
Posts: 62,948
You and jbcarioca are correct. It's not unlike many electromechanical items people buy - reliability is lowest at entry ("break in") and toward end of "useful life". IMO it's not a brilliant idea to take a ship's maiden voyage - or an aircraft at introduction. E.g. 787 and battery issues, 77W and some F seat problems, etc. It may seem desirable to be on an aircraft's maiden flight, but in my book it's usually one to avoid.
I'll hold off for some time, if it's radically new - Lockheed L-188 Electra suffered "whirl mode", literally vibrating its wings off at times; DH-106 Comet had explosive decompression problems as stress cracks grew from the square window frames; DC-10 had baggage door problems causing loss of all three hydraulic systems, etc. etc. The initial Boeing 747-100 was both underpowered and unreliable; a pilot friend of mine (now passed away) flew an early PA flight JFK-LHR and lost all four engines in the air - landed at a UK Air Force Base. I've flown a lot of the aircraft I listed over the years, but I avoided the model until issues were sorted out.
I'll hold off for some time, if it's radically new - Lockheed L-188 Electra suffered "whirl mode", literally vibrating its wings off at times; DH-106 Comet had explosive decompression problems as stress cracks grew from the square window frames; DC-10 had baggage door problems causing loss of all three hydraulic systems, etc. etc. The initial Boeing 747-100 was both underpowered and unreliable; a pilot friend of mine (now passed away) flew an early PA flight JFK-LHR and lost all four engines in the air - landed at a UK Air Force Base. I've flown a lot of the aircraft I listed over the years, but I avoided the model until issues were sorted out.
Last edited by JDiver; Sep 26, 2013 at 12:33 pm
#10
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: SJC
Programs: AA EXP, BA Silver, Hyatt Globalist, Hilton diamond, Marriott Platinum
Posts: 33,535
Cheers.
#11
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: KHOU/KIAH
Programs: AA EXP | Marriott Bonvoy Titanium| Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 11,252
#12
Join Date: Jun 1999
Location: NYC/LA
Programs: DL Plat, AA Plat Pro, Marriott Titanium, IHG Diamond Amb
Posts: 7,487
Would you say the seat pitch felt worse than on the 738s? Supposedly the non-MCE seat pitch on the A319s is a tight 30", but I'm curious what effect the new seat design has. (Of course, overall less pitch is never a good thing, regardless of how slim a seat is designed. Even if it feels the same as before, it still means more people crammed into the same space, sharing the same overhead bins, etc.)
#14
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Wichita
Posts: 628
I flew it for the first time yesterday. My review is here: http://meteorologicalmusings.blogspo...-new-a319.html