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Old Sep 14, 2014, 8:13 am
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Last edit by: gingeola
BA FLEET: NEW AIRCRAFT ARRIVALS AND RETIREMENTS WIKI

BA are in the mid-stages of a large fleet renewal programme. The new aircraft enabled BA to retire the 767 and 737 Classic fleets with retirement of the 747 fleet and selected 777/A319 aircraft currently in progress.

This Wiki has been divided into:
  • Projected Fleet
  • New Arrivals
  • Retrofits
  • Retirements
  • Historical Fleet

(Click on the aircraft type, where there is a link, to go to the relevant details in this wikipost.)


Projected Fleet

This renewal programme, which is being complemented with a cabin refresh for some of the older aircraft, is expected to see the following fleet numbers at year end 2022.

Heathrow Fleet and Gatwick Fleet

Shorthaul
A319: 9 (38 currently in fleet)
A320ceo: 67 (67 currently in fleet)
A320neo: 22 (12 currently in fleet)
• A321ceo: 14 (14 currently in fleet)
A321neo: 13 (9 currently in fleet)

Midhaul
• A321: 4 (4 currently in fleet)

Longhaul
A350-1000: 18 (6 currently in fleet)
A380: 12 (12 currently in fleet)
B747-400: 12 (30 currently in fleet)
B777-200ER: 43 (43 currently in fleet)
B777-300ER: 16 (12 currently in fleet)
B777-9: 8 (0 currently in fleet)
B787-8: 12 (12 currently in fleet)
B787-9: 18 (18 currently in fleet)
B787-10: 9 (2 currently in fleet)

London City Fleet

Shorthaul
E170 / E190: 28 (24 currently in fleet)

Longhaul
• A318: 1 (1 currently in fleet)

New Arrivals

Airbus A320ceo: Ten A320ceos were delivered between June 2013 and October 2014, based at LHR. Ten second hand A320ceos were delivered to LGW between December 2014 and August 2016. Details are archived here.


Airbus A320neo: 35 A320neo family aircraft (25 A320s and 10 A321s) were ordered to replace 21 of the older A319 and A320ceos and add extra capacity. Deliveries started in 2018. In May 2019 three A320neos were converted to A321neo bringing the split to 22 A320s and 13 A321s.

G-TTNA - Delivered on 10 Apr 2018
G-TTNB - Delivered on 25 Apr 2018
G-TTNC - Delivered on 07 Jun 2018
G-TTND - Delivered on 26 Jul 2018
G-TTNE - Delivered on 21 Sep 2018
G-TTNF - Delivered on 27 Oct 2018
G-TTNG - Delivered on 29 Nov 2018
G-TTNH - Delivered on 17 Jan 2019
G-TTNI - Delivered on 20 Feb 2019
G-TTNJ - Delivered on 28 Feb 2019
G-TTNK - Delivered on 27 Feb 2020
G-TTNL - Delivered on 09 Mar 2020
G-TTNM - Due in May 2020?
G-TTNN - Due in Jul 2020
G-TTNO - Due in Sep 2020
G-TTNP - Due in 2020
G-TTNR -
G-TTNS -
G-TTNT -
G-TTNU -
G-TTNV -
G-TTNW -

Airbus A321neo:

G-NEOR - Delivered on 23 Nov 2018
G-NEOS - Delivered on 29 Jan 2019
G-NEOT - Delivered on 01 Mar 2019
G-NEOP - Delivered on 27 Mar 2019
G-NEOU - Delivered on 10 May 2019
G-NEOV - Delivered on 30 Aug 2019
G-NEOW - Delivered on 25 Oct 2019
G-NEOX - Delivered on 23 Dec 2019
G-NEOZ - Delivered on 17 Mar 2020
G-NEOY - Due in May 2020?
G-TNEA -
G-TNEB -
G-TNEC -

Airbus A350: BA ordered 18 A350-1000s for delivery between 2019 and 2021. They will all be based at LHR are being delivered as 3-class in a 56J/56W/219Y configuration. Deliveries started in July 2019.

G-XWBA - Delivered on 27 Jul 2019
G-XWBB - Delivered on 19 Sep 2019
G-XWBC - Delivered on 26 Nov 2019
G-XWBD - Delivered on 23 Dec 2019
G-XWBE - Delivered on 12 Feb 2020
G-XWBF - Delivered on 20 May 2020
G-XWBG - Due in Jun 2020
G-XWBH - Due in Jul 2020
G-XWBI - Due in Oct 2020
G-XWBJ - Due in Jan 2021
G-XWBK - Due in Feb 2021
G-XWBL -
G-XWBM -
G-XWBN -
G-XWBO -
G-XWBP -
G-XWBR -
G-XWBS -

Airbus A380: Twelve A380s were delivered between July 2013 and June 2016 and are based at LHR. Details are archived here.


Boeing 777-300ER: Six 777-300ERs were delivered between September 2013 and August 2014 and are based at LHR. Details are archived here. A further three were ordered in November 2018, and a fourth in December 2018. These final four are due to be delivered from Q3 2020.

G-STBM - Due in Jul 2020?
G-STBN - Due in Aug 2020?
G-STBO - Due in 2020
G-STBP - Due in 2020


Boeing 777-9: In February 2019 BA announced an order for 18 Boeing 777-9 aircraft plus 24 options which will be powered by General Electric GE9X engines. Each aircraft will be fitted with 325 seats in a 4-class, 8F/65J/46W/206Y configuration. The 777-9s on order will be used to replace 14 Boeing 747-400 and four Boeing 777-200ER between 2022 and 2025.


Boeing 787-8: Twelve 787-8s were delivered between June 2013 and November 2018 and are based at LHR. Details are archived here.


Boeing 787-9: Eighteen 787-9s were delivered between September 2015 and June 2018 and are based at LHR. Details are archived here.


Boeing 787-10: BA has 12 787-10s on order to be delivered between 2020 and 2023: Each aircraft will be fitted with 256 seats in a 4 class 8F/48J/35W/165Y configuration.

G-ZBLA - Due 24th May 2020
G-ZBLB - Due in Jun 2020
G-ZBLC - Due in Aug 2020
G-ZBLD - Due in 2020
G-ZBLE - Due in 2020
G-ZBLF - Due in 2020
G-ZBLG - Due in 2021
G-ZBLH - Due in 2021
G-ZBLI - Due in 2022
G-ZBLJ - Due in 2023
G-ZBLK - Due in 2023
G-ZBLL - Due in 2023

Embraer 190: Three more new Embraer 190s were delivered in May 2014 and September 2014. Details are archived here. Seven second hand aircraft have since been sourced. Two more are due in 2020.

G-LCYV - Delivered on 19 Dec 2015
G-LCYW - Delivered on 25 May 2016
G-LCYX - Delivered on 10 Jul 2016
G-LCYY - Delivered on 22 Dec 2017
G-LCYZ - Delivered on 17 May 2018
G-LCAA - Delivered on 23 May 2019
G-LCAB - Delivered on 21 July 2019
G-LCAC - Due into service June 2020 (currently at WAW)
G-LCAD - Due in June / July 2020? (currently at CAN)
G-LCAE
G-LCAF
G-LCAG
G-LCAH

Retrofits

A320ceo:

The A320ceos currently based at LHR are being reconfigured from CY168 to CY180. These feature Pinnacle seats throughout and still have tables in CE, (unlike the A320neos).
There are currently 55 completed.

Completed (CY180):
G-EUUA/D/E/F/G/H/I/J/K/L/M/N/O/P/R/S/T/U/V/W/X/Y/Z
G-EUYA/B/C/D/E/F/G/H/I/J/K/L/M/N/O/P/R/S/T/U/V/W/X/Y
G-MEDK
G-MIDO/S/T/X/Y
G-TTOB/E

The following aircraft are currently undergoing cabin refit at Madrid:

G-EUUB/C

A321ceo (Completed):

All 14 shorthaul frames have now been reconfigured from a CY205 to a CY218. These feature Pinnacle seats throughout and still have tables in CE (unlike the A321neos). The four midhaul frames remain unchanged in a 23J/131Y layout.

Boeing 777-200ER:

For full details on the complete refit plan of the 777s, see the following detailed thread: https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/brit...8-onwards.html

LGW Cabin retrofit of 777-200ERs with 10-across economy seating and upgraded Panasonic IFE. These do notfeature the new Club World seat. This commenced in January 2018.
There are currently 14 completed.

Completed (32J/52W/252Y): G-VIIO/P/R/T/U/X
Completed (32J/48W/252Y): G-YMMB/C/D/E/F
Completed (14F/48J/40W/136Y): G-VIIV/W/Y

The following aircraft are currently undergoing cabin refit at
Cardiff:

None

LHR Cabin retrofit of 777-200ERs with 10-across economy seating and upgraded Panasonic IFE. These feature the new Club World seat. This commenced in August 2019.
There are currently 6 completed.

Completed (8F/49J/40W/138Y): G-VIIB/K/L/M/N, G-RAES

The following aircraft are currently undergoing cabin refit at Cardiff

G-VIIF - Arrived at CWL on 14 April
G-VIIA - Arrived at CWL on 25 April


Boeing 777-300ER:

Cabin retrofit to commence in October 2020 in an 8F/76J/40W/130Y configuration with the new Club World seat.

Retirement

With all the new arrivals there are also some much loved/hated (*delete as applicable) older aircraft heading for scrapping. Until 2015 most of these ended up in Victorville (VCV) in California for storage and ultimately part out for scrap. Since then most ex-BA planes have been sent to St Athan (DGX) in Wales for scrapping. Recent 747 retirements have been to Kemble (GBA) in England for scrapping.


Airbus A319:

G-DBCI - Retired to MAD on 07 Mar 2018
G-EUPV - Retired to DGX on 01 Nov 2018
G-EUOH - Retired to DGX on 05 Sep 2019
G-EUPX - Retired to DGX on 07 Sep 2019
G-EUOI - Retired to DGX on 04 Nov 2019
G-EUPE - Retired to DGX on 11 Mar 2020
G-EUOC - Retired to DGX on 11 Mar 2020
G-EUOD - Retired to DGX on 11 Mar 2020
G-EUOB - Retired to DGX on 16 Mar 2020

The next to be retired (subject to change) are:

G-EUPA - Due to be withdrawn in Sep 2020
G-EUPC - Due to be withdrawn in Nov 2020
G-EUPB - Due to be withdrawn in Oct 2021
G-EUPF - Due to be withdrawn in Nov 2021
G-EUPH - Due to be withdrawn in Nov 2021
G-EUPJ - Due to be withdrawn in Nov 2021
G-EUPK - Due to be withdrawn in Aug 2022
G-EUOE - Due to be withdrawn in Oct 2022
G-EUOF - Due to be withdrawn in Oct 2022

Airbus A320:

G-TTOB - Due to be withdrawn in Feb 2022


Boeing 747-400: As of 27 April 2020, 29 747-400s have been retired from the original fleet of 57, leaving 30 aircraft in service. Of those remaining, 17 are "super high-J" aircraft (14F / 86J / 30W / 145Y). (Cabin refresh dates here). The remaining 11 aircraft are "mid-J" aircraft. (14F / 52J / 36W / 235Y). (Cabin refresh dates here). All remaining aircraft have been refurbished.

The current plan is for all aircraft to be retired by February 2024. According to the Capital Markets Day presentation in November 2019, BA plan to have the following amount of 747s in the fleet at year end:
  • 2020: 25 aircraft
  • 2021: 20 aircraft
  • 2022: 12 aircraft
  • 2023: 3 aircraft
A list of retired 747-400s as of May 2019 is archived here.

Since then the following have been retired:

G-BNLN - Retired to DGX on 24 Jun 2019
G-CIVG - Retired to DGX on 25 Nov 2019
G-CIVM - Retired to DGX on 16 Mar 2020
G-CIVL - Retired to GBA 14 Apr 2020
G-CIVJ - Retired to GBA 15 Apr 2020
G-CIVN - Retired to GBA on 16 Apr 2020

For a further analysis of the fleet and retirement plans: see Globaliser's tracker.

The last known planned dates of the next retirements were as follows (but should all be regarded as subject to change). All the retirements will be of the "mid-J" configuration unless stated otherwise.

G-CIVI - Due to be retired in Apr 2020 [super high-J]
G-CIVD - Due to be retired in May 2020
G-CIVH - Due to be retired in Jun 2020 [super high-J]
G-CIVK - Due to be retired in Jan 2021
G-CIVF - Due to be retired in Jun 2021 [super high-J]
G-CIVB - Due to be retired in 2022
G-CIVC - Due to be retired in Nov 2022
G-CIVE - Due to be retired in Nov 2022
G-BYGC - Due to be retired in 2023 [super high-J]
G-BNLY - Due to be retired in 2023

Boeing 777-200:

G-ZZZC - Retired to DGX on 13 Jan 2020
G-ZZZA - Due to be retired in Sep 2020 [potential early retirement - stored at LHR 19 Mar 2020]
G-ZZZB - Due to be retired in Oct 2020 [potential early retirement - stored at LHR 20 Mar 2020]

Embraer 170:

G-LCYE - Retired to WAW on 07 May 2020

Historical Fleet

Boeing 737: The last remaining 737 was retired in Oct 2015. Details are archived here.


Boeing 767: The last remaining 767 was retired in Nov 2018. Details are archived here.







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BA Fleet : New aircraft arrivals and retirements master tracker

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Old Jul 12, 2018, 10:31 am
  #2221  
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: London, UK
Programs: bmi DC, BAEC
Posts: 1,108
Originally Posted by Globaliser
You would have thought that they might have tried to learn in advance from the well-documented experiences of other airlines in their peer group!
what experiences of dodgy 2nd hand planes are you thinking of ?
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Old Jul 12, 2018, 10:42 am
  #2222  
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Originally Posted by fartoomanyusers
what experiences of dodgy 2nd hand planes are you thinking of ?
QF 744s are the first example that come to mind.
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Old Jul 12, 2018, 2:44 pm
  #2223  
 
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Posts: 2,203
Originally Posted by wythy
I think the current scope clause agreements prevents Cityflyer operating with aircraft with more than 100seats. There would also be an issue of Ramp space at LCY as the C-series (A220) has a much bigger footprint than the Embraer.
Indeed, LCY only has 3 stands that can take the A220 currently. Swiss are only allowed to have 1 A220 on the ground at LCY at a time.

When the LCY expansion is complete in 2021/2, that will increase to 10 stands that can take the A220.
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Old Jul 12, 2018, 3:30 pm
  #2224  
 
Join Date: Aug 2016
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Posts: 817
Originally Posted by fartoomanyusers
what experiences of dodgy 2nd hand planes are you thinking of ?
There was an A320 rejected that was supposed to go to Gatwick.
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Old Jul 12, 2018, 5:04 pm
  #2225  
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
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Indeed, LCY only has 3 stands that can take the A220 currently. Swiss are only allowed to have 1 A220 on the ground at LCY at a time.
Is that right? Seen two side by side before
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Old Jul 12, 2018, 5:20 pm
  #2226  
 
Join Date: Jul 2014
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Posts: 2,203
Originally Posted by skipness1E
Is that right? Seen two side by side before
That was from an article over a year.

Koch says ground space restrictions at London City will for the time being restrict the CSeries operation to one aircraft at a time. The airport has three parking positions.
However, it also noted

London City's chief operating officer Alison FitzGerald says the airport is "testing" operations with two CSeries aircraft at a time. Expansion plans for the airport involve extension of the apron to the east with seven additional aircraft stands and a taxiway to runway 27 by 2022, she adds.
source
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 4:03 am
  #2227  
 
Join Date: May 2014
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Although wednesday saw the largest drop in Brent Crude in 2 years! The 6.9% drop still keeps it at $73.40 a barrel so your point is valid, but it may not be stable at this level..

Last edited by john205; Jul 13, 2018 at 4:04 am Reason: correction
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 4:57 am
  #2228  
 
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Posts: 5,596
When BA made their submission to the CAA they claimed they needed the 3 Qatar aircraft, and there was no suitable European aircraft available. No mention was made of any retirements during the wet lease period in the submission.Accordingly urgent appeals have been made to the CAA that by retiring G-BNLA BA are breaching the conditions of their temporary wet lease approval.Not sure what will happen next.
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 5:50 am
  #2229  
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Originally Posted by rapidex
... by retiring G-BNLA ...
G-BNWA, surely?
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 6:10 am
  #2230  
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 9
Originally Posted by rapidex
when ba made their submission to the caa they claimed they needed the 3 qatar aircraft, and there was no suitable european aircraft available. No mention was made of any retirements during the wet lease period in the submission.accordingly urgent appeals have been made to the caa that by retiring g-bnla ba are breaching the conditions of their temporary wet lease approval.not sure what will happen next.
bnwa bnwb??
stevieboii is offline  
Old Jul 13, 2018, 6:25 am
  #2231  
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
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Sorry you are correct. My BALPA mate rather jumped the gun on that one.
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 7:00 am
  #2232  
 
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Originally Posted by rapidex
When BA made their submission to the CAA they claimed they needed the 3 Qatar aircraft, and there was no suitable European aircraft available. No mention was made of any retirements during the wet lease period in the submission.Accordingly urgent appeals have been made to the CAA that by retiring G-BNLA BA are breaching the conditions of their temporary wet lease approval.Not sure what will happen next.
Not sure the CAA will entertain this one in my opinion. The retiring B767 is in short-haul config and I'd hazard a guess BA specifically stated the requirement for suitable medium/long-haul aircraft to cover the inoperable B787 fleet. While the B767's could probably do the routes currently being served by the QR A330 wet leases, BA would have to refit them to CW standard or pay out tons of compensation to pax on each flight who were expecting a flat bed but ended up bolt upright for a 6hr to 10hr flight (destination dependent)!

Pilot37
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Old Jul 13, 2018, 7:03 am
  #2233  
 
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: UK
Programs: BA
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Originally Posted by rapidex
When BA made their submission to the CAA they claimed they needed the 3 Qatar aircraft, and there was no suitable European aircraft available. No mention was made of any retirements during the wet lease period in the submission.Accordingly urgent appeals have been made to the CAA that by retiring G-BNLA BA are breaching the conditions of their temporary wet lease approval.Not sure what will happen next.
But the Qatar aircraft are to cover 787 Engine problems, and the 767s are shorthaul configured aircraft, so how would keeping a 767 longer be able to cover the 787 problems? Yes a 767 could fly long routes but surely BA would argue from a commercial perspective they can't put a shorthaul configured aircraft on a route to replace a longhaul configured aircraft, hence the Qatar lease.
The Ginge is offline  
Old Jul 14, 2018, 12:16 am
  #2234  
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
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Posts: 1,546
Long haul or short haul configuration. Yes, all true.
But if you're trying to give a message that you're short of planes and you've looked absolutely everywhere but your only option is to hire from outside the EU.... Well decommissioning aircraft off your fleet at the same time certainly does send out a mixed message.
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Old Jul 14, 2018, 12:27 am
  #2235  
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
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Originally Posted by The Ginge
But the Qatar aircraft are to cover 787 Engine problems, and the 767s are shorthaul configured aircraft, so how would keeping a 767 longer be able to cover the 787 problems? Yes a 767 could fly long routes but surely BA would argue from a commercial perspective they can't put a shorthaul configured aircraft on a route to replace a longhaul configured aircraft, hence the Qatar lease.
Don’t forget that BA do to some extent use long/mid-haul aircraft on short haul routes - the 777s to MAD and the mid-haul A321s.
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