Norwegian Boeing 787-8 Los Angeles-Oslo, STUNNING VIEWS, Premium Class [AirClips full flight series]
Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA (
OSE:
NAS), trading as
Norwegian, is the third largest low-cost carrier in
Europe, the second-largest airline in
Scandinavia, and the ninth-largest airline in Europe in terms of passenger numbers. It offers a high-frequency domestic flight schedule within Scandinavia and to business destinations such as
London, as well as to holiday destinations in the
Mediterranean and the
Canary Islands, transporting 20.7 million people in
2013.
As of August 2014, Norwegian operates 98 aircraft of which 90 are Boeing 737s and 7 are
Boeing 787 Dreamliners, and is known for its distinctive livery of white with a red nose, with individual portraits of noteworthy Scandinavians on the tail fin. The airline has bases at
Oslo (
OSL),
Copenhagen (
CPH),
Stockholm (
ARN),
Helsinki (
HEL), London (
LGW),
Málaga (
AGP),
Las Palmas (
LPA),
Alicante (
ALC),
Bergen (
BGO),
Trondheim (
TRD),
Stavanger (
SVG),
Barcelona (
BCN),
Tenerife (
TFS) and
Madrid (
MAD).
Norwegian launched its long-haul operation in May 2013. In line with the majority of Norwegian's operations also the long-haul flights are operated by two fully owned subsidiaries.
Norwegian Long Haul is a legally separate entity with two unique
AOC but shares branding and commercial set up with the rest of the
Group. A crew base for long haul is established at
Bangkok (
BKK).
The
Boeing 787 Dreamliner is a long-range, mid-size wide-body, twin-engine jet airliner developed by
Boeing Commercial Airplanes. Its variants seat 242 to 335 passengers in typical 3-class seating configurations. It is Boeing's most fuel-efficient airliner and the world's first major airliner to use composite materials as the primary material in the construction of its airframe. The 787 has been designed to be 20% more fuel efficient than the 767 it is to replace. The
787 Dreamliner's distinguishing features include mostly electrical flight systems, a four-panel windshield, noise-reducing chevrons on its engine nacelles, and a smoother nose contour. It shares a common type rating with the larger
Boeing 777, allowing qualified pilots to operate both models, due to related design features.
The aircraft's initial designation was the
7E7, prior to its renaming in
January 2005. The first 787 was unveiled in a roll-out ceremony on July 8,
2007 at Boeing's
Everett assembly factory, by which time the aircraft had 677 on order; this is more orders from launch to roll-out than any previous wide-body airliner. By
November 2014, the 787 program had logged 1,055 orders from 58 customers, with
All Nippon Airways having the largest number on order.
Development and production of the 787 has involved a large-scale collaboration with numerous suppliers worldwide.
Final assembly is at the
Boeing Everett Factory in
Everett, Washington.
Assembly is also taking place at the
Boeing South Carolina factory in
North Charleston, South Carolina. Both sites will deliver 787s to airline customers.
Originally planned to enter service in May 2008, the project has experienced multiple delays. The airliner's maiden flight took place on
December 15, 2009, and completed flight testing in mid-2011. Final
Federal Aviation Administration (
FAA) and
European Aviation Safety Agency (
EASA) type certification was received in
August 2011 and the first
787-8 model was delivered in
September 2011. It entered commercial service on
October 26,
2011 with launch customer All Nippon Airways. The stretched
787-9 variant, which is 20 feet (
6.1 m) longer and can fly 450 nmi farther than the -8, first flew in
September 2013. Deliveries of the 787-9 began in July 2014; it entered commercial service on August 7, 2014 with All Nippon Airways, with 787-9 launch customer
Air New Zealand following two days later.
The aircraft has suffered from several in-service problems, notably fires on board related to its lithium-ion batteries. These systems were reviewed by both the FAA and the
Japanese aviation agency. On
January 16, 2013, the FAA issued an emergency airworthiness directive that grounded all 787s in the
United States. The EASA,
Japanese Transport Ministry,
India's
Directorate General of Civil Aviation (
DGCA), and
Chile's Dirección
General de
Aeronautica Civil (
DGAC) followed suit and grounded the Dreamliners in their jurisdictions. After Boeing completed tests on a revised battery design, the FAA approved the revised design on
April 19, 2013, and lifted the grounding on April 26, 2013. The 787 returned to passenger service on April 27, 2013, with
Ethiopian Airlines.