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Do A380s fly to Hawaii?

Furthermore, the airline will operate daily flights on the Airbus A380 to Honolulu from April for the first time since March 2020, along with resuming service on the Narita-Honolulu NH182/181 flights from July 21.



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In response to the recovering passenger demand for flights to Hawaii, ANA will bring a third Airbus A380 aircraft into service between Tokyo and Honolulu. The aircraft, known as the FLYING HONU because of its colorful liveries resembling the Hawaiian sea turtle, or Honu, has a capacity of 520 seats.

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Since its introduction, the A380 has established a strong safety record and is regarded as one of the safest aircraft in the world. The aircraft has been involved in only two significant incidents since its introduction – a 2011 crash in France and a 2016 tyre burst incident in Australia.

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For some airlines, the A380 offered too much capacity, while for Emirates, the airline can't get enough of the plane. Unfortunately for Emirates (and us passengers), the days of the Airbus A380 are numbered. Airbus stopped A380 production in 2021, as there weren't sufficient orders to keep production going.

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AIRBUS 380 MoS
  • ANC - Anchorage International Airport.
  • ATL - Atlanta Hartsfield International Airport.
  • BOS - Boston Logan International Airport.
  • DEN - Denver International Airport.
  • DFW - Dallas/Ft. ...
  • HNL - Honolulu International Airport.
  • IAD - Washington Dulles International Airport.
  • IAH - Houston Intercontinental Airport, Texas.


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Emirates is the largest operator of the A380 3 Class (ultra-long-range) - 489 seats.

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The bottom line. Overall, the A380 seems to come out far ahead in first class as there may also be wider availability of tickets. It also comes ahead in business class unless passengers are traveling in pairs and do not need access to the bar.

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Emirates A380.

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Currently, the world's biggest international airline has on order 50 A350-900s, 30 787-9s and 115 Boeing 777Xs. The airline operates 119 A380s, 123 Boeing 777-300ERs and 10 Boeing 777-200LRs. The 777X aircraft will replace the A380s, while the A350s and 787s will eventually replace the 777s.

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British Airways Airbus A380 At the moment you can find BA A380s flying from London to 7 destinations in the United States. These are: Boston (BOS), Washington Dulles (IAD), Miami (MIA), Chicago (ORD), Dallas (DFW), Los Angeles (LAX) and San Francisco (SFO).

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Regarding airports, it's hardly surprising that the world's largest operator, Emirates, with 119 A380s in its fleet, made Dubai International Airport (DXB) the busiest airport for A380 flights.

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Currently, the bragging rights for the longest flight in the world belong to Singapore Airlines' New York City to Singapore route. Its longest flight path, which connects Singapore's Changi Airport with New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, 9,585 miles away, takes 18 hours and 40 minutes.

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You'll be able to find A380 First Class Suites on all of these routes: Los Angeles (LAX) – Dubai (DXB) New York (JFK) – Dubai (DXB)

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Emirates presently uses the Airbus A380 on its daily Dubai-Milan Malpensa-New York JFK service.

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Now that the pandemic seems under control, the great queens of the sky are making a comeback. Etihad, Emirates, Lufthansa, Qantas, British Airways and other airlines, including new start-up Global, are putting the A380 back to work.

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As of December 2022, there were 237 aircraft in service with 16 operators worldwide.

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The remaining nine aircraft were due to be phased out slowly, but when the pandemic hit, the airline took the plunge and retired the remaining nine almost immediately. Eight of the aircraft were placed into storage where, according to planespotters.net, they remain to this day.

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