Lion Air: Béda antarrépisi

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Nyieun kaca anyar {{Infobox_Airline | airline = Lion Air | logo = Lionair logo.png | logo_size = 200 | fleet_size = 59 (+139 pesenan) | destinations = 61 | IATA ...
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Révisi nurutkeun 16 Nopémber 2010 17.40

200
Lion Air
IATA
JT
ICAO
LNI
Callsign
LION INTER
Ngadeg1999
Frequent flyer programLion Passport
Tempat diuk anggotaLion King Lounge
Ukuran armada59 (+139 pesenan)
Tujuan61
Company sloganWe make people fly
Kantor pusatJakarta, Indonesia
KonciRusdi Kirana (CEO)
Loka: www.lionair.co.id
A Lion Air MD-82 with 'www.lionair.co.id' titles boarding at Sultan Syarif Kasim II Airport, Indonesia. (2006)

PT Lion Mentari Airlines, operating as Lion Air, is Indonesia’s largest private carrier and Asia’s first hybrid carrier which offers both economy and business-class seating,[1] based in Jakarta, Indonesia. Lion Air also flies to Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia. Its main base is Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, Jakarta.[2] It operates scheduled passenger services on an extensive domestic network from Jakarta to 42 destinations with 226 daily flights (as of December 2009).

Along with many other Indonesian carriers, Lion Air is on the list of air carriers banned in the European Union due to safety concerns as of December 2010.

History

The airline was established in October 1999 and started operations on June 30, 2000, when it began scheduled passenger services between Jakarta and Pontianak using a leased Boeing 737-200. It is owned by Rusdi Kirana and family.[2] The airline is also planning to become an IATA member, thereby becoming the second IATA Indonesian carrier behind Garuda Indonesia.

Starting February 2010, Lion Air will increase the number of flights to Jeddah to five times weekly. This route will be served by their two Boeing 747-400 with 496 seats.[3]

Tujuan

 Artikel utama: Lion Air destinations.

Lion Air serves 61 destinations; 55 domestic and 6 international (as of July 2010).

Fleet

Current

Lion Air's fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of 25 October 2010):[4]

Pesawat Beroperasi Pesenan Panumpang Catetan
Boeing 737-300 2 0 148 Dieureunkeun: 2010
Boeing 737-400 8 0 158 Dieureunkeun: 2011
Boeing 737-900ER 43 139 195-212 Launch Customer
Boeing 747-400 2 0 496
McDonnell Douglas MD-90 4 0 172 To be phased out
Total 59 139

In October 2010, the average age of Lion Air's average fleet is 7.2 years.[5]

A Lion Air Boeing 737-900ER parked at Sultan Hasanuddin International Airport, Indonesia. (2007)

Throughout 2007 to 2012, 138 Boeing 737-900ERs will be delivered from the total 178 aircraft ordered to strengthen Lion Air's fleet. The 737-900ER is the newest member of the Next Generation 737 family. All other aircraft, including the Boeing 737 Classic family and the McDonnell Douglas/Boeing MD-80 family, are being phased out to make room for their new aircraft.

Retired

Aircraft Total
Airbus A310 2
Boeing 737-200 2
McDonnell Douglas MD-82 22
Yak-42[6] 1

Insiden jeung kacilakaan

External links

Citakan:Portalbox


References

  1. Lion Air - Our Fleet (2nd Paragraph, Asia's first hybrid carrier)
  2. a b "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International: p. 106. 2007-04-03 
  3. Lion Air adds extra flights to Jeddah
  4. "Directory: World Airlines Part 2 (C-L)". Flight International: 31–80. 2009-06. 
  5. Lion Air Fleet Age
  6. Airliners.net