Thai Airways International

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Thai Airways International
การบินไทย
IATA
TG
ICAO
THA
Callsign
THAI
Founded 1960
Hubs Suvarnabhumi Airport
Focus cities Chiang Mai International Airport
Don Mueang International Airport
Phuket International Airport
Frequent flyer program Royal Orchid Plus
Member lounge Royal First Lounge
Royal Orchid Spa
Royal Silk Lounge
Royal Orchid Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance
Fleet size 88 (+49 orders)
Destinations 74
Parent company Thai Ministry of Finance[1]
Headquarters Bangkok, Thailand
Key people Apinan Sumanaseni (president)
Chalit Pookpasuk (chairman)
Website: http://www.thaiairways.com
Thai Airways International's headquarters.
Thai Airways International's headquarters.

Thai Airways International Public Company Limited (Thai: การบินไทย) (SET: THAI) is the national air carrier of Thailand, operating out of Suvarnabhumi Airport, and is a founding member of the Star Alliance network. The airline operates some of the longest non-stop commercial flights, including routes from Bangkok to New York and to Los Angeles. Skytrax awarded Thai Airways International 'Worlds Best Cabin Staff and The Best Airline in the World' in 2006, while placing first in the 'Airline of the Year' category in 2007.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

Thai started as Thai Airways International, a joint venture with Scandinavian Airlines System (which initially held a 30% share), along with a domestic carrier, Thai Airways Company (Thai: เดินอากาศไทย). The carrier's first flight was on May 1, 1960. On April 1, 1977, the Thai government bought out the remaining 15% of SAS-owned shares. On April 1, 1988, the two carriers merged to form the present Thai Airways International.[3]

The arrival of the A340-500 coincided with a change to the airline's image, including a new livery and a revised font for the title "Thai".

On May 1, 2005, the airline began a non-stop Bangkok-New York service (TG790/791) with a new A340-500. The New York bound flight time is 16 hours 55 minutes and Bangkok bound flight time is 17 hours 10 minutes. Routing from New York/JFK is via Bergen; Oslo; Stockholm; the Baltic States; south of Moscow; Kabul; south of Delhi and on into Bangkok. Routing from Bangkok/BKK is north over Laos and Vietnam; then over China and into Siberia; north to a very short crossing of the Chukchi Sea to near Nome, Alaska; east past Cambridge Bay and the southern end of the Northwest passage; then southeast over Hudson Bay to a point between Ottawa and Montreal. Finally over the Adirondacks and the Hudson Valley down into JFK. Citing fuel costs, Thai will discontinue the JFK service as of July 1, 2008.

Boeing 747-400 in current colours
Boeing 747-400 in current colours

Non-stop Bangkok-Los Angeles service (TG794/795) started on December 2, 2005, also using a new A340-500. The flight time is 16.5 hours eastbound. This replaces TG774/775 (LAX-KIX-BKK & BKK-KIX-LAX) service using Boeing 747-400 aircraft and the stop at Kansai International Airport in Osaka. However, THAI will be discontinuing BKK-LAX non-stop and will instead restart BKK-KIX-LAX from October 2008 amid cost cutting measures.

Thai Airways International operates three weekly direct flights on the route BangkokJohannesburg v.v., utilizing A340-600 aircraft from October 2006.

[edit] Destinations

[edit] Cargo

Thai Airways Cargo operate 747-200F freighter aircraft service, twice weekly Bangkok-Dubai-Paris.

[edit] Fleet

The Thai Airways International fleet consists of the following aircraft as of May 2008:[4]

Thai Airways International Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers
(First/Royal Silk/Premium Economy*/Economy)
Notes
Airbus A300-600 10
2
5
247 (0/46/201)
261 (0/28/233)
260 (0/28/232)
Some to be phased out in 2008-2009
Airbus A321-200 0
(20 orders)[5]
179 (0/20/159) For delivery between 2012-2017
Airbus A330-300 12
(8 orders)
305 (42/263) For delivery between 2008-2010
Airbus A340-500 4 215 (0/60/42/113) Ultra long-haul flights to New York and Los Angeles
To be phased out in 2008
Airbus A340-600 5
(1 order)
267 (8/60/199) For delivery in 2008
Airbus A380-800 0
(6 orders)
For delivery between 2010-2011, Will be used for Bangkok – London, Paris and Frankfurt routes
ATR-72-200 2 66 (0/0/66) Includes 1 aircraft leased out to Nok Air
Boeing 737-400 10 149 (0/12/137) Includes 4 aircraft leased out to Nok Air
Boeing 747-400 6
12
389 (14/50/325)
375 (10/40/325)
Boeing 777-200 8 309 (0/30/279) Domestic, China, Japan
Boeing 777-200ER 6 292 (0/30/262)
Boeing 777-300 4
2
388 (0/49/339)
364 (0/34/330)
Domestic, China, Japan
Boeing 787-9 0
(14 orders)[6]
For delivery between 2012-2015
Total number of aircraft 88
(49 orders)
*Premium Economy is only available on non-stop flights from Bangkok to Los Angeles and New York.
Thai Airways aircraft at Don Mueang International Airport
Thai Airways aircraft at Don Mueang International Airport

The average age of the Thai fleet was 10.5 years at December 2007.

Thai has ordered 6 Airbus A380 aircraft, which will be delivered from 2010 for use on services to Frankfurt, Paris and London where frequencies cannot yet be increased.

Six Airbus A300-600 will leave the fleet between 2008-2009, Thai will acquire 8 A330-300 as replacement aircraft for delivery between 2008 and 2010.

The airline has a plan to retire 47 planes, and buys 65 in 10 years, Thai plan to lease 14 Boeing 787-9, and buy 20 Airbus A321-200. The airline still studies the additional 8 747-8I and 23 on more Boeing 787s and Airbus A350s.

Because the delay of Boeing 787-900 program, Thai might not be able to get the planes within 2012. Therefore, they have the second plan to lease more A330-300 or Boeing 777s.

Thai has announced that the airline is going to sign a deal with the Airbus company for 2 A350-1000 with the future order and expected to get the first two planes in 2016. The number of the future order has not been announced.

[edit] Cabin Services

Thai has four travel classes: Royal First, Royal Silk, Premium Economy and Economy.

[edit] Royal First Class

The new Royal First Class was introduced with the arrival of the Airbus A340-600. It offers 8 single flat-beds seats. Furthermore, Thai's retrofited 12 Boeing 747-400s are also equipped with this B/E Aerospace seat which mostly serves Europe-Australia and some intra-Asian flights. The new seats are equipped with lumbar massage and personal touch screen with AVOD and IFE system. Passenger on Royal First class can pick from 22 different meal choices, which they can pre-order before they fly.

Royal First class check-in at Suvarnabhumi Airport.
Royal First class check-in at Suvarnabhumi Airport.

[edit] Royal Silk (Business) Class

The new Royal Silk Class was also introduced with the arrival of Airbus A340-600. The new shell, angled lie-flat business class seats are installed on other 12 Boeing 747-400 aircraft, 2 Boeing 777-300 aircraft, all boeing 777-200 aircraft, all Boeing 777-200ER aircraft and all Airbus A340 aircraft. The pitch is 60"-62" between seats and width is 20"-21.5". When fully reclined (electrically adjusted) the seat becomes completely flat, however it is angled. The seat can perform lumbar massage. All seats are equipped with 17"-20" touch screen and AVOD IFE.

There are more choices of main course meal selection in Royal Silk class on international flights, although some may be identical to Economy Class offering. Premium alcoholic drinks are served with a more extensive choices of wine. Cheese is served after lunch and dinner. In addition, Royal Silk Class passengers have a dedicated check-in facility at Bangkok Suvarnabhumi International Airport, dedicated check-in desks at major airports around the world, lounge access, priority boarding, pre-flight champagne, fast track lane for passport control & security-check and priority baggage handling.

[edit] Premium Economy Class

The new Premium Economy Class is only available on inter-continental flights between Bangkok(BKK) and Los Angeles(LAX) or New York(JFK) on Airbus A340-500 aircraft. The fare for Premium Economy Class is slightly higher than those of Economy. Premium Economy seating is configured as 2-3-2 rather than the standard 2-4-2 in Economy. Seat pitch is increased to 42", 135 degree angle of recline and the seat features a leg-rest. Premium Economy class passengers also have more choices over their meal selection. All seats of Premium Economy class are equipped with AVOD and IFE with 10.5" touch screen.

On some long-haul routes such as Bangkok – Copenhagen, Bangkok – Stockholm, aircraft with previous generation Business Class seats are used – therefore the seats are sold under Premium Economy Class fare.


[edit] Economy Class

Thai Airways Economy Class meal
Thai Airways Economy Class meal

The seat pitch on Economy cabin offers passengers up to 36" pitch in selected aircraft as well as 34" on all the other aircrafts. Seat rows are configured in a 3-3-3 configuration in Boeing 777-200, 777-300 and 777-200ER aircraft, 2-4-2 in Airbus A340-500, A340-600, A330-300 and A300-600 aircraft, 3-4-3 in Boeing 747-400 aircraft and 3-3 in Boeing 737-400 aircraft. All Economy seats in Airbus A340-500, Airbus A340-600, Boeing B777-200ER and Boeing 777-300 (HS-TKA and HS-TKB) have individual Audio-Video On Demand (AVOD) In-flight Entertainment (IFE) system with 10.5" touch screen with more than 50 movies to choose and also many varieties of songs, games, and videos. Passengers will be given a choice of Thai or Western meals. Alcoholic beverages are free and served to passengers over the legal age limit.


[edit] Royal Orchid Plus

Thai Airways International's Royal Orchid Plus is the first frequent flyer program established in Thailand[citation needed]. It has a membership of over two million members world-wide.

Earning Miles

There are two types of mile which can be earned towards a Royal Orchid Plus account.

Firstly, Eligible Qualifying Miles (EQM) this type of mile is earned on:

  • Thai Airways flights
  • TG codeshare flights on routes departing from/to Bangkok (Malaysian Airlines, Emirates Airlines, El Al Israel Airlines and China Eastern Airlines)
  • Star Alliance flights
  • Jet Airways flights

Qualifying Miles (Q Miles) are the miles flown and additional class of service miles on Thai and Star Alliance airlines. Royal Orchid Plus miles are earned based on the paid class of travel.

Thai Airways Boeing 747-400 in old livery, taking off
Thai Airways Boeing 747-400 in old livery, taking off

Secondly, Partner Miles are earned from non-airline partners, such as hotels.

Status Tiers

There are three tiers in the Royal Orchid Plus program

  • Member – entry-level status
  • Silver – requires 10,000 Q Miles in one calendar year or 15,000 Q Miles from the date of enrolment up to December 31 of the next complete calendar year
  • Gold – requires 50,000 Q Miles in one calendar year, 80,000 Q Miles from the date of enrolment up to December 31 of the next complete calendar year, or 40 international flown sectors on THAI within any 1 calendar year.

[edit] Codeshare agreements

Check-in desks in Suvarnabhumi Airport Bangkok
Check-in desks in Suvarnabhumi Airport Bangkok

Thai Airways International codeshares with the following airlines:

[edit] Incidents and accidents

  • July 31, 1992Flight 311, an Airbus A310-304 hit the side of a hill 23 miles north of Kathmandu while descending towards Tribhuvan International Airport from Bangkok. All 113 on board (99 passengers and 14 crew) died. The accident was caused by technical faults (with flaps and a possible second unknown fault), pilot error and lack of equipment at TIA at the time (no radar).[7]
  • December 11, 1998Flight 261, another A310-200, bound for Surat Thani from Bangkok, during its third landing attempt in heavy rain, crashed into a rice paddy about 2 miles from Surat Thani airport; 102 of 143 aboard were killed.[8]
  • March 3, 2001 – a Boeing 737-400, bound for Chiang Mai from Bangkok, was destroyed by an explosion of the center wing tank resulting from ignition of the flammable fuel/air mixture in the tank. The source of the ignition energy for the explosion could not be determined with certainty, but the most likely source was an explosion originating at the center wing tank pump as a result of running the pump in the presence of metal shavings and a fuel/air mixture. [5] One flight attendant died [6].

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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