Re: The Answers to the CRJ Quesions....

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Wow. No further questions your honor!

Mr. CRJ is a deserved title.

Thanks,

Matthew

On Tuesday, April 1, 2003, at 07:49  PM, Keith Stibbe wrote:

> OK, here in a short, relatively painless message are the answers....
>
> 1) Air Wisconsin took several of the ex-Midway CRJs as did Jazz,
> Skywest and Mesa. The new Midway has received 2 of their old
> aircraft back and have repainted them in US Airways CS.
>
> 2) CL65 - Used by IACO as their code for all Canadair Regional Jets
> and the term CRJ is used by IATA.
>                                                        IACO       IATA
> Canadair Challenger all series       CL60       CLJ
> Canadair Regional Jet all series     CL65       CRJ
> Canadair Regional Jet 100/200      CL61       CR1
> Canadair Regional Jet 700             CL67       CR7
> Canadair Regional Jet 900             CL69       CR9
>
> 3) CRJ100ER - Original Design Aircraft
>     CRJ100LR - Longer Range / Better Hot / High Performance
>     CRJ200ER - Updated RJ100ER - Uprated Engines and Performance
>     CRJ200LR - Updated RJ100LR - Uprated Engines and Performance
>     CRJ440 - Specific RJ sub-type originally built for Northwest
> Airlines
>                  Requirement - 44 Seat Aircraft instead of 50 seat.
> Can be
>                  converted to RJ100ER status, but requires additional
>                  payment to Bombardier. (Union thing at airline)
>     CRJ700 - 68/70 Seat CRJ
>     CRJ900 - 86/90 Seat CRJ
>
> Any further questions?
>
> Keith Stibbe
> Mr. CRJ
> YYZ
>
>
>
>
>> From: Matthew Montano <mmontano@xxxxxxxxx>
>> Reply-To: The Airline List <AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Matthew
>> Montano
>> <mmontano@xxxxxxxxx>
>> Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2003 19:22:35 -0800
>> To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Subject: Re: AC Jazz's RJ's
>>
>> Paper thin and leather can be.
>>
>> Though I was on a Air Wisconsin CRJ this morning and the seats were
>> identical (as was the typeface used for the seat numbers.) Good chance
>> that both AW and AC Jazz picked up the old Midway birds?
>>
>> And I still never understood the nomenclature difference bewteen:
>>
>> - CL65
>> - CRJ100
>> - CRJ200
>>
>> I've been on a CL604, and understand the CRJ700 and CRJ900 bit...
>>
>> Matthew
>>
>> On Friday, March 28, 2003, at 09:24  PM, Matthew Sheren wrote:
>>
>>> Matthew Montano wrote:
>>>
>>>> Logged my first mile on an AC Jazz CRJ.
>>>> For a 'new' plane, they had well worn blue leather seats (AC's CRJs
>>>> have their 'trademark' green fabric.)
>>>> Where did they get these birds from, as this one didn't look new at
>>>> all?
>>> They came from Midway, or at least the version of Midway that flew
>>> 73Gs and CRJs ex-RDU.
>>>
>>> As long as you were noticing the seats; were they paper-thin like the
>>> seats on AC's mainline CRJs?
>>> Matthew :)
>>>
>

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