A better place is the Bureau of Transportation Statistics located at http://www.transtats.bts.gov/ Click on Aviation then Air Carrier Statistics (Form 41 Traffic). Click on the download link located in the T-100 International Market row. Filter the data then download it. Warning: The file may be very big. Also, this does not break it down by flight. David R -------------- Original message -------------- > This might help, but you will probably have to work out the capacity > yourself.: > > US DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE last Friday announced that 4.3m > > international visitors travelled to the United States in August 2005, > > an increase of almost 7% over August 2004. Arrivals were also up 8% > > for the first eight months of 2005 compared to 2004. These figures are > > in spite of some of the most vigorous immigration checks anywhere in > > the world, enough to put off many innocent leisure tourists to even > > bother. Noticeably arrivals from the UK declined by 4% compared to > > August 2004, although they were up for the first eight months of 2005 > > over 2004. For port activity see > > http://www.tinet.ita.doc.gov/view/m-2005-I-001/port_entry05.html To > > see the top markets and regional data, please go to > > http://www.tinet.ita.doc.gov/view/m-2005-I-001/index.html > > > Antoin > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Michael Burris" > To: > Sent: 28 November 2005 01:50 > Subject: Number of Passengers > > > > AIRLINE: > > > > Is there any way to determine the number of passengers > > that boarded a past flight? > > > > I'm writing an article on Varig and I am wondering if > > their flights arriving from S. A. to the U.S. are > > fully sold, partially sold, arriving with very few > > passengers, etc? > > > > Any software on the Net that this info can be > > accessed? > > > > Thanks, > > > > Michael A. Burris > > Cambridge, Massachusetts > > > > > > > > __________________________________ > > Yahoo! Music Unlimited > > Access over 1 million songs. Try it free. > > http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited/ > >