Just to put some numbers on the extra capacity provided by say a RYR based B738 with 189 seats.
Taking just 20 return flights a week, over a full year would provide over 196,000 seats. Even a seasonal based a/c for 30 weeks would be 113,000 seats.
As EGCC_MAN points out, RYR have been very obliging in using non-based a/c for MAN services but even an extra such flight a day only produces 1/3 of those seats.
Yawner, if you view the apron in the middle of an afternoon, you may well feel there's no shortage of stands. Try taking a look between 05.45 and say 09.00 and you'll probably reach a different conclusion.
But User is right, it's not just parking stands for a/c. At certain times, the terminals - T3 & even T1 - struggle to cope.
Certain airlines such as foreign carriers using a/c from their own bases do help the situation as arrival into MAN can be at less busy times and help to produce growth, but it's those based carriers that can significantly boost capacity, providing of course the demand is there.
It's going to take some creative thinking from MAN over the next few years if pax numbers continue to increase as to how best to accommodate them. "There's no room at the Inn" is not the sort of message the airport will want to send out. But if airlines such as easyjet, Ryanair and Jet 2 were to start putting extra a/c into other competitive UK airports and not MAN, it would be a real cause of concern.
Taking just 20 return flights a week, over a full year would provide over 196,000 seats. Even a seasonal based a/c for 30 weeks would be 113,000 seats.
As EGCC_MAN points out, RYR have been very obliging in using non-based a/c for MAN services but even an extra such flight a day only produces 1/3 of those seats.
Yawner, if you view the apron in the middle of an afternoon, you may well feel there's no shortage of stands. Try taking a look between 05.45 and say 09.00 and you'll probably reach a different conclusion.
But User is right, it's not just parking stands for a/c. At certain times, the terminals - T3 & even T1 - struggle to cope.
Certain airlines such as foreign carriers using a/c from their own bases do help the situation as arrival into MAN can be at less busy times and help to produce growth, but it's those based carriers that can significantly boost capacity, providing of course the demand is there.
It's going to take some creative thinking from MAN over the next few years if pax numbers continue to increase as to how best to accommodate them. "There's no room at the Inn" is not the sort of message the airport will want to send out. But if airlines such as easyjet, Ryanair and Jet 2 were to start putting extra a/c into other competitive UK airports and not MAN, it would be a real cause of concern.
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