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American Airlines retrofits Airbus A319s with more first class seats

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American Airlines retrofits Airbus A319s with more first class seats
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American Airlines is set to remove seat-back video screens from its Airbus A319 aircraft, which were ordered before US Airways management took over. These planes will undergo modifications to include more seats and larger overhead bins. Aviation watchdog JonNYC reported that the first aircraft will enter prototyping for the new cabin configuration in spring 2025.

"AA A319 will go in for Oasis prototype in Spring on '25. This is for the group of AA A319's, 32 of them, delivered around 2013," JonNYC tweeted on September 13, 2024.

The retrofit of American Airlines' Airbus A319s has been anticipated for three years, with plans to add more first-class seats finally coming to fruition. Currently, these planes have only eight first-class seats compared to 16 on Boeing 737s and 20 on Airbus A321neos. The limited number of first-class seats has constrained American's revenue potential as purchasing first-class tickets can be challenging on many routes.

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American Airlines intends to add a row of first-class seating (four seats) without removing any coach seats. This will result in a tighter configuration with smaller lavatories and likely reduced seat space in both first class and coach sections.

Seven years ago, American Airlines introduced a new domestic product featuring less legroom, reduced seat padding, no seat-back entertainment screens, and smaller lavatories but larger overhead bins. Over time, this "Oasis" configuration was applied to existing planes, which involved removing seat-back screens from those that had them. Initially implemented without thorough planning or mockups, the project required subsequent adjustments under "Project Kodiak."

However, the Airbus A319s never received this treatment initially because they were already densely configured when ordered by American Airlines before the US Airways merger. Now these planes will see their padded seats replaced and their seat-back entertainment removed as part of the Oasis retrofit.

With legacy American Airlines A319s receiving the Oasis treatment and additional first-class seats, a few domestic fleets remain untouched since the merger. The premium cross-country Airbus A321T planes are set to be replaced by Airbus A321XLRs upon delivery; these older models will be converted to standard configurations with less legroom in coach and no seat-back entertainment.

Additionally, American’s aging Airbus A320 fleet still features an old US Airways configuration with outdated seating and no modern amenities like larger overhead bins or extra legroom options. Rather than retiring these aircraft, American plans to retrofit them with an extra row of first-class seating as well.

In contrast, competitors Delta and JetBlue offer seat-back entertainment screens while United is adding them. All three airlines plan to provide fast, free Wi-Fi services whereas American’s inflight internet remains among the most expensive in the industry.

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