
Delta Bombardier CS100 / Airbus A220 Inaugural
In February 2019, I flew on Delta Air Line’s inaugural Airbus A220 flight. Delta was the first airline in North America to fly the A220, formerly known as the Bombardier C Series.
Delta ordered 75 C Series aircraft in 2016 and later expanded that order to 90. Order mix consist of 40 A220-100 (CS100) 109-seaters and 50 larger 130-seater A220-300 (CS300). Final delivery is expected in late 2023.
First A220/CS100 was delivered to Delta in October 2018. Service launch was scheduled on January 31, 2019 with flights originating from New York LaGuardia (LGA) and Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW). Due to the U.S. Federal government shutdown that went on for 35-days during December-January, the aircraft could not get certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in time for the start date. As a result, the inaugural flight was pushed one week to February 7.
I booked the inaugural flight on the original date when it first came on sale in October. When the flight moved, Delta was generous enough to refund my tickets without a penalty. On my new ticket, I booked the inaugural A220 departure from LaGuardia: a 6 am Delta Shuttle flight to Boston (BOS). After returning to LGA (not on the A220), I booked an afternoon A220 flight to DFW.
At 4:30 am, there was little traffic through the construction maze entering LGA. Single lane in most places, I can see how this could become a traffic nightmare during busy periods. My Lyft driver said the routing changes daily and he really has to stay alert.
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N102DU to Boston |
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N104DU to Dallas-Ft Worth |
Delta’s Vice President for New York and Sales, East Chuck Imhof and Managing Director-LGA Airport Operations Ginny Elliott spoke about significance of the A220 for Delta and the push to become New York’s Airline at the “New LaGuardia”.
Despite being a small class jet, the cabin had a wide-body feel: sculpted panels, high capacity overhead bins, large windows, mood lighting, and seat back monitors.
At every seat, passengers found the only collectible given — a First Flight pin with a commemorative boarding pass.
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Seat back contents with collectible 1st Flight pin |
Before the door closed, the camera crew asked everyone to wave and cheer. It was early, people really didn’t get into it. We were asked to do it again, “this time with feeling”. And it was the second take that ended up on the Delta blog video.
Outside, the ramp was wet from light rain during this near-freezing winter morning. The windows were dotted with rain drops, making photo-taking a difficult proposition (granted it was still dark out).
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I spy CS100! |
It was a long 20-minute taxi to Runway 13. Upon reaching, we made an immediate takeoff. We made a powerful and steep takeoff run. On rotation, I got a bit of the roller coaster feeling in my stomach. We quickly punched through the cloud deck and made a sharp bank to the left for Boston. Upon climb out, there were some grinding vibrations from the engines.
Due to the line blocking the aisle and the short flight, the service cart couldn’t quite make it through to where I was seated. Fortunately, another flight attendant stationed at the aft galley handed out beverage and snack choices on foot. Kudos to the crew for making best of the situation.
Approaching Runway 04R, we flew over the industrial port area of Boston. With condensation on the wings, we made a smooth touchdown to the applause of all on board.
Bonus! You made it this far, here is the video trip report of my second flight, from LGA to DFW where we experienced a touch-and-go landing!