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Air Canada Boeing 777-300ER

c-fitw air canada boeing 777-300er new livery

The first Boeing 777-300ER was delivered to Air France in 2004, nearly a decade after the initial Boeing 777 variant entered service with United Airlines in 1995. The B77W is 74 metres or 242 feet in length with a wingspan of 65 metres or 213 feet. At the tail, the aircraft stands 19 metres or 61 feet in height. The flight range is 13,650 kilometres.

Air Canada Boeing 777-300ER Seating Maps

air canada boeing 777-300er seating map
air canada boeing 777-300er seating map

List of Air Canada Boeing 777-300ER Airplanes

C-FITL

C-FITU

C-FITW

C-FIUL

C-FIUR

C-FIUV

C-FIUW

C-FIVM

C-FIVQ

C-FIVR

C-FIVS

C-FIVW

C-FIVX

C-FJZS

C-FKAU

C-FNNQ

C-FNNU

C-FNNW

C-FRAM

About Air Canada

Air Canada was founded as Trans Canada Air Lines in 1937. The name was officially switched on January 1, 1965. There are over 170 aircraft in the main fleet (including Air Canada Jetz and Air Canada Cargo) with nearly 320 when subsidiaries are included. The largest in the fleet is the Boeing 777-300ER. The airline flies to over 220 destinations around the world (350 with subsidiaries included).

Headquartered at the Air Canada Centre on the grounds of Montreal Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport (YUL) in Dorval, Quebec, the airline is a founding member of the Star Alliance. Other founding members include Lufthansa, Scandinavian Airlines, Thai Airways and United Airlines. There are now 26 full member airlines worldwide.

Headquartered at the Air Canada Centre on the grounds of Montreal Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport (YUL) in Dorval, Quebec, the airline is a founding member of the Star Alliance. Other founding members include Lufthansa, Scandinavian Airlines, Thai Airways and United Airlines. There are now 26 full member airlines worldwide.