Delta Flight 777

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To a casual observer in the cabin, Delta Air Lines flight 8777 from New York to Los Angeles on Saturday might have looked like a run of the mill hop from coast to coast, one of many crisscrossing the country every day.

But at a closer look, it would have become clear that this was not a normal coast-to-coast flight like we used to have before the pandemic.

All the middle seats, blocked by Delta’s social-distancing policy, were unoccupied, and everybody wore a mask — but most importantly, the vast majority of the passengers behind those masks weren’t regular flyers just getting from JFK to LAX. They were aviation enthusiasts, flying to California on the last run of a popular airplane that’s fallen victim to the pandemic: Delta’s former flagship, the Boeing 777.

  • Delta first placed an order for eight Boeing 777-200ERs on November 13, 1997. The first of these aircraft, N860DA, was delivered to Delta on March 23, 1999. It’s first flight was a few weeks later on May 1, 1999, connecting its main base in Atlanta (ATL) with London-Gatwick (LGW) as well as training flights to Orlando (MCO).
  • A Delta 777 touched down in Atlanta for the last time Friday to pick up passengers, bound for Los Angeles International Airport. The 777′s final Delta mission worldwide, Flight 8777, will take.
© The Points Guy Boarding the last Delta 777 flight at JFK (Photo by Alberto Riva/The Points Guy)

Delta CEO Ed Bastian announced on Thursday that the airline will permanently retire its Boeing 777 fleet by the end of the year. According to Bastian, the decision was made due to the drop in travel demand caused by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Delta has a fleet of 18 Boeing 777s, including eight 777-200ERs, and 10 Boeing 777-200LRs. The 777 first joined Delta’s fleet in 1999, and was a game changer, since the 777-200LR allowed Delta to operate flights like Atlanta to Johannesburg, which otherwise weren’t possible. Delta has embarked on a full-fleet interior renovation of its 777 aircraft, with the first refreshed 777-200ER taking flight this afternoon from Detroit (DTW) to Beijing (PEK) featuring the award-winning Delta One suites, the new Delta Premium Select cabin and the widest Main Cabin seats of Delta's international fleet, among other interior upgrades.

Because of the drop in traffic this year, the biggest twinjet ever made has become too big for Delta to fly economically. Its almost 300 seats are tough to fill these days when there isn’t a planeload of aviation geeks who want to go on a last ride, so Delta is phasing it out in favor of the Airbus A350. The Airbus doesn’t fly as far, but offers much better economics.

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The demise of the 777 is bad news for the passenger experience in coach class, where Delta was among the few carriers in the world retaining the original 3-3-3 seat layout that Boeing had originally designed. Most other airlines that fly 777s have squeezed in one more seat in a 3-4-3 layout, and that made Delta’s Triple Sevens very popular among passengers, by contrast.

“Retiring a fleet as iconic as the 777 is not an easy decision,” Delta CEO Ed Bastian said earlier this year. “I’ve flown on that plane often and I love the customer experience it has delivered.”

Delta Flight 777

Customers on DL8777 agreed.

“Flying to Australia was the best on Delta,” reminisced Craighton Miller, a flight dispatcher with regional carrier Endeavor Air who flew the 777 across the Pacific. “Oh, that flight was long!” The 777 was the first twin-engine airplane that could fly it nonstop, breaking into the exclusive long-haul domain of the four- and three-engined jets.

Yan Chan, a defense contractor, loved the Triple Seven so much that he showed up at the gate with a model Delta 777 he asked his fellow avgeeks to sign.

© The Points Guy Yan Chan and his model 777 (Photo by Alberto Riva/The Points Guy)

Max Moncrief, a ramp trainer with Delta, came on his day off to salute an airplane that took him, he said, “all over the world.”

And at the front of the jet, half of the Delta One cabin — sporting the individual suites that the airline had just spent millions installing, before the pandemic — had been taken over by members of the Delta Diamond Medallion Flyers, a Facebook group for people who have the highest elite status on the airline. Buoyed by free biz-class champagne, they had clearly come to party, lowering their masks only to drink from the special cups they had made for the occasion.

© The Points Guy (Photo by Alberto Riva/The Points Guy)

Not everybody was so into it.

“I don’t understand the excitement about it,” said Mel Bollom, who had come from Wisconsin to chaperone his young, aviation-enthusiast grandson Cooper, “but I am amazed by the enthusiasm.”

777

Delta 777 Flight Routes

About 10 percent of the people on board, according to a quick estimate by a flight attendant, were normal passengers like him — a number that gives an insight into the scale of the problem Covid-19 has given the airlines. Without the avgeeks filling the jet on this one special occasion, the flight would have gone 90 percent empty.

And that’s why Delta’s Triple Sevens — even if they are at most two decades old, which is young in airplane years — are going away.

According to a study by the International Council for Clean Transportation of airplanes flying on North Atlantic long-haul routes, the Airbus A350 is the most fuel-efficient jet currently used to serve that very important market, while the 777 is among the worst performers. Delta says the Airbus burns 21 percent less fuel per seat than the 777 it replaces.

© The Points Guy Screen shot from International Council for Clean Transportation

The two jets have similar capacity, both seating around 300 people, but the A350 is a generation later. Thanks to the use of composite materials, it’s about 30 percent lighter, and it also has newer engines.

Delta Airline Flight Schedule

Until the pandemic reduced air travel to a trickle, the higher fuel burn of the Boeing was not an issue. Delta flew its Triple Sevens full, which made them profitable. It had also just refurbished their interiors, a sure sign that an airline plans to keep a plane type in the fleet for a while — especially if that airline is Delta, known for investing in maintenance and updated cabins to keep its jets longer than many competitors do.

But when an airline is flying planes almost empty and burning through $750 million a month, fuel savings matter a lot. That means it’s curtains for the airplane that just three years ago had inherited from the 747 the title of biggest and heaviest in the Delta fleet.

None of that mattered on Saturday, though, as the 777 branded on the fuselage as The Delta Spirit crossed the U.S. with its complement of socially-distanced aviation geeks. People were there to celebrate another storied airplane that’s going away, like so many 747s and A380s this year.

“You made this flight extremely special,” Captain Tim Freeman told his passengers on the intercom as the 777 began descending from 40,000 feet. “This is my final landing with the Triple Seven, so make sure to say it’s a nice landing.”

Captain Freeman did make a nice landing at LAX, and many of the avgeeks onboard saluted his smooth touchdown with something that frequent flyers never do, as if to highlight the special occasion: they clapped.

After the 777, the captain will go on to fly Delta’s new flagship, the A350. The first officer, Scott Gottschang, will become a captain himself, on the short-haul Airbus A320.

For the airplane they flew to Los Angeles, though, the future is not as bright.

© The Points Guy The last takeoff (Photo by Alberto Riva/The Points Guy)

A few hours later, having disgorged its final passengers into a near-deserted terminal, The Delta Spirit departed one last time, headed for storage — and likely recycling — in the California desert. As the sun went down over the Pacific, Delta’s last 777 gave one of those passengers, watching from a nearby terrace, a sight that summed up a career: it took off, literally, into the sunset.

Delta Airline 777-200

All photos by Alberto Riva/The Points Guy

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