Air Caraïbes aircraft

Air Caraïbes

Up-to-date detailed seat maps of the Air Caraïbes fleet

The wide bodies

Air Caraïbes has a fleet of three Airbus A330-300s, three Airbus A350-900s, and four A350-1000s. The airline operates transatlantic long-haul services from its Paris Orly base, as well as a regional network in the West Indies

Airbus A330-300
333
Fleet size2
1235307

Airbus A330-300

Airbus A350-900
359
Fleet size1
1845326

Airbus A350-900

Airbus A350-1000
351
Fleet size3
2445360

Airbus A350-1000

The narrow bodies

Air Caraïbes also operates four ATR 72s from its Pointe-à-Pitre hub

ATR 72-600
ATR
74

ATR 72-600

A guide to AeroLOPA

Not familiar with the letters and numbers that accompany our seat maps? No problem. Here is our methodology.

Aircraft type

77W
8
52
28
216

This is a three (or sometimes four) digit alpha-numeric code used to identify the aircraft type. We mainly use the established industry standard IATA codes but when more granularity is called for, we use the airline's own aircraft codes instead. In this example, the Boeing 777-300ER is represented by the code 77W.

Seating configuration

77W
8
52
28
216

To the right of the aircraft code are the cabin seat counts, ordered from left to right and displayed as bubbles representing First, Business, Premium Economy, and Economy cabin classes. The colour of each bubble matches the cabin identifying bar displayed at the right hand side of the seat map.

320
180

Some narrow body cabin classes are dynamically sized, where a separating curtain moves forward or aft in accordance with the demand. Here we display the aircraft's combined seat count.

Fleet count

77W
Fleet size14

Below the aircraft code we show the airline's fleet count for that aircraft type. In this example, the airline operates 14 of the Boeing 777-300ER. When an airline has several variants of the same aircraft type, each variant has its own tile and the fleet count reflects only that specific variant.

Variant navigation

Three aircraft tiles with the middle one highlighted and variant-position dots beneath each

On the aircraft page, when an airline operates several variants of the same aircraft type, a small row of dots appears beneath each tile. The dots show how many variants exist and which one you're currently viewing — the highlighted dot is in the current variant's position. Click any tile in the variant row to jump between configurations.