QantasLink
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QantasLink
Summary
QantasLink is an airline[1]. QantasLink ranks in the top 5% of airline entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,210 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- QantasLink is in the country of Australia[3].
- QantasLink's instance of is recorded as airline[4].
- QantasLink's airline hub is recorded as Melbourne Airport[5].
- QantasLink's airline alliance is recorded as Oneworld[6].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Airbus A220[7].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Airbus A319[8].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Airbus A320[9].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as de Havilland Canada DHC-8-200[10].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as de Havilland Canada DHC-8-300[11].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as de Havilland Canada DHC-8-400[12].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Embraer 190[13].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Fokker 100[14].
- QantasLink's item operated is recorded as Short 360[15].
- QantasLink's IATA airline designator is recorded as QF[16].
- QantasLink is a type of regional airline[17].
- QantasLink's Commons category is recorded as QantasLink[18].
- 2002 marks the founding of QantasLink[19].
- QantasLink's parent organization or unit is recorded as Qantas Airways[20].
- QantasLink's official website is recorded as http://www.qantaslink.com.au/[21].
- QantasLink's has works in the collection is recorded as National Museum of World Cultures[22].
- QantasLink's copyright status as a creator is recorded as works protected by copyrights[23].
Body
Founding
2002 marks the founding of QantasLink[19].
Operations
QantasLink's parent organization or unit is recorded as Qantas Airways[20].
Why It Matters
QantasLink ranks in the top 5% of airline entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,210 views/month).[2] QantasLink has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] QantasLink is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]