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    United Airlines successfully installed Starlink on its first aircraft, and the promised speeds are up to 50 times faster


    • United Airlines has installed Starlink on its first regional aircraft
    • The install time is just four days per aircraft versus 10+ days for other Wi-Fi systems
    • The airline expects to install Starlink on over 40 aircraft a month starting in May

    Back in January, right ahead of the 2025 Consumer Electronics Show, United Airlines announced that it was speeding up its rollout and installation of Starlink across its fleet. It was good news as Grant Milstead, VP of Digital Technology for the airline, told us that it was “kind of enabling the living room in the sky experience.”

    How? Well, once Starlink is installed on United Airline’s aircraft, the result is free, fast Wi-Fi while on the ground and in the air as long as you are a member of MileagePlus, which is free to join. United Airlines sped up its planned rollout by confirming that the first commercial flight was expected on an Embraer E175 in the spring and that its entire regional fleet would be covered by the end of the year. Its first mainline aircraft would also have Starlink installed by the end of the year.

    Now United Airlines has successfully installed Starlink on its first regional aircraft, learned some new lessons, and confirmed some theories about what this process would look like. And for anyone who flies United Airlines, it’s great news as you’re one step closer to getting this stronger, more stable connection in the sky.

    Woman using headphones and Nintendo Switch on United Airlines flight

    (Image credit: United Airlines)

    The most significant learning is that installing the Starlink antenna, the wiring, and the wireless access points inside the cabin of the aircraft is a lot less time-consuming than a typical antenna for traditional airline Wi-Fi. United says that it takes about eight hours to install the Starlink equipment, which is about 10 times faster than the current in-flight Wi-Fi equipment (though that eight-hour window doesn’t include de-installation or the testing equipment).

    https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/WMqmrLMmvgiTdTaXNDJPv5-1200-80.jpg



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    jacob.krol@futurenet.com (Jacob Krol)

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