I believe it usually flies Northeast from Singapore towards Japan and the Bering sea and then make a turn towards southern Alaska and passes through Canada and the Great Lakes towards New York state and then proceed southeast to EWR...
I believe it usually flies Northeast from Singapore towards Japan and the Bering sea and then make a turn towards southern Alaska and passes through Canada and the Great Lakes towards New York state and then proceed southeast to EWR...
No. Commercially, SQ 21/22 are "transpacific" fights. Operationally, the "eastward" flight (i.e EWR - SIN) virtually always operates across the north Atlantic -- you can see this on Flightaware or Flightview. The "westward" flight (i.e. SIN - EWR) isn't westward at all: it always operates via the North Pacific and Alaska.
According to FP above, this week flights are flying over atlantic. Sometimes north pole flight are affetcted by extremly low temperature which impact fuel temperature. In such case, even if it is a slower route they have to fly over atlantic.
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