Air India Express flight IX1971, operating Bangalore (BLR) to Pune (PNQ), was photographed on March 22, 2026, aboard Airbus A320neo registered VT-RTG — an aircraft whose current configuration reflects the ongoing fleet consolidation underway across the Tata Group's Indian aviation holdings. The airframe was originally delivered to Air India on December 7, 2023, carrying the test registration F-WWTV out of Airbus's production system. Approximately 13 months after delivery, on January 13, 2025, the aircraft was formally transferred to Air India Express, where it now operates in an all-economy single-class layout consistent with the carrier's low-cost positioning on domestic trunk routes such as BLR-PNQ.
The aircraft continues to wear the legacy Air India livery — distinguished only by an AIX decal — because Air India Express has not yet completed full exterior repainting of transferred narrowbodies. As of the date of the photograph, only VT-RTD, an A321neo, had received a full repaint into the Air India Express house colors. This situation is operationally common during periods of rapid fleet absorption: repainting programs require significant hangar time and coordinated scheduling, and carriers routinely prioritize revenue flying over cosmetic compliance, particularly when multiple airframes are transitioning simultaneously. For line crews and ground handlers, operating an aircraft in a mixed or predecessor livery requires heightened attention to branding-sensitive passenger interactions and station signage alignment, though the aircraft's airworthiness and systems documentation remain entirely unaffected by the livery status.
The broader context is the sweeping restructuring of Indian aviation under Tata Sons, which acquired Air India from the government in January 2022 and subsequently merged AIX Connect (formerly AirAsia India) into Air India Express to create a consolidated low-cost subsidiary. Transferring A320neo-family aircraft from the mainline Air India operation into the AIX fleet allows Tata to optimize type commonality and crew utilization across its aviation portfolio while scaling capacity on high-density domestic routes where single-aisle, all-economy aircraft maximize seat-mile economics. The movement of VT-RTG from a full-service context into an LCC frame within roughly 13 months of delivery illustrates how quickly fleet roles can shift under integrated group ownership — a structural dynamic increasingly familiar to operators and lessors across Asia-Pacific aviation markets.
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