Upvote:6
There's yet 7 hours until the departure of that flight. Presumably the airlines's operations department has not yet filed a flight plan, which tracking websites would be using to match a particular aircraft to the future flight.
However, I note that the flight you linked to (in a comment on Kate's answer) is BA 202, which goes from an overseas airport to the operator's hub in London. Thus there's a really good chance that it will be operated by an aircraft that has just completed an outbound flight in the other direction.
Searching on BA's website (for flights a week from now such as not to confuse it) we see that flights from London arrive in Boston on Fridays at 13:30, 19:35, 20:50, and 22:20, and leave at 07:50, 19:20, 21:35, and 22:40.
Evidently one aircraft stays in Boston overnight, so assuming they depart in the same order they arrive in, you want the one arriving at 19:35, which is BA 203. (As a check on this conclusion, the flight numbers are next to each other, which is usually the case for outbound/inbound flight pairs).
Flightradar24 shows BA 203 as a Boeing 777-200, registration G-VIIC, which is currently almost halfway between Ireland and Newfoundland (and expected to arrive about 20 minutes early).
Upvote:8
Unaware of the quicker approach in Flightaware, I had used a workaround making use of Flightradar24 previously:
https://www.flightradar24.com/flight/ba202
where BA202
is your flight number. You get a results page with the flights of the last and next week. G-VIIN
, i.e. https://www.flightradar24.com/reg/g-viin
is your link. Upvote:13
I use Flight aware for this. Here's an image of a flight that leaves in an hour or so:
Both Where is my plane now? and Track inbound plane (which I've circled) lead to a page just like this, but for the incoming flight. It's a great way to know how true Air Canada's favourite excuse, "late arrival of the inbound flight", really is.