i think it depends on what airline you travel on. :)
They would fly over Ireland.
Approximately 15.5 hours based on that it is 14 from KL to London and just over and hour from London to cork
Yes, but they also fly over Scotland, but that's very rare though. It did happen on Dec 21, 1988 though!
There is not always a stop-over on London to Perth flights. It depends on which airline you use. However, stop-over flights typically are less expensive.
Most flights from London to Washington DC will fly over south Wales, the Irish sea, the middle of Ireland and the Atlantic Ocean before reaching Washington.
No
Yes
This will be a decision of air traffic controllers. Many flights coming from London and other parts of Europe that are heading to North America, fly over the south of England and Wales, over the south of Ireland and on across the Atlantic. That can mean that it can be a busy route, so the alternative for London to Dublin flights is to fly north towards Manchester and then across to Dublin.
No, from London Egypt and Greenland are in the opposite direction.
No they go over the English Channel and the Mediterranean sea.
It is the shortest route. Despite what it may look on a map, try it on a globe. If you put one end of string on London and the other on your destination, you will get the actual shortest or 'great circle' route. Even the ones that fly across Ireland are flying northwest, not west, and heading across the north Atlantic, on a similar route to those that go over Scotland. No flights go due west from London to the USA, as it would be a longer way to go.
Yes it does if u ask and they will answer it