Pretty sure NWA has unlimited JS. Space in the back, you're good.
On the 630pm flight I beat an airtran guy for the J/s. He was sad because he couldnt get on.
So he couldn't walk when you were done with him, eh?
To answer your question, Delta's jumpseat policy used to be that only 1 jumpseater was allowed in the cabin, even if there were 20 open seats. Now, they will take as many jumpseaters as there are open seats. (Which is more in line with other carriers, including XJT.)![]()
Huh. I've never heard of a guy getting turned away if there were empty seats in the back.
I have heard about it a few times... happened to some of my class mates. That is why its usually a good idea to list ahead of time as a non-rev just in case. If there is another NWA mainline jumpseater, and they are nice, that jumpseater can officially occupy the Flight Attendant jumpseat while you officially occupy the cockpit jumpseat.
While a coach seat goes empty? That's pretty retarded, IMO.
While a coach seat goes empty? That's pretty retarded, IMO.
It costs money to move a jumpseater - I know it seems to come for free, after all the planes going there anyway, but the more weight it has to carry the more fuel it consumes - and jumpseaters typically come with a fine selection of baggage as well. I don't know if that's the REASON any specific airline limits jumpseaters, but I bet it would seem like a good reason to some bean counter somewhere.
Does anybody know WHY some airlines restrict the jumpseat count, other than it's in the GOM or the CBA? Maybe there is no good reason, it's just a negotiating point.
I don't buy that one, and here's why. The airline doesn't wait until 20 minutes prior to order fuel for the aircraft based on the number of passengers. If you have 20 seats left at the last minute and 20 people show up to buy those seats, the airline would look pretty bad if they said "Sorry, we can't sell you the tickets. We didn't order enough fuel." If a paying passenger showed up, they'd damn sure take them and wouldn't have to do anything differently to the fuel load. Same should be done with an open seat in the back and a JSer.
Cold towels? ROFLOfficially, the reason jetBlue is pulling the seats is to save $$$ with one less FA. That's coming from my CA from Dec whos finacee is a jetBlue FA. As for the APU thing, that sounds like an extreme penny pincher issue, especially in places like the South and the desert. That thing doesn't burn up THAT much fuel, and I'd rather the passengers be comfortable than save $.02. Then again, my company is the one that put out a memo saying that if the APU is deferred, hand out cold towels.