staplegun
Well-Known Member
Are you in the land of "Happy Buddha", "Ramada Mexican". "Malone's Special" and "Bar-ba COO kichun?"![]()
Yes...
Kevin
Are you in the land of "Happy Buddha", "Ramada Mexican". "Malone's Special" and "Bar-ba COO kichun?"![]()
Whoah there Nelly. They're actually upping the forecasts for the amount of pilots they're looking to hire and parking 50-seaters.
Furthermore if something isn't done and done soon, my prediction about all domestic service being contracted out and flown in mainline colors, with only international service done by mainline, will be the reality.
Never happen. Mainline pilots are starting to wake up to the reality they've created. The CAL MEC is vowing not to let a single seat go. At AirTran, we just voted down a TA largely in part due to scope issues. At AMR, the APA is demanding a single list. The AWA MEC captured the EMB-190 flying. Things are going in a positive direction on scope. I don't think you'll see any more scope concessions for a while unless another carrier enters bankruptcy protection before we're able to change the bankruptcy laws.
article said:The reductions in Delta's domestic flying continue a strategy the airline has relied on during much of its turnaround efforts, as the growing competition from discount carriers has made many U.S. routes unprofitable for big network carriers.
Bastian said Delta will continue growing its more profitable overseas flying next year, where it is better able to pass higher fuel costs on to customers.
If its got more than 70 seats, it needs to be flown by MAINLINE pilots. Period.
You give them even more leeway that I would. As far as I'm concerned, if it has jet engines hanging on it, then mainline pilots should be flying it, whether it's 35 seats or 999 seats.
Have you seen the cost of fuel recently? Its a fact, 50 seat RJs are going bye-bye. Next gen turboprops or 70 seat jets are the future.
You don't reduce capacity by increasing the number of seats you're flying. You must understand that these are things airline executives believe:
- people want jets
- frequency of service is everything
So in a world where capacity at mainline out of the hubs is being constrained and given that you don't want to reduce the frequency of service the 50 seat jet is about to return with a vengance. This rush to 70 seat jets make sense when the industry is in an upswing, but when it downturns, as it looks like it might be about to, the 70 seat jet won't make any more sense than running a 757 where you used to run a 737.
"Next gen turboprops" are fine, assuming we can keep the nose gear from collapsing, which seems to be an unfortunate problem, but cities that have had "jet" service will not stand for prop service - look what happened in New York when Delta started running Dashs up there.
So what happens. The 50 seat jets stay running around to the small markets. The 70 seat jets start picking up markets that used to be mainline and the turboprops get slotted in where they can, but they're not making wholesale swaps for jets. Driving down the number of mainline jobs and driving up the number of piss poor paying regional jobs. Like it or not, that's where the market is going.
article said:The reductions in Delta's domestic flying continue a strategy the airline has relied on during much of its turnaround efforts, as the growing competition from discount carriers has made many U.S. routes unprofitable for big network carriers.
Bastian said Delta will continue growing its more profitable overseas flying next year, where it is better able to pass higher fuel costs on to customers.
Markus, almost forgot, that right there means that the rumots of ASA getting 900's is true!
The whole regional mania came into effect because the big wigs in management believe that their most valuable customer, the business traveler, wants more frequency. Thing is what management should know is that while the business traveler wants more frequency, they don't want to pay for it.![]()
ASA is definitely getting 900s. Its a matter of how soon and from whom. When its all said and done in a couple years I think the majority of the fleet will be 700s and 900s.
Khakis, "Duck Head" polos, brown loafers and "sweet-ta r'unsweet?"![]()
Bombardier, Delta has a sweetheart deal with them.
But not as sweet as a deal that they have with their MD-88s/90s.
Read somewhere Delta is leasing the -88s/90s for about 80,000 a month. That is the same price you pay per month to lease the -700/-900, but half the capacity, hence, half the revenue.
We need three on the Beech and four on the Saab to break even from what I have been told.