wheelsup
Well-Known Member
Hmm, maybe, just a generic flight plan at this point.I'm all for winning arguments on the internet, but isn't that data proprietary?
Hmm, maybe, just a generic flight plan at this point.I'm all for winning arguments on the internet, but isn't that data proprietary?
When you are a network planner at a major airline then I will think your opinions carry weight. For now you analyze based on unknowns. You don't know what you don't know so to speak.
I really don't know why they bumped you. Maybe it was to get another passenger on. I've had gate agents be misinformed before, or make excuses to avoid confrontation. But suffice to say what you experienced is not anything near normal, and I can see how if you believe it is, why you would have such feelings for the airplane.
I pulled up a DFW-LAX flight (headwinds vs tailwinds going the other way) on an A321 recently. This flight could have potentially flown DFW-LAX, full of pax, then flown to PHX and still landed legally with required reserves. And that was without putting on more gas.
There are certain missions that only the 75 can do. IMO, getting rid of the tooling to produce it is the biggest mistake Boeing has ever made. With the advances in engine technology, just re-engining it and giving it an all glass cockpit would have made it an instant success.
757-NEO
Instead, companies are stuck pulling old airframes out of the desert, and making do. There simply isn't anything on the market right now, that's new, that'll do what a 75 does.
This is so cool. Pilots arguing over the economics of an airframe, without having any of the information that the big brains in network have. Next, you'll all be spouting off investing advice.
I kept trying to say that. With Delta pulling them out of the desert, they know something we don't. I wasn't arguing the economics of the airframe. I was saying that it could do what others can't btw.
This is so cool. Pilots arguing over the economics of an airframe, without having any of the information that the big brains in network have. Next, you'll all be spouting off investing advice.
I kept trying to say that. With Delta pulling them out of the desert, they know something we don't. I wasn't arguing the economics of the airframe. I was saying that it could do what others can't btw.
Oh, no. I got what you were saying. I agree with you. It's the other experts I was referring to!
"Just fly the damn jet, will you?"This is so cool. Pilots arguing over the economics of an airframe, without having any of the information that the big brains in network have. Next, you'll all be spouting off investing advice.
This is so cool. Pilots arguing over the economics of an airframe, without having any of the information that the big brains in network have. Next, you'll all be spouting off investing advice.
I actually think we're all in more agreement than not, we just might be speaking past each other. I don't claim to be an expert, but this an area I can speak to with a bit more confidence since I live in fleet/network data on a day-to-day basis. Not all of us here are pilots- some fell off the wagon along the way but still enjoy the community.
Both @mshunter and @wheelsup are correct on the 757. @mshunter is correct that the 757 is the only large narrowbody in today's environment that can handle niche long/thin routes, and hot/high airports. Cheap fuel has probably made it easy to bring parked 752s back to support existing markets, and possibly even re-open markets that were previously unprofitable at higher gas prices. I would also add that Delta sold 11 757s for the NBA charter program in late 2015, so some of the aircraft coming out of the desert could be replacing those (?). Regardless, the fleet folks in Atlanta, some of whom I know well, know exactly what they are doing. The math works for them.
@wheelsup is also correct that for the remainder of 757 markets, which tend to be shorter-haul and the majority of 752 departures, the 752 cannot compete. Think relatively benign stuff like ATL-MCO, ATL-LAX, JFK-LAX, etc. United once claimed that every 739 that replaced a 752 generated an additional $2M in annual profits. The math here works for United.
@mshunter unfortunate story being bumped on DFW-LAX. At first blush that should be a market the 739 can handle just fine with a full payload. I wonder if the flight was operating at/near MZFW, with a unique LAX reserve requirement that put it at risk of exceeding MLW on arrival? I can't really think of another reason this would happen. Probably plenty of other scenarios, I'm sure, this is just the first one that comes to mind. Not an uncommon occurrence in island markets, where flights go out at MZFW and alternates are spread out enough that you have to carry more reserve gas than usual - MLW becomes the limiting factor.
It doesn't matter why it was weight restricted. It still was.
Climbing or descending V/S. What derg and others are talking about (I believe) are guys not paying attention to what regime they're in and try to outsmart the autopilot.OK I'll bite as a 175 driver... what do you do in the airbus for the last 1000 feet if you're operating close to other traffic where they're applying min IFR separation to avoid a TCAS RA? Forgive my ignorance... That's the only time I monkey with VS, to convince the plane that we aren't going to hit that guy climbing below us about to level.
Pull VS and roll it to 1500.OK I'll bite as a 175 driver... what do you do in the airbus for the last 1000 feet if you're operating close to other traffic where they're applying min IFR separation to avoid a TCAS RA? Forgive my ignorance... That's the only time I monkey with VS, to convince the plane that we aren't going to hit that guy climbing below us about to level.
OK I'll bite as a 175 driver... what do you do in the airbus for the last 1000 feet if you're operating close to other traffic where they're applying min IFR separation to avoid a TCAS RA? Forgive my ignorance... That's the only time I monkey with VS, to convince the plane that we aren't going to hit that guy climbing below us about to level.
OK I'll bite as a 175 driver... what do you do in the airbus for the last 1000 feet if you're operating close to other traffic where they're applying min IFR separation to avoid a TCAS RA? Forgive my ignorance... That's the only time I monkey with VS, to convince the plane that we aren't going to hit that guy climbing below us about to level.
I guess I'm a lazy pilot, but it's not my job to worry about that. In 20 years, I've never tried to convince the TCAS of anything.