stillageek
Well-Known Member
I'm taking an "I'll believe it when I see it" stance. Bigger RJs, to me, mean fewer mainline jobs. Then again, I've seen so many routes that used to be DC-9s going to -900s and 175s that I'm uber-jaded now. IND-TPA, MEM-PHX, MEM-SLC, etc. All are RJs. You'll forgive me if I'm not turning back flips as more RJs come down the pipe. If it's replacing 135s, that's fine since it'll be a net gain of zero. However, it may or may NOT be the case.
Question, if the IND-TPA route only supports 100 PAX a day (using made up numbers for my point, there are many city pairs like this). As an airline planner would you rather send 1 MD 80 once a day or 2 RJs twice a day? Some routes that used to be flown by mainline may not support such use and thus an RJ is put on it. If there was no RJ....the route could be dropped. There are many smaller cities/markets that can only support an RJ. Even big cities like Pittsburgh might get an RJ between it and ORD because for the particular airline flying that route...that's all that is needed for that time/day/month. As previously stated the DFW-PIT route for AMR (not AA) is performing better than expected and will now have 2 CRJs (from Eagle) and 2 MD-80s (from AA).
Before getting on a soap box and stating "RJs are taking over mainline route"....do some research. Is the route performing well? Is the yield high enough to support mainline? To help you get started on this research here is a great site that shows passenger traffic from just about every airport in the United States. Dig into the details and then post up what you researched...and not what you heard/saw on a message board.