Roger Roger
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From a very much outside perspective, it seems like Boeing has kind of lost their way lately.For good reason. Battery fires and outsourcing fiascos are not what we look for in planes.
From a very much outside perspective, it seems like Boeing has kind of lost their way lately.For good reason. Battery fires and outsourcing fiascos are not what we look for in planes.
Take a large foreign airline with ONE major hub in say CDG, FRA, or AMS with a worldwide route structure and all of a sudden a significant number of very large ultra long haul widebodies makes a lot of sense.
Delta is quite late to the 787 party.
Take a large foreign airline with ONE major hub in say AUH, BAH, or DOH with a worldwide route structure and all of a sudden a significant number of very large ultra long haul widebodies makes a lot of sense.
Take a large foreign airline with ONE major hub in say CDG, FRA, or AMS with a worldwide route structure and all of a sudden a significant number of very large ultra long haul widebodies makes a lot of sense.
From a very much outside perspective, it seems like Boeing has kind of lost their way lately.
Meh, they seem to be doing fine.........From a very much outside perspective, it seems like Boeing has kind of lost their way lately.
That was a Pratt problem not the aircraft. I still keep in touch with contacts at Bombardier. Pratt and Whitney fixed the issue, but it put the flight test program several months behind schedule.As long as Boeing sticks to the 737 and the occasional engine upgrade, they will be fine. The competition in that market is less fierce now that Bombardier seems to be effing up on the C-Series.
Anyone know what General Lee is going to bid?
-Bye Bye
Anyone know what General Lee is going to bid?
-Bye Bye
I wonder who hates SWA more....General Lee or @ATN_Pilot?
Something missing in these discussions is opportunity lost. Something that the managers likely missed as well. What exactly is the opportunity lost? It is under belly freight capacity that an airline gets when they have B777s. That translates to additional revenue.
A big part of Emirates consistent profitability is their freight operation. NWA had that at one time with dedicated freighters in the Pacific. They earned a lot of revenue for that airline. Why they and their routes were given up is a good question. Why U.S. majors don't go after more cargo revenue is also a mystery. When they order small airplanes like the A330 they end up handicapping themselves when it comes to generating that kind of revenue.
Typhoonpilot.
DL has an intense focus on belly cargo. The 330 has fantastic cargo capability, while the 777 is too much airplane for most routes we do, which is why they continue to have problems deploying them.
Yes, but when you reference the B777 at DAL how much of that takes into account the -200LR?
As much as I like that airplane it really is only meant for unique ultra long haul routes. It is difficult to make money with it, to be honest. The -300ER is completely different in that regard.
A lot of airlines have gone with the -300ER in the last decade. It has replaced a lot of 747-400s and other equipment on international routes.
Not saying that DAL doesn't know what it is doing because they have been quite successful of late. Just that I am not convinced of their long term strategy with small airplanes. Airport and airspace capacity is becoming more and more an issue. When you only get x number of slots into a major international gateway and are serving that with sub 300 seat airplanes then I think there is the potential to leave a lot of money on the table.
TP
There's a reason we fly airplanes and do not run airlines. Senior managment has to trust us to know and do our job and we have to trust that they know and do their jobs.. Just that I am not convinced of their long term strategy with small airplanes.