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#121
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AJC schrieb:
This is in contrast with flights from Europe to North America where there is often empty seats. Last September coming back to London from Chicago the United flight was half full This is why so many Americans are so sceptical of the market for the 380. They mostly see small aircraft, empty flights, airlines in financial problems. Go to airports in Europe, Asia and you see 744s lined up, and as you say get on the flights and they are packed. Traffic on the Europe-Asia-Aus/NZ routes is booming, within Europe there is steady growth, while it is declining on the North Atlantic. There is a growth Germany - Russia, I guess linked to migration. However, flights I used were 15 - 65 % full. Well, I tend to book cheap flights. Of course no 747 but 319, 320, 737, 310, 154. 10/11 flights per day FRA - MOW (each direction), 3/4 operators. Number of flights steadily increasing. Regards, ULF |
#122
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"Frank F. Matthews" schrieb:
Cities like New York/Boston, LA/San Francisco, and Houston/Dallas are more likely to support increased frequency than larger size if it can be done economically. Won't be easy to increase frequency at New York. Just my guess. Regards, ULF |
#123
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![]() "Ulf Kutzner" wrote in message - There is a growth Germany - Russia, I guess linked to migration. However, flights I used were 15 - 65 % full. Well, I tend to book cheap flights. Of course no 747 but 319, 320, 737, 310, 154. 10/11 flights per day FRA - MOW (each direction), 3/4 operators. Number of flights steadily increasing. Plain stupid. When you have cities that far you wil only need a morning flight (that will allow you to get the afternoon/late afternoon at the "other end" and an evening/late afternoon fligt that will bring you back late in the day. The rest is nonsense. Nik. |
#124
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![]() "Nik" wrote in message ... "Ulf Kutzner" wrote in message - There is a growth Germany - Russia, I guess linked to migration. However, flights I used were 15 - 65 % full. Well, I tend to book cheap flights. Of course no 747 but 319, 320, 737, 310, 154. 10/11 flights per day FRA - MOW (each direction), 3/4 operators. Number of flights steadily increasing. Plain stupid. When you have cities that far you wil only need a morning flight (that will allow you to get the afternoon/late afternoon at the "other end" and an evening/late afternoon fligt that will bring you back late in the day. 1) not every one fits into your mould. Some will want a very early departure which enables them to arrive in time to make a useful onward connection. Others will want a mid evening return that allows them to spend as much time at the destination but still get home without have to resort to a taxi. 2) as many flights as can be filled are necessary - this isn't a route for which other modes make sense 3) A plane on the ground is very expensive. It's often better to make a marginal journey even if only partially full. The rest is nonsense. It's called competition. tim |
#125
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On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:47:09 -0800, AES wrote some
stuff about " 380 fuel usage", to which I would like to add the following: I think frequent flyer loyalty was seriously eroded also when the airlines changed over from having more or less open availability for award travel, except for certain blackout periods that were stated in advance, and instead began limiting the number of FF award seats on any flight to such low levels that cashing in FF miles for award travel became, if not nearly impossible, at least an almost always unpleasant and unrewarding hassle. That would be "USA based Airlines". Just yesterday I cashed a bunch of miles for a long flight out of Thailand on Thai Airways. This is for the evening flight of 12 April. 13 April all the way to 18 April is the main National Holiday in Thailand (Thai New Year) when the whole country has a holiday. It's the equivalent of getting an award ticket Los Angeles to Paris on 23 or 24 December. ![]() Cheers, Chanchao |
#126
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Nik schrieb:
There is a growth Germany - Russia, I guess linked to migration. However, flights I used were 15 - 65 % full. Well, I tend to book cheap flights. Of course no 747 but 319, 320, 737, 310, 154. 10/11 flights per day FRA - MOW (each direction), 3/4 operators. Number of flights steadily increasing. Plain stupid. When you have cities that far you wil only need a morning flight (that will allow you to get the afternoon/late afternoon at the "other end" and an evening/late afternoon fligt that will bring you back late in the day. The rest is nonsense. SU provides morning connections in Moscow with an overnight flight. MOW - FRA allows you a morning flight arriving 1,5 hours after departure time, if measured in local time. Regards, ULF - rta |
#127
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Ulf Kutzner schrieb:
There is a growth Germany - Russia, I guess linked to migration. However, flights I used were 15 - 65 % full. Well, I tend to book cheap flights. Of course no 747 but 319, 320, 737, 310, 154. 10/11 flights per day FRA - MOW (each direction), 3/4 operators. Number of flights steadily increasing. Just to add: 321, AB6. Regards, ULF |
#128
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On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 15:09:23 +0100, Thomas Borchert
wrote in :: Lee, Suppose the 7E7 is wildly popular. It's light weight, efficient engines, 3 day assembly time and very low maintainence cost makes all competing metal aircraft (A300/A310/A330/B757/B767) obsolete. Don't forget the A350, Airbus's answer to the 7E7 It would appear that sales for Boeing's 7E7 Dreamliner are heating up: BOEING CO. will sign deals worth up to $7.5 billion to sell 60 of its 7E7 Dreamliner aircraft to six Chinese airlines on Friday, a source familiar with the transactions said. The source, citing U.S. government and company officials, said the aircraft were being purchased by CHINA SOUTHERN AIRLINES CO. LTD., CHINA EASTERN AIRLINES CORP LTD, Air China, Shanghai Airlines Co. Ltd., Hainan Airlines Co. Ltd. and Xiamen Airlines. Boeing, in a statement, said it would sign preliminary agreements during a ceremony at the U.S. Commerce Department attended by the Chinese ambassador to the United States, Yang Jiechi, and the president of the China Avaition Supply Co., Li Hai. (Reuters 04:37 PM ET 01/27/2005) Mo http://q1.schwab.com/s/r?l=248&a=104...a&s=rb050 127 ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
#129
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![]() Larry Dighera wrote: On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 15:09:23 +0100, Thomas Borchert wrote in :: Lee, Suppose the 7E7 is wildly popular. It's light weight, efficient engines, 3 day assembly time and very low maintainence cost makes all competing metal aircraft (A300/A310/A330/B757/B767) obsolete. Don't forget the A350, Airbus's answer to the 7E7 It would appear that sales for Boeing's 7E7 Dreamliner are heating up: BOEING CO. will sign deals worth up to $7.5 billion to sell 60 of its 7E7 Dreamliner aircraft to six Chinese airlines on Friday, a source familiar with the transactions said. The source, citing U.S. government and company officials, said the aircraft were being purchased by CHINA SOUTHERN AIRLINES CO. LTD., CHINA EASTERN AIRLINES CORP LTD, Air China, Shanghai Airlines Co. Ltd., Hainan Airlines Co. Ltd. and Xiamen Airlines. Boeing, in a statement, said it would sign preliminary agreements during a ceremony at the U.S. Commerce Department attended by the Chinese ambassador to the United States, Yang Jiechi, and the president of the China Avaition Supply Co., Li Hai. (Reuters 04:37 PM ET 01/27/2005) Mo http://q1.schwab.com/s/r?l=248&a=104...a&s=rb050 127 I thought it was now the 787. |
#130
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"Frank F. Matthews" wrote in
: I thought it was now the 787. It is, but WTF does it matter? Sorry, you hit a sore spot with me. Nothing personal, Frank. Zillions of posts here and on other aviation fora about the significance of the model number of an airplane, and they are all a waste of time and energy, as far as I'm concerned... A rose by any other name would smell as sweet... Somehow people seem to get a near-orgasmic joy because an aircraft has a certain number. I just don't get it. --lw-- |
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