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This is great SEVEN!
Now we can create the new Mesa except it'll be worse than Mesa!
I can see why they want to create more jobs at the lower rate!
In the next two years you will see one tenth the number of 200's in the Delta regionals that there are now.
I'll preface this by saying that press releases/sources to follow shortly. i.e "speculation" for now.![]()
200 new hires before the end of 2008
500 new hires before the end of 2009
Mesaba will receive their first 2 CRJ-900's to be operated as Delta Connection in February. We will then receive 2 a month until we have not less than 15 being operated for DCI. Management is expecting NWA to use the options they have for the CRJ-900's to give to Mesaba.
6 of the 900's we are rumored to receive will be operated by Pinnacle until the software issue is resolved that will allow Delta's software to integrate with Mesaba's (apparently the reason crewtrac crashed a few months ago)
Also, the American Eagle rumor is again surfacing. Training Department being told to hire at least 2-3 more instructors for the Saab, as Mesaba is looking to get at least some of American Eagle's SF340's.
All new airplanes to be operated out of ATL. The new ATL base to be as large as the DTW base ASAP.
The New Premier Regional Carrier for the New Delta.
Where do you guys get this stuff? 1/10 the number of 50-seaters? Pull your head out of your a**.
Oil is $64/barrel and back in the price range that makes 50-seaters very lucrative. Passenger bookings are poor from the recessed economy. Seems to me that 50-seaters are going to be the hot airplane in 2009.
This is great SEVEN!
Now we can create the new Mesa except it'll be worse than Mesa!
I can see why they want to create more jobs at the lower rate!
No, the 50 seaters are still going away. The DC9 will be introduced in ATL for a lot of those routes that CRJs are now competing with Airtran 717s. The DC9 will be the hot airplane in ATL for 2009, not the 50 seat RJ. Cheap oil also makes the DC9 more economical, and they are needed against the larger 717s (compared to the smaller RJ).
Bye Bye--General Lee
No, the 50 seaters are still going away. The DC9 will be introduced in ATL for a lot of those routes that CRJs are now competing with Airtran 717s. The DC9 will be the hot airplane in ATL for 2009, not the 50 seat RJ. Cheap oil also makes the DC9 more economical, and they are needed against the larger 717s (compared to the smaller RJ).
Bye Bye--General Lee
No, the 50 seaters are still going away. The DC9 will be introduced in ATL for a lot of those routes that CRJs are now competing with Airtran 717s. The DC9 will be the hot airplane in ATL for 2009, not the 50 seat RJ.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Where do you guys get this stuff? 1/10 the number of 50-seaters? Pull your head out of your a**.
Oil is $64/barrel and back in the price range that makes 50-seaters very lucrative. Passenger bookings are poor from the recessed economy. Seems to me that 50-seaters are going to be the hot airplane in 2009.
*****Looking at history you will find that oil prices (adjusted for the value of todays dollar) have only exceeded $60/barrel three time over the past 140 years. Once in the 1870s, once in the 1970-80s, and currently. To think that the spike in oil prices over this past summer are a long term indicator of future prices is just*****asinine. Relatively speaking even $60/barrel is*****extraordinary*****high.*****Please pull your head out of your ass! If you think oil will be at $64 for long than you are very very mistaken. The only reason prices are dropping like they are is because of the markets drop, the election, and the overall economy. OPEC is dropping production and you can count on them to make further cuts to drive prices back up. This is temporary...very temporary.