That is what I was saying, in different
words. They figured out that it cost
about the same to run their own 717
as it does to give AirWiskey a profit
in an RJ...
The plus side is that it is a larger, more
comfortable aircraft with a "business"
class section,you don't have to give
up your carryon and they are in direct
control of the quality of service. Very
smart move, and I would love to go there
or to one of the few other operations that
are showing a profit in what is possibly
the most difficult chapter in passenger
transport history.
I have wondered a great deal about why
the mainlines are contracting out these
services to the rj's instead of running more
717's, a-319's...why USAir and DL are
creating dissention in their family by
getting outside contractorslike Mesa,
instead of running their own rj's if they
insist, or beefing up their own regional
airlines. The first thing AA did was park
all of the new 717s and keep running the
f-100's for two years. I wonder how much
that cost! Maybe it worked out better
(less training and cheaper leases vs.
fuel savings) I don't know.
FDJ 2 showed some numbers on NWA vs.
RJ. Yeah, 17% loss operating the RJ
or -4% on mainline...what we didn't see
was how big the -4% at mainline was. I
bet it was a much larger number than the
-17% on the rj's was. How much would
they have lost if they had all been
mainline flights? Dollars, not %! They are
really looking at the bottom line, dollars.
there are only three kinds of lies. Lies,
damm lies and statistics.
Boyd says on flights less than 300 mi
costs go "bonkers"...what about a
73 on a 300 mi trip? Bet they go bonkers
too! I love it when journalists/analysts
(like politicians) try to make a case for their
views by presenting one side of the story
as gospel.
Are RJ's profitable...probably sometimes.
Do they loose less money over the same
route with the same number of butts in
the seats (not percent of capacity, but the
same whole number of pax), bet your bum.
And when the mainline can loose less/show
a profit with one of their own planes on
that same route, guess what...they will
do it.
Bet Indy air gets more airbuses when/if
the number of enplanements justifies it.
For quite some time Midway was profitable
running RJ's and F-100's. IMHO only two
factors killed them. 1) Poor management
and 2) a weekening economy pre 9/11.