No slamming of the pilots of the original Xjet intended here.
But, my opinion, is that you guys were bought to reduce competition and for your pilots. The ERJ, no matter its merits, are simply temporary placeholders. The main reason for that is the fact that the ERJ-145 is a training platform for nothing other than itself. There is no reduction in training time for the EMB-170 by having a ERJ type. The CRJ is a different story. We can turn a CRJ-200 pilot into a -700, -900, or even a -1000 pilot in less than a week. In these days it is beyond golden to keep a pilot out of training for 3 months if an alternative presents itself.
I would not be surprised if the new United scope allows a few bigger jets while crap-canning the smaller jets. I think it has more to do with pilot supply than fuel burn. Also, when you shrink the range of any aircraft the fuel milege decreases. When Delta starts running a 717 all over Georgia, tennesse, and Alabama, I bet there will be no talk of how much more fuel they burn. Anyways, I woulg figure we would transition the CRJ-200's that Delta disposes to the UAL side and use them as Training/transition aircraft for bigger CRJ's. I am simply looking at this from what makes the most sense given all the variables.
But, my opinion, is that you guys were bought to reduce competition and for your pilots. The ERJ, no matter its merits, are simply temporary placeholders. The main reason for that is the fact that the ERJ-145 is a training platform for nothing other than itself. There is no reduction in training time for the EMB-170 by having a ERJ type. The CRJ is a different story. We can turn a CRJ-200 pilot into a -700, -900, or even a -1000 pilot in less than a week. In these days it is beyond golden to keep a pilot out of training for 3 months if an alternative presents itself.
I would not be surprised if the new United scope allows a few bigger jets while crap-canning the smaller jets. I think it has more to do with pilot supply than fuel burn. Also, when you shrink the range of any aircraft the fuel milege decreases. When Delta starts running a 717 all over Georgia, tennesse, and Alabama, I bet there will be no talk of how much more fuel they burn. Anyways, I woulg figure we would transition the CRJ-200's that Delta disposes to the UAL side and use them as Training/transition aircraft for bigger CRJ's. I am simply looking at this from what makes the most sense given all the variables.