General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
I agree General, just a lot of talk, very unlikely at this time. Most of the benefits can be derived through the current code share arrangement with NWA and the DAL joint venture with AF and KLM.
Here's a fleet snap shot for what's it worth.
NWA has 31 B747s DAL has 0
DAL has 8 B777s, NWA has 0
NWA has 33 A330s, DAL has 20 B767-400s
DAL has 80 B 767-300s, NWA has 0
DAL has 136 B 757s, NWA has 72
DAL has 71 B737-800s, NWA has 75 A-320s
DAL has 136 MD88/90s, NWA has 0
NWA has 66 A-319s and 115 DC-9s, DAL has 0
To summarize, DAL has significantly more wide bodied aircraft, but NWA's has 31 747s.
DAL's 757 fleet is roughly twice as big as NWA's.
The smaller narrow bodied fleets are about the same size, but DAL's aircraft are slightly larger.
Pilot demographics are somewhat comparable, so I don't see the same dynamics as the AAA/AWA merger.
Likelihood of a merger anytime soon, minimal. JMHO
The 747s at NWA on the cargo side (all pax 742s flights have now stopped) will go away sooner than later, just like UPS parking their 742s and 741s. I have heard that they plan to put the 744s in place of them, just like ANA, Japan Air, Eva, and others are doing (most are replacing the 744s with 773ERs)--for fuel efficiency. I have read that NWA plans to replace 744s with 787s, which are not as big as our own 777s. High fuel is killing 4 engine planes on the pax side. Some remain on the cargo side, but if UPS has to park 742s (while getting some 744s), then there must be some fuel efficiency problem. (obviously they aren't profitable enough on the passenger side anymore)
It would be interesting to see, no doubt.
Bye Bye--General Lee