ANA winter 2022 schedule is announced
#197
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: SFO
Programs: United Gold (frmer. 1k and GS), AAdvantage Platinum, Alaska MVP Gold, HHonors Gold
Posts: 182
I think you're probably right, but I'm hoping there's still a chance. It just wouldn't make sense to me for them to service that route less, especially for peak travel season.
#198
formerly davidchui
Join Date: Jan 2018
Posts: 165
Conversely, from SFO, JL has one frequency with F (JL001) and it's not even a daily right now, so there's not even 8 daily F seats from SFO right now. Between the lower competitiveness of SFO vs LAX and the fact that it's their TPAC JV partner UA's hub, I wonder if they just decided that if there's not enough 777s to service all routes, SFO might be the better option for them.
#199
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: SFO
Programs: United Gold (frmer. 1k and GS), AAdvantage Platinum, Alaska MVP Gold, HHonors Gold
Posts: 182
I wonder if they decided that they had too much F capacity into LAX and that was driving down yields. I have less experience with F but in general for other cabins, I've found LAX way cheaper (as much as 50%) than SFO because every carrier feels like they need to serve LAX and there's no dominant US carrier that drives loyalty to any alliance. JL/AA together have 3 daily frequencies with F to LAX with a total of 24 F seats, all to HND (vs ANA currently with one frequency to each of HND and NRT). SQ11 also adds another 4 F seats. In the current winter season, that's 44 daily F seats between LAX and TYO. I can't think of any other market from either TYO or LAX that has that many daily F seats on the route.
Conversely, from SFO, JL has one frequency with F (JL001) and it's not even a daily right now, so there's not even 8 daily F seats from SFO right now. Between the lower competitiveness of SFO vs LAX and the fact that it's their TPAC JV partner UA's hub, I wonder if they just decided that if there's not enough 777s to service all routes, SFO might be the better option for them.
Conversely, from SFO, JL has one frequency with F (JL001) and it's not even a daily right now, so there's not even 8 daily F seats from SFO right now. Between the lower competitiveness of SFO vs LAX and the fact that it's their TPAC JV partner UA's hub, I wonder if they just decided that if there's not enough 777s to service all routes, SFO might be the better option for them.

#200
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 970
I looked back but I don't think you mentioned who you booked with. If United, then yes it should be possible to route that way but you may owe more miles to include the connection (same with ANA). There would be a change fee I think (but it's been a good while since I've done a United award, I mostly do Virgin). If Virgin there will be a $50 fee to change and I don't think you'll be able to include the connection since it's not NH metal - you'd have to get yourself to SFO, collect and recheck your bags, and reclear security.
#201
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: SFO
Programs: United Gold (frmer. 1k and GS), AAdvantage Platinum, Alaska MVP Gold, HHonors Gold
Posts: 182
I looked back but I don't think you mentioned who you booked with. If United, then yes it should be possible to route that way but you may owe more miles to include the connection (same with ANA). There would be a change fee I think (but it's been a good while since I've done a United award, I mostly do Virgin). If Virgin there will be a $50 fee to change and I don't think you'll be able to include the connection since it's not NH metal - you'd have to get yourself to SFO, collect and recheck your bags, and reclear security.
#202
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Tokyo
Programs: JAL Metal Card (OWE), SAS Eurobonus Diamond (*G), Marriott Titanium (LTP), Tokyu Hotels Platinum
Posts: 18,032
#203
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 99
I wonder if they decided that they had too much F capacity into LAX and that was driving down yields. I have less experience with F but in general for other cabins, I've found LAX way cheaper (as much as 50%) than SFO because every carrier feels like they need to serve LAX and there's no dominant US carrier that drives loyalty to any alliance. JL/AA together have 3 daily frequencies with F to LAX with a total of 24 F seats, all to HND (vs ANA currently with one frequency to each of HND and NRT). SQ11 also adds another 4 F seats. In the current winter season, that's 44 daily F seats between LAX and TYO. I can't think of any other market from either TYO or LAX that has that many daily F seats on the route.
Conversely, from SFO, JL has one frequency with F (JL001) and it's not even a daily right now, so there's not even 8 daily F seats from SFO right now. Between the lower competitiveness of SFO vs LAX and the fact that it's their TPAC JV partner UA's hub, I wonder if they just decided that if there's not enough 777s to service all routes, SFO might be the better option for them.
Conversely, from SFO, JL has one frequency with F (JL001) and it's not even a daily right now, so there's not even 8 daily F seats from SFO right now. Between the lower competitiveness of SFO vs LAX and the fact that it's their TPAC JV partner UA's hub, I wonder if they just decided that if there's not enough 777s to service all routes, SFO might be the better option for them.

I think there may have been a miscalculation about 24 F seats on LAX-TYO between JL/AA. Of those 3 flights, Only JL 15/16 LAX-HND is a 77W with 8F seats. JL 61/62 LAX-NRT is operating on a high density 787-9 with only 28J and no F. AA 169/170 is a 788, with only 20J and no F.
So in fact, there are only 28 total F seats on the LAX-TYO market this winter, and would shrink to a measly 12 if NH pulled all 77Ws from the route. Yes, paid transpacific F demand is far greater from LAX than SFO. I don't think any Asian airline has operated more premium seats to SFO than LAX in the past. The 60+ J cabin on both NH LAX 77W flights appear quite full on close in bookings, so I can't imagine why they would shrink down to 48 x 3. Also, 77W gives a nice boost to belly cargo.
#204
Join Date: Mar 2013
Programs: Aeroplan, Amex AeroPlat
Posts: 969
Just wait, be patient, F will return to LAX on NH
.
I think there may have been a miscalculation about 24 F seats on LAX-TYO between JL/AA. Of those 3 flights, Only JL 15/16 LAX-HND is a 77W with 8F seats. JL 61/62 LAX-NRT is operating on a high density 787-9 with only 28J and no F. AA 169/170 is a 788, with only 20J and no F.
So in fact, there are only 28 total F seats on the LAX-TYO market this winter, and would shrink to a measly 12 if NH pulled all 77Ws from the route. Yes, paid transpacific F demand is far greater from LAX than SFO. I don't think any Asian airline has operated more premium seats to SFO than LAX in the past. The 60+ J cabin on both NH LAX 77W flights appear quite full on close in bookings, so I can't imagine why they would shrink down to 48 x 3. Also, 77W gives a nice boost to belly cargo.

I think there may have been a miscalculation about 24 F seats on LAX-TYO between JL/AA. Of those 3 flights, Only JL 15/16 LAX-HND is a 77W with 8F seats. JL 61/62 LAX-NRT is operating on a high density 787-9 with only 28J and no F. AA 169/170 is a 788, with only 20J and no F.
So in fact, there are only 28 total F seats on the LAX-TYO market this winter, and would shrink to a measly 12 if NH pulled all 77Ws from the route. Yes, paid transpacific F demand is far greater from LAX than SFO. I don't think any Asian airline has operated more premium seats to SFO than LAX in the past. The 60+ J cabin on both NH LAX 77W flights appear quite full on close in bookings, so I can't imagine why they would shrink down to 48 x 3. Also, 77W gives a nice boost to belly cargo.
Any educated guesses?
#205
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: LAX/SFO
Programs: Alaska MVPG, Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Diamond, Marriott Gold, Fortune Wings Club Gold
Posts: 253
Non-educated guess: LAX has connections to pretty much every major and major-minor city on every major carrier (AA, UA, DL, AS) b/c nobody is dominant. So if you live anywhere in the west half of the US, you have a nonstop to LAX and can then book the F connection. Whereas SFO is dominated by UA so feed is only Star Alliance and more O/D traffic focus.
#206
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 7
NH111/112
Hi, I have a flight booked from ORD-HND-ORD in F for November 2023. It currently shows that it's on the 777 but it doesn't say "The Suite". Is it safe to assist that it's going to be the previous first class product. I was looking forward to the new first class since it'll be my first time ever flying first class. Or is it to early to tell?
Thanks
Thanks
#207
formerly davidchui
Join Date: Jan 2018
Posts: 165
Non-educated guess: LAX has connections to pretty much every major and major-minor city on every major carrier (AA, UA, DL, AS) b/c nobody is dominant. So if you live anywhere in the west half of the US, you have a nonstop to LAX and can then book the F connection. Whereas SFO is dominated by UA so feed is only Star Alliance and more O/D traffic focus.
I don't know enough about how ANA's management team approaches routes, but if you look at how savvy US carriers approach LAX vs other West Coast connecting hubs (and I would consider that to be UA and DL), there's actually a lot less service from them in LAX than SFO for UA and SEA for DL. On their own metal, UA serves 8 destinations in Europe (LHR, CDG, AMS, FRA, MUC, ZRH, TLV and now FCO), 12 destinations in Asia (HND, NRT, KIX, ICN, TPE, PEK, PVG, CTU, HKG, SIN, BLR) and 5 in the South Pacific (SYD, MEL, BNE, AKL, PPT), many with 777s. Compare that against their LAX long-haul network (LHR, HND, NRT, PVG, SYD, MEL), which is tiny in comparison. Far fewer destinations, frequencies and only on smaller 787s. Ignoring the fact that some of the routes (particularly the China and India ones) aren't fully back yet, Their long-haul strategy with LAX is just to serve key destinations that matter to O&D customers for corporate contracts (ideally also partner hubs), let other Star Alliance carriers pick up the slack on connecting traffic since those carriers more or less have to serve LAX from their own hubs, and cede nonstop markets that are too competitive. If you look at how UA approaches LAX-LHR vs SFO-LHR, which should both be primarily O&D given LHR is not a partner hub for UA and SFO is the second worst place to connect to LHR in UA's network after LAX, UA has way more seats on SFO-LHR (summer schedule has 2 777-200s and a 787-9 for 148 Polaris seats) than LAX-LHR (2 787-9s for 96 Polaris seats) even though LAX-LHR is a bigger market, and I think it's because LAX-LHR is too competitive with all 3 US carriers and both BA/VS, while SFO is just UA from the US side. Anecdotally, the long-haul fares I've seen now living near SFO are roughly 1.5-2x what I use to pay from LAX. If NH have a limited number of F seats to sell since they're only on their 777s, it probably makes more sense to try to win in still good but less competitive markets like SFO vs LAX. Would seem to make more sense to me to have one 777 on each of LAX and SFO from NH's side, as JL does, but maybe they see roughly equal amounts of demand from the Bay Area and SoCal for premium seats overall, so 2 777s to SFO vs 3 787s to LAX works (not unrealistic given that pre-COVID, they flew to SJC in addition to SFO).
Btw, DL does the same thing for LAX (LHR and CDG in Europe, HND in Asia, and SYD, AKL and PPT in the South Pacific) vs SEA (LHR, CDG and AMS for Europe, HND, ICN, PEK, PVG and historically KIX for Asia), though less true on the South Pacific side.
#208
formerly davidchui
Join Date: Jan 2018
Posts: 165
Just wait, be patient, F will return to LAX on NH
.
I think there may have been a miscalculation about 24 F seats on LAX-TYO between JL/AA. Of those 3 flights, Only JL 15/16 LAX-HND is a 77W with 8F seats. JL 61/62 LAX-NRT is operating on a high density 787-9 with only 28J and no F. AA 169/170 is a 788, with only 20J and no F.
So in fact, there are only 28 total F seats on the LAX-TYO market this winter, and would shrink to a measly 12 if NH pulled all 77Ws from the route. Yes, paid transpacific F demand is far greater from LAX than SFO. I don't think any Asian airline has operated more premium seats to SFO than LAX in the past. The 60+ J cabin on both NH LAX 77W flights appear quite full on close in bookings, so I can't imagine why they would shrink down to 48 x 3. Also, 77W gives a nice boost to belly cargo.

I think there may have been a miscalculation about 24 F seats on LAX-TYO between JL/AA. Of those 3 flights, Only JL 15/16 LAX-HND is a 77W with 8F seats. JL 61/62 LAX-NRT is operating on a high density 787-9 with only 28J and no F. AA 169/170 is a 788, with only 20J and no F.
So in fact, there are only 28 total F seats on the LAX-TYO market this winter, and would shrink to a measly 12 if NH pulled all 77Ws from the route. Yes, paid transpacific F demand is far greater from LAX than SFO. I don't think any Asian airline has operated more premium seats to SFO than LAX in the past. The 60+ J cabin on both NH LAX 77W flights appear quite full on close in bookings, so I can't imagine why they would shrink down to 48 x 3. Also, 77W gives a nice boost to belly cargo.
#209
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: TYO / WAS / NYC
Programs: American Express got a hit man lookin' for me
Posts: 4,112
Silicon Valley generally doesn't pay for F. If you're a billionaire mogul you probably fly private; if you're a mid-level executive at a FAANG type company you probably fly business. The entertainment industry, on the other hand, often pays for F as part of the contract. Also, lots of Asian companies have their US headquarters in Southern California, and let senior executives fly F. And lots of high net worth Asians choose to live around LA, moreso than SF.
#210
Join Date: Mar 2013
Programs: Aeroplan, Amex AeroPlat
Posts: 969
Silicon Valley generally doesn't pay for F. If you're a billionaire mogul you probably fly private; if you're a mid-level executive at a FAANG type company you probably fly business. The entertainment industry, on the other hand, often pays for F as part of the contract. Also, lots of Asian companies have their US headquarters in Southern California, and let senior executives fly F. And lots of high net worth Asians choose to live around LA, moreso than SF.