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Originally Posted by FWAAA
I think you mean these guys:
http://www.thompsonsolutions.co.uk/ The seats aren't really angled - the rows are offset/staggered. :) |
Originally Posted by Vulcan
Everything we heard at the Houston DO indicated that the most likely initial routes would be out of Houston, with Europe (at that time) more likely to get the first flights. The problem with the Asia flights is that they take 2 aircraft to operate with the aircraft sitting many hours there ( 20 hours in HKG) doing nothing.
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Originally Posted by J.Edward
...
I'd guess CO will do what their competitors/partners are doing. ... CO is probably least swayed by its competitors and partners. As someone posted in a different thread, CO's fares seem to be consistently higher than other airlines. I for one am glad that CO can charge a higher fare and yet post record load factors. More power to CO. Also, CO is the only Skyteam member to maintain 50% EQM and other restrictions that fly in the face of consistency with regards to alliance partners. Again, if this is a business model that works for CO, great for them. One thing's for sure - this 50% EQM sure has driven me to look/book at CO.com everytime I fly. To CO's credit, CO.com is top of the line and is easily the best airline website today. I see CO opting for a 3-3-3 seating with 31" pitch, a la their 777s. If they can fill those birds with passengers willing to endure long hours in cattle class, I don't see why they should opt for a different configuration. Of course, I'd love something similar to the 767 with regards to seat configuration, but if I had to choose between CO and most US based carriers, I'd go with CO as long as the price is competitive. Unless a US based carrier offers free alcohol in cattle class :D |
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
And herein lies why Continental should serve two, not just one, destination in the US! :) Cycling the equipment to two destinations makes sense. The aircraft could shuttle between Asian and European destinations, to maximize aircraft utilization. I don't know if IAH is necessarily the perfect hub for such a plan, but it has worked for LGW, CDG and AMS.
But EWR-HKG has the longest flight time. In order to get the feed from other cities, the earliest it can depart is around noon, like EWR-PEK. That would get into HKG around 5pm. A 7pm departure at HKG will arrive EWR very late in the evening, and people can't connect to their final destinations. That's why NW & UA all overnight their planes in HKG or other SE Asian airports. It's just the name of the game. Having another US mainland-HKG flight is not going to help. IAH->HKG will take even longer than EWR->HKG, and the return flight will have similar time. It's sad that while the HKG route is filled up to the gills right now, with the cheapest summer fares at like $1,700 (and no consolidator fares I can find), they still won't bump the frequency up from 6/week to daily. Now, if Boeing had gone ahead with the sonic-cruiser, and CO had bought them, then it may be different. But that's another story for another time. |
Seat Pitch?
Personally, as someome with a reasonable waist size and long inseam - I'd hope they make up a bit of it in seat pitch....
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787 Nightmare Liner
from: Aviation Today – May 23, 2006
http://www.aviationtoday.com/reports/crampedseat.htm Cramped Seating Can 'Trap' and 'Trip' Passengers During Emergency Evacuation' More space needed for today's overweight, aging passengers, study concludes The combination of larger passengers crammed into tightly packed seats could delay emergency evacuation and contribute to potentially fatal embolisms on long flights. Providing more space between seats, and redesigning them to better accommodate persons of widely varying sizes, could have enormous cost implications to the airlines. A recent study concludes that economy-class passengers are so tightly packed together that they cannot assume a correct "brace" position for emergency landing, and the seats themselves can be obstacles to quick emergency evacuation of the cabin. The current minimum spacing and design standards for transport-category aircraft allow for too-tight seating, and new standards are needed regarding minimum seat width and a minimum area for feet. ………………….. In fact, the study's recommendations are not intended to improve the passengers' comfort. Rather, they are intended to ameliorate the problem of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) on long flights and, more particularly, to expedite emergency evacuation. |
Originally Posted by BF263533
A recent study concludes that economy-class passengers are so tightly packed together that they cannot assume a correct "brace" position for emergency landing, and the seats themselves can be obstacles to quick emergency evacuation of the cabin. The current minimum spacing and design standards for transport-category aircraft allow for too-tight seating, and new standards are needed regarding minimum seat width and a minimum area for feet.
I can imagine that a few hefty class-action suits on behalf of those suffering from DVT in-flight might speed things along considerably. These days, litigation is far more effective behavior modification for corporations than legislation. |
Originally Posted by PIT_Flyer
CO is probably least swayed by its competitors and partners. As someone posted in a different thread, CO's fares seem to be consistently higher than other airlines.
Originally Posted by PIT_Flyer
...CO is the only Skyteam member to maintain 50% EQM and other restrictions that fly in the face of consistency with regards to alliance partners.
Originally Posted by PIT_Flyer
Again, if this is a business model that works for CO, great for them.
Originally Posted by PIT_Flyer
I see CO opting for a 3-3-3 seating with 31" pitch, a la their 777s. If they can fill those birds with passengers willing to endure long hours in cattle class, I don't see why they should opt for a different configuration.
My comment about competitors/partners was this. A 12% capacity increase (going from 8 to 9) represents a material competitive advantage which would be formidable to overcome. Hence, if the majority of CO's competitors/partners realized this advantage no number of winglets, labor concessions or meals at meal time will bridge the gap.
Originally Posted by PIT_Flyer
...but if I had to choose between CO and most US based carriers, I'd go with CO as long as the price is competitive.
As I said before - time to (re)start the diet if I'm planning on parking myself there. |
Another thing to consider:
It's a lot easier and cheaper to order 9-abreast at 33in pitch and adjust pitch to match demand/tolerance, than to order 8-abreast and then find out they need to put more seats. Because they'd have to order all new seats for the whole plane, as I don't think passengers will tolerate a 28-in pitch, regardless of how wide the seats are. |
Originally Posted by rkkwan
But EWR-HKG has the longest flight time. In order to get the feed from other cities, the earliest it can depart is around noon, like EWR-PEK. That would get into HKG around 5pm. A 7pm departure at HKG will arrive EWR very late in the evening, and people can't connect to their final destinations.
That's why NW & UA all overnight their planes in HKG or other SE Asian airports. It's just the name of the game. Having another US mainland-HKG flight is not going to help. IAH->HKG will take even longer than EWR->HKG, and the return flight will have similar time My real thought is for CO to think outside the box and build up an airport like LAX. Here's the idea. B777/787 #1 EWR/HKG 1500/1850 HKG/LAX 2030/1400 LAX/LGW 1530/0945 LGW/EWR 1145/1445 Back the equipment goes to Europe; another piece of equipment wends its way to HKG. B777/787 #2 LAX/HKG 0020/0615 HKG/EWR 1025/1405 I think that the B777 spends too much idle time in HKG. CO should think of opening a route to a different city in North America. I think LAX is a good choice: (i) there's a lot of originating traffic and (ii) it's somewhat underserved by ST. The only thing militating against LAX is, apparently, the CEO, who has told FTer's that a hub in LAX is not an option. :( |
Originally Posted by Vulcan
The problem with the Asia flights is that they take 2 aircraft to operate with the aircraft sitting many hours there ( 20 hours in HKG) doing nothing.
I'd bet anything CO knows this example inside out, as the airlines are among the biggest optimization software customers. Airline crew scheduling is the textbook "integer programming" problem. On the other hand, gauging customer acceptance of a rotating schedule is a business decision, not an engineering decision. I'd think that customers would accept a rotating schedule if it came with a better price. And the cargo wouldn't care, where many say the Pacific money really is. (I'm reminded of the midwest farmer's reaction to daylight savings time: "Won't it confuse the crops?") |
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
...I have noticed a lot of comments about GUM as an option--even a gateway to the mainland. I don't know if Hawaii is another option.
I certainly hope CO does choose to grow GUM (as was recently discussed on another thread) but I'd suspect growth would come to meet O/D traffic vis-à-vis connecting traffic from the states.
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
My real thought is for CO to think outside the box and build up an airport like LAX. Here's the idea.
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
B777/787 #1
EWR/HKG 1500/1850 HKG/LAX 2030/1400 LAX/LGW 1530/0945 LGW/EWR 1145/1445 ****************** B777/787 #2 LAX/HKG 0020/0615 HKG/EWR 1025/1405
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
I think that the B777 spends too much idle time in HKG. CO should think of opening a route to a different city in North America.
Originally Posted by ContinentalFan
I think LAX is a good choice: (i) there's a lot of originating traffic and (ii) it's somewhat underserved by ST. The only thing militating against LAX is, apparently, the CEO, who has told FTer's that a hub in LAX is not an option. :(
Those 777's - and to a lesser extent 787's - are expensive machines to hurl through the air. Perhaps one reason they sit for so long at HKG (or PEK, EZE, GIG, etc.) is that any incremental revenue gained through more service would not offset the incremental cost associated with operating the flight (to say nothing of performing MX or possessing the necessary rights to operate the flight). The reason there's no hub/gateway at LAX is the same reason there's none at GUM: it's just not believed to be economically viable by the current administration. |
Originally Posted by J.Edward
UA used to offer HKG-LAX flight but pulled it due to lack of demand. Moreover, CA offers two non-stops between the markets. Secondly, does CO have the rights to fly to LGW from LAX? If they do, they'll have to compete against multiple flights from VS, BA, AA and UA.
Originally Posted by J.Edward
You think it spends to much time in HKG? :eek: Did it ever cross your mind that perhaps this is when CO sends the birds off for the MX? Just because the plane is not in the air does not mean it is sitting on a lonely tarmac somewhere waiting to gorge itself on passengers again.
Originally Posted by J.Edward
Those 777's - and to a lesser extent 787's - are expensive machines to hurl through the air. Perhaps one reason they sit for so long at HKG (or PEK, EZE, GIG, etc.) is that any incremental revenue gained through more service would not offset the incremental cost associated with operating the flight (to say nothing of performing MX or possessing the necessary rights to operate the flight). The reason there's no hub/gateway at LAX is the same reason there's none at GUM: it's just not believed to be economically viable by the current administration.
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Originally Posted by J.Edward
Those 777's - and to a lesser extent 787's - are expensive machines to hurl through the air. Perhaps one reason they sit for so long at HKG (or PEK, EZE, GIG, etc.) is that any incremental revenue gained through more service would not offset the incremental cost associated with operating the flight (to say nothing of performing MX or possessing the necessary rights to operate the flight). The reason there's no hub/gateway at LAX is the same reason there's none at GUM: it's just not believed to be economically viable by the current administration. see discussion at http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showt...&highlight=bkk |
Let's forget about maintenance and route rights (as in the other thread) for now, and just concentrate on passenger and flights logistics for a moment. What CoFan proposes is barely possible:
- First, EWR-HKG have to be a day flight. If it departs midnight, it arrives HKG at 3am. Too early. The route isn't far enough like SQ's EWR-SIN to do it as a red-eye. So, it has to be day flight. Right now it departs 3pm. To turn around that flight, it needs to leave earlier. Earliest is about noon, like EWR-PEK, to get the feed from other cities into EWR. - So, CO99 EWR-HKG departs noon and arrives 3pm. Turn around 5pm for LAX. Arrives 3pm. After passengers go through immigration, only place for the 777 to go is IAH. - So, this first plane will do EWR-HKG-LAX-IAH, and gets in to IAH late evening. It can then do NRT the next morning. --- - The other 777 can come from EWR or IAH to LAX. Then a 1am departure for HKG, arriving early next morning, just like 2 of the 3 daily CXs. It can then turn around and do CO98 HKG-EWR at the current schedule. Depart around 11am and gets into EWR at 3pm. Now, since LAX is not a CO hub, and the HKG-LAX fligth arrives that late, the only passengers they can market to are Houston and LA area residents plus those that can go on AA's connection from LAX. I don't think there's enough market to do this, since CX already flies the route 3 times a day. |
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