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Same Flight Number - Second Leg Upgrade
Just returned after flying NW 784, LAS-MSP-LGA, one flight number but change of plane in MSP. F was totally full on the first leg and wide open on the second. I was told by the GA in MSP that it was "all or nothing" as far as upgrades were concerned. If you weren't upgraded for the first leg, you could not be for the second. She went on to state that normally an upgrade would not be allowed, but she would process it as an exception to the rule. Since this GA had told me ten minutes before that F was totally sold out (as it turned out, four people were upgraded and five seats were vacant in F), I take what she said with a grain of salt. Two questions...
1. What is NW policy on upgrading on the second leg of a connecting flight with one flight number? 2. Why would a gate agent say F was "totally sold out," when there were nine empty seats 45 minutes before flight time? |
I don't have the answer, but I wish that NWA would take a different outlook on these "continuing" flights. Yes it may be the same equipment, but you must deplane, usually with the same layover time and I'm sure this has been covered before.....No additional segment or 500 mile minimum. With the current segment qualifying rules I try to avoid "continuing flights". The "all or none" upgrade policy makes no sense at all.
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Originally Posted by frequentfoulup
I don't have the answer, but I wish that NWA would take a different outlook on these "continuing" flights. Yes it may be the same equipment, but you must deplane, usually with the same layover time and I'm sure this has been covered before.....No additional segment or 500 mile minimum. With the current segment qualifying rules I try to avoid "continuing flights". The "all or none" upgrade policy makes no sense at all.
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Originally Posted by yogimax
2. Why would a gate agent say F was "totally sold out," when there were nine empty seats 45 minutes before flight time?
Maybe she was accidentally looking at your LAS-MSP leg on her screen. |
This is the policy.
I think the reason is that the computer sees the itin as a single flight making it difficult to change class of service half-way through. I once flew EWR-DTW-NRT-PVG "direct," and wasn't eligible for upgrade on the EWR-DTW leg. For flights where the equipment doesn't change, I think the computer may even want you in the same _seat_ for both legs. For exmaple, if rows 1-3 are full on LAS-MSP and rows 4-6 are full on MSP-LGA, you might not get upgraded even if the other seats are all empty. This may also have been why the GA said FC was "sold out." While there may have been empty seats for the MSP-LGA portion, the fact that it was full on the LAS-MSP portion made it full for anyone travelling both legs. Bottom line: avoid "direct" flights! |
It is true they have that "all or nothing" policy for upgrades on through flights.
The thing is since you're on the through flight with the same flight number, your upgrade comes out of the R bucket for LAS-LGA, not the R bucket for MSP-LGA. I know it doesn't quite make sense, but that's the way it is programmed. I avoid same flight number flights like a plague! |
Originally Posted by themicah
Bottom line: avoid "direct" flights!
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Originally Posted by cAAl
Is there any way to get around this policy? For example, by booking each segment individually using the multi-city booking feature?
When I come across this situation, I'll fly through another city or pick a later flight with a different flight number. |
I don't know if that "all or nothing" is policy, but I have a Silver friend who has requested and received a gate upgrade for MSP-MCI after not getting EWR-MSP (she was a same flight number EWR-MCI). I think the key is to ask at the connecting gate because you won't automatically be on the upgrade wait list.
I could be wrong and it was DTW, but oh well... |
Though I totally against Congress getting anymore into the Airline business, somebody should pass a law getting rid of these "direct" flights that are not direct. It is a connection. They know it is a connection, we know, everybody knows. So stop fooling us and screwing us.
(Other airlines do this as well) |
The best way to avoid the problem (because I don't see the airlines fixing it any time soon) is to book each segment individually on nwa.com. That'll get OLCI to print you out two boarding passes for the "direct" flight and eligible for upgrades independently on both flights.
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Originally Posted by NoStressHere
Though I totally against Congress getting anymore into the Airline business, somebody should pass a law getting rid of these "direct" flights that are not direct. It is a connection. They know it is a connection, we know, everybody knows. So stop fooling us and screwing us.
(Other airlines do this as well) |
Originally Posted by slippahs
The best way to avoid the problem (because I don't see the airlines fixing it any time soon) is to book each segment individually on nwa.com. That'll get OLCI to print you out two boarding passes for the "direct" flight and eligible for upgrades independently on both flights.
No use. After you have ticketed the ticket, the reservation system will tie in the 2 flights as a "single" flight. |
Originally Posted by NoStressHere
Though I totally against Congress getting anymore into the Airline business, somebody should pass a law getting rid of these "direct" flights that are not direct. It is a connection. They know it is a connection, we know, everybody knows. So stop fooling us and screwing us.
(Other airlines do this as well) Technically, you would say they are direct flights with a stop, and quite often even with a connection. Since 9 times out or 10 you get an "unexpected change of equipment". |
Originally Posted by wldtrvlr
No Stress, They are "direct" flights, however, they are not "non-stop".
But 99.9% of the population has no clue that "direct" doesn't mean "nonstop." Do a search for "direct flight" on google news, and every single article involves a nonstop. Sure "nonstops" are technically "direct," too (just like squares are technically rectangles). But "direct" flights should not involve changing planes, let alone all the shenanigans with seat assignments, upgrades, reduced mileage/segments, etc. I've even seen folks on a "direct" flight misconnect to their onward leg. There's nothing quite like watching a hapless GA try to explain to an irate mother why he didn't hold the plane for her family of 5 who just sprinted from MSP's F12 to C27 as part of their "direct" (as advertised) flight. :rolleyes: Other than saving a few pennies in taxes, "direct" flights with stops do not benefit pax. There was a time when you could at least stay on the plane during the stopover, such as my first solo flight, when at age 8 I flew TW's "direct" MLI-IAD flight via STL. But they probably wouldn't let you stay on the plane these days even if you had the good fortune to be on the rare direct flight where they actually used the same equipment for both legs. And some "direct" flights don't even leave that possibilty open, since they use different types for different legs (e.g., CO's EWR-OGG "direct," which swaps a 757 for a 767 in IAH). The terminology is flat-out misleading and should be abolished. A flight these days is either nonstop or connecting. |
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