LBAYORKIE
Elite-Member
- Dec 30, 2009
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Probably replacing the chartered DAT aircraft.And with 2 more ATR72 due to arrive at Emerald, it makes you think that they must be earmarked for something.
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Probably replacing the chartered DAT aircraft.And with 2 more ATR72 due to arrive at Emerald, it makes you think that they must be earmarked for something.
Depends where they place them but they could use them to increase frequency on their current routes in the network.And with 2 more ATR72 due to arrive at Emerald, it makes you think that they must be earmarked for something.
Theres a balance to be had. They need domestics to feed into the long haul flights.The two more ATR72s going into Emerald are both heading for frequency expansion at Dublin. The slot cap at Dublin was suspended and more slots became available. Planned Emerald growth into UK bases using its UK-based AOC was fairly swiftly binned and the two extra aircraft diverted to Dublin to secure grandfather rights to slots. They have no further aircraft in the wings after those, and with the ATR market still proving very difficult, are unlikely to rush out to secure more.
There is a problem with all of this Heathrow talk. IAG last week announced a combined order for British Airways as ageing 777 replacements and future fleet growth at LHR. Doing the sums, it looks like around 12 additional daily slots will be needed at LHR to fund the long-haul growth.
There are some services you could presume are slot-holders at BA today (eg it flies 6 x MAN-LHR on Mondays and Thursdays but 9 x on Tuesdays). Unless it is going to obtain loads more slots from somewhere between now and the new long-haul aircraft arriving, you keep those "slot holders" on existing routes. You can quietly pull those one by one as you need them.
If you launch a new route like LBA-LHR, you have a big fanfare - but in three or four years' time, you'll need those LHR slots for your new long-haul aircraft and end up stopping the new short-haul route. All of your positive publicity from the launch is now negative. Why bother, if you know now that this is what you're letting yourself in for?
To me, the long-haul growth within the BA fleet order says that LBA-LHR (or anything else like it) has just become a whole lot less likely. I may be wrong, but I can't see why BA would go to all of the hassle of launching a new short-haul route taking up LHR slots which already they know they'll need elsewhere in a year or two.
There is a problem with all of this Heathrow talk. IAG last week announced a combined order for British Airways as ageing 777 replacements and future fleet growth at LHR. Doing the sums, it looks like around 12 additional daily slots will be needed at LHR to fund the long-haul growth.
The days of widebodies on a domestic route like that is long gone. They'd just use more A321s on the route.Perhaps some of the ageing BA B777s could be used on eg MAN-LHR and other high density routes, so 1 b777 replaces 2 A320s to reduce the frequency and free up more slots, just a thought!
The days of widebodies on a domestic route like that is long gone. They'd just use more A321s on the route.
I think this makes sense, accepting also what @KARFA has said regarding the fleet spread for new aircraft across IAG.The two more ATR72s going into Emerald are both heading for frequency expansion at Dublin. The slot cap at Dublin was suspended and more slots became available. Planned Emerald growth into UK bases using its UK-based AOC was fairly swiftly binned and the two extra aircraft diverted to Dublin to secure grandfather rights to slots. They have no further aircraft in the wings after those, and with the ATR market still proving very difficult, are unlikely to rush out to secure more.
There is a problem with all of this Heathrow talk. IAG last week announced a combined order for British Airways as ageing 777 replacements and future fleet growth at LHR. Doing the sums, it looks like around 12 additional daily slots will be needed at LHR to fund the long-haul growth.
There are some services you could presume are slot-holders at BA today (eg it flies 6 x MAN-LHR on Mondays and Thursdays but 9 x on Tuesdays). Unless it is going to obtain loads more slots from somewhere between now and the new long-haul aircraft arriving, you keep those "slot holders" on existing routes. You can quietly pull those one by one as you need them.
If you launch a new route like LBA-LHR, you have a big fanfare - but in three or four years' time, you'll need those LHR slots for your new long-haul aircraft and end up stopping the new short-haul route. All of your positive publicity from the launch is now negative. Why bother, if you know now that this is what you're letting yourself in for?
To me, the long-haul growth within the BA fleet order says that LBA-LHR (or anything else like it) has just become a whole lot less likely. I may be wrong, but I can't see why BA would go to all of the hassle of launching a new short-haul route taking up LHR slots which already they know they'll need elsewhere in a year or two.
I didn't know that!Oddly there was a 787 on the EDI route yesterday
But yes you are right, other than very rare one-offs, ba are never going to regularly use widebodies on domestic flights.
Probably because they don't feel as much need considering Heathrow is more accessible by land options. NCL, EDI, GLA, ABZ and INV aren't as close. MAN is more an anomaly but is a big airport and big market hence their presence. Everything further south Heathrow becomes more accessible by road and train. Even from Yorkshire. My sister used BA recently for a trip to Rome. She and her partner used the train to get to Heathrow and back.Unfortunately BA don’t seem to see wide spread U.K. feeder services as viable as do KLM with their more comprehensive feeder structure. If it had a third runway things might be different?
BA's own statement last week said:how do you come to that conclusion that the BA long haul fleet is expanding? The combined order was for all of IAG btw, not just BA. Also did you consider the 777s based at LGW?
I flew from HKG to CAN (30 mins) with Cathay on an A330.Oddly there was a 787 on the EDI route yesterday
But yes you are right, other than very rare one-offs, ba are never going to regularly use widebodies on domestic flights.
I flew from HKG to CAN (30 mins) with Cathay on an A330.
Japan is a good example.yes, the market is very different in that part of the world. lots of what we in europe would consider short haul is flown with widebodies.
This discussion seems to be reiterating the same points without resolution. The reality is that Leeds currently manages approximately 4 million passengers per annum (mppa). If the concerns you’ve raised were valid, the airport simply wouldn’t sustain such passenger numbers. While alternatives like Manchester or London exist, not all travelers share your preference for those hubs - a fact underscored by Leeds’ consistent traffic of 4mppa. Its growth was limited primarily by terminal capacity constraints, not lack of demand.But LBA isn't Heathrow or MAN where the airlines are already established. This is a challenge all the small airports face unless they have distance or geography in favour. Its easy to get to bigger airports and airlines like BA, Air France, Lufthansa etc know that.
Well i guess we'll see how much LBA grows by and what airlines it attracts once the terminal redevelopment is done.Its growth was limited primarily by terminal capacity constraints, not lack of demand
And I have a funny feeling that one or two people may just end up eating humble pie. It may not be instant but it won't take long for new airlines to start appearingWell i guess we'll see how much LBA grows by and what airlines it attracts once the terminal redevelopment is done.
Reverse the journey and you can get to LBA in the same time. It's a pointless argument.
And once those extra aircraft parking stands start to be laid of course! Something tells me the airports at a turning point, the population is there so we shall see!And I have a funny feeling that one or two people may just end up eating humble pie. It may not be instant but it won't take long for new airlines to start appearing
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