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Bazza wrote:QUOTE (Bazza @ Jun 18 2014,11:52 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>I reckon you wrote that Ian......Ben Rich aka Ian Warren.
Sounds plausible...
Founder and Former CEO of VANZ
"You land a million planes safely, then you have one little mid-air
and you never hear the end of it."
Air Traffic Controller, New York TRACON
Westbury, L.I

Splitpin wrote:QUOTE (Splitpin @ Jun 18 2014,9:20 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Im not going to get into the A vs B thing ....its old news , and frankly boring, and i wish it would just go away .
Give me a can of petrol and I'll useno need for matches , I'll turning an element on and wrap a bitta paper up .. Whoof !
....
Splitpin wrote:QUOTE (Splitpin @ Jun 18 2014,6:20 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Im not going to get into the A vs B thing ....its old news , and frankly boring, and i wish it would just go away .
My sentiments exactly.
Operators are only interested in low seat/mile costs.
That's why spiffy little jets like the Fokker F-28/100 have been replaced with ATRs and Dash-8s - a modern turboprop with a modern propeller uses less fuel.
That's why the airframe you sit in does not belong to the airline you are flying with - it is leased from a company which specialises in that.
That's why you can fly NZ-UK with one airline, and return on another, but propelled by the same engines - they are leased, too.
Aircraft builders make their decisions on how they see the future market, and quite often get it wrong.
Leasing companies also get it wrong.
But there was (possibly still is) a shuttle from Kennedy to La Guardia using 747s - 7 minutes flight time. Lease a couple of A380s to shuttle twice as many pax, and while the flight time will be about the same, the dwell time (load/unload) will be twice as much.
Y'all have a good day nowMikeW
'Propliner' is actually short for 'Proper airliner, with big rumbly radials'
Charl wrote:QUOTE (Charl @ Jun 18 2014,8:15 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>I wanted to see some more of Ben Rich's wisdom, so Googled him, and "Latitudes Unlimited International Maritime & Aviation Consulting."
Danged if it didn't turn up a single result... now that is strange, I can Google "My Left Toenail" and come up with Something.
Funny I got hits straight away.
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ben-rich/15/b28/44
....and it gets worse for Airbus.Last edited by cowpatz on Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
cowpatz wrote:QUOTE (cowpatz @ Jun 18 2014,10:28 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Funny I got hits straight away.
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ben-rich/15/b28/44
....and it gets worse for Airbus.
"This article is only available to registered Flightglobal users"
Anyways, it gets to the point where you can only build for profitability or scale, you can't do both. Unfortunately Airbus have gambled on a plane that isn't ready for the current market and it's just a big white whale. There is currently no reason to build larger than a 747 or an A340-600, not when cost ratio comes into play. If you can't fill the plane or it costs too much to run, then it's gonna be a bad ratio every time.Last edited by omitchell on Wed Jun 18, 2014 11:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Founder and Former CEO of VANZ
"You land a million planes safely, then you have one little mid-air
and you never hear the end of it."
Air Traffic Controller, New York TRACON
Westbury, L.I
Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 19 2014,10:03 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Even with the numbers, the idea of the aircraft being more economical than anything, the aircraft in most fleets offered to airlines are just the same...just political porkies
Not everything is political Ian.
This was just a bad business move by Airbus, it happens in all companies from time to time. It has however, set Boeing up to recapture the Long Haul sales market again with the 747-8 and 777-x due to their economical and environmental factors and the fact that it both are well known and loved aircraft now set for increased profitability instead of going radical all new plane that just wasn't right for market conditions. Boeing already took that gamble once but were fortunate. If Pan Am hadn't been so popular and TWA hadn't jumped in too, chances are this conversation would have been had 50 years ago about the 747. They were lucky, in this case Airbus are not.
Founder and Former CEO of VANZ
"You land a million planes safely, then you have one little mid-air
and you never hear the end of it."
Air Traffic Controller, New York TRACON
Westbury, L.I
omitchell wrote:QUOTE (omitchell @ Jun 19 2014,3:08 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Not everything is political Ian.
I did mean it that way regard to NZ , I meant that is the reason ANZ bought ARBUSTS .. kissy up and bottom licking, put the price down and that's as simple as that.Last edited by Ian Warren on Thu Jun 19, 2014 2:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 19 2014,2:17 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>I did mean it that way regard to NZ , I meant that is the reason ANZ bought ARBUSTS .. kissy up and bottom licking, put the price down and that's as simple as that.
Oh yes, I'm sure Airbus' pitch to ANZ was "Oh hey, what do you think John Key would prefer, Airbus or Boeing?" No Ian it was a financial marketing campaign, Airbus had the better pitch to the company than Boeing did so ANZ went with them. Does it make it the right decision, in my opinion no, but that's nothing to do with political reasons. Once again this is business, it happens EVERY DAY...
Founder and Former CEO of VANZ
"You land a million planes safely, then you have one little mid-air
and you never hear the end of it."
Air Traffic Controller, New York TRACON
Westbury, L.I
omitchell wrote:QUOTE (omitchell @ Jun 19 2014,5:01 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Once again this is business, it happens EVERY DAY...
To today's business is politics when its a country owned airline , lie steal cheat , key was not in when ARBUSTS were (nosed) in with Clark decider was back then and its not recent .. go back a decade fact is pilots and ground staff are left to lump it or leave it .
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