JetClipper
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- May 2, 2004
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I have seen the press releases about how NWA will be progressively introducing the A330-200 on trans-Pacific and Asia interport routes over the next few months. While I believe the airplane will please the passengers that actually get on, I am curious how NWA expects this airplane to handle the demand.
From what I understand, NWA’s Asia flights are going out full nearly every day. However, the A330s will be replacing much larger aircraft on the routes they serve, so NWA will lose significant capacity on these flights (e.g. SFO-NRT goes from a DC10 to an A330 with the loss of 26 seats per flight, and SEA-NRT loses 106 seats by switching from a 747-200). That being said, how will NWA handle the current loads on these flights with smaller aircraft?
I suspect that NWA is simply filling seats on the existing aircraft by offering low fares, but do these vacation travelers account for that much of the traffic mix? And, if demand consistently outstrips capacity, how will NWA adjust, particularly when much of 747-200 and DC10 fleets are gone?
Just curious.
From what I understand, NWA’s Asia flights are going out full nearly every day. However, the A330s will be replacing much larger aircraft on the routes they serve, so NWA will lose significant capacity on these flights (e.g. SFO-NRT goes from a DC10 to an A330 with the loss of 26 seats per flight, and SEA-NRT loses 106 seats by switching from a 747-200). That being said, how will NWA handle the current loads on these flights with smaller aircraft?
I suspect that NWA is simply filling seats on the existing aircraft by offering low fares, but do these vacation travelers account for that much of the traffic mix? And, if demand consistently outstrips capacity, how will NWA adjust, particularly when much of 747-200 and DC10 fleets are gone?
Just curious.