WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Dec 5, 2003
- 21,709
- 10,662
- Banned
- #16
given that US has improved revenues on CLT-GIG, it's a little surprising that US decided to pull the plug.A320 Driver said:CLT-GIG is a money loser on an A330. It also takes two aircraft to service the route. The 767s won't be around forever and there are much better places to deploy an A330 than GIG. The last A330 delivery is in May...there are no more on order until the A350s come on line in 2017. I have flown GIG and will not miss it in the least. I hate people losing their jobs but I haven't seen a merger where it didn't happen to some degree and it seems that Parker and crew are getting their house in order right away. I heard rumors months ago that the route would move to MIA.
MIA may be the capital of Latin America but it simply doesn't have the connectivity that CLT does. It might not make any difference for alot of passengers but there will be cities that will lose single connection service on new AA.
It also calls into question the idea that CLT can really be a challenge to ATL if AA can't or won't duplicate the same type of network that DL flies from ATL. ATL is the 2nd largest single carrier Latin America gateway behind MIA including a half dozen flights daily to deep S. America.
CLT doesn't have quite the caché as a global hub if it serves only Europe.
Josh,
if the question came down to ADDING a 2nd TLV flight, MIA might make sense but it makes no sense to dump a flight from the NE that has good connectivity to nearly all of the US-TLV market in order to add a longer flight that won't serve as much of the country.
If the LY codeshare really happens, then it might make sense for LY or AA to start a codeshare flight from MIA capturing some of the traffic from Latin America that currently flows over European carriers.