....If it will support his UA/US ICT/UCT theories?...I'm sure he'd buy off on that scenario too.ClueByFour said:You do realize that many of UAs 762s are the oldest production models still flying and that in many (if not most) combinations the flight deck and powerplant are not the same as the variants U is currently flying.Chip Munn said:Furthermore, there a reliable reports inside of the company that Bronner holds United B767 EETC paper and he is not interested in taking a "haircut" for United's POR.
The information I have posted on United eliminating its entire B767-200 fleet in about 12 months is public record, the information was provided to the bankruptcy court during the last omnibus hearing, and the aircraft "for sale" listing can be viewed at www.speednews.com.
I guess your supposition is that US should bring the DC-9s, MD-80s, and the Fokkers out of retirement. Who needs fleet commonality?
Any move to take on UA's 767's would be a quantum step backwards...not because it's UA's assets....but because it's NOT a natural or logical fit. The age of the Acft in question is just another compounding negative.
I believe the issues on engine differences , tooling requirements , training issues and cockpit instrumentation differences because of the engines alone would prove to be too costly. This would in fact defeat the reason for going with Airbus to begin with....and that was a mistake in my opinion too !!!
IMHO....buying into UA's 767's ..is buying into another mans troubles. UA is not thinking of discarding them for giggles and grins afterall.