- Joined
- Jan 29, 2012
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Thanks for that. Consider me edjumacated!
Sent from my iThing.
Why, because iCan.
Unfortunately for you the aviation world does not agree with your version of the analysis...
Your original comment was holistic, not a matter of perspective. You did not argue that "some" analysts disagree with the OP, you bluntly retorted that the "aviation world" does not agree.Does that make my comment ridiculous or does it mean we are looking at it from a different perspective...
I'm more than happy to modify my original comment to ' Unfortunately the sections of the aviation world who are turning profits do not agree with your version of the analysis. They have a lot of highly paid people making that analysis as an ongoing work versus your opinion.'Your original comment was holistic, not a matter of perspective. You did not argue that "some" analysts disagree with the OP, you bluntly retorted that the "aviation world" does not agree.
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... and I countered your examples. Both Qantas and Virgin (and probably all airlines) offer the flexibility of fly ahead if you buy the appropriate ticket type. Virgin only offers free it to their elite customers and only if there is no checked baggage. The US carriers to whom you refer are largely financial basket cases and hardly the right companies to put on a pedestal.I gave two examples to disprove your broad claim.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
I'm SG on Qantas, booked on a Red-e-Deal at 8pm tonight from Syd to Mel. I've had my afternoon meeting cancel, and now can fly any time from 5pm onwards.
I can't change this ticket cause it's a cheapie, and I can't buy another cheapie because there's none left, and I can't justify buying another ticket at the higher bracket just so I can get away a few hours earlier.
Under my Virgin Gold days, I could just ask them at check in and they'd put me on an earlier flight. Has anyone had a similar experience with Qantas?
[LEFT][COLOR=#000000][FONT=Helvetica]1. STANDBY - A. AADVANTAGE EXECUTIVE PLATINUM/ PLATINUM/ GOLD PASSENGERS AND THEIR ONEWORLD EQUIVALENTS AND AA CONCIERGE KEY AND AAIRPASS MEMBERS TICKETED WITH ANY FARE MAY STANDBY WITHOUT CHARGE AS NOTED BELOW. B. PASSENGERS NOT QUALIFYING BY TIER STATUS AS DESCRIBED ABOVE WHO PURCHASED TICKETS FOR FIRST OR BUSINESS CLASS OR COACH FARES BOOKED IN Y/B/H/D/I/A/P INVENTORIES MAY STANDBY WITHOUT CHARGE AS NOTED BELOW. WHEN TICKETED WITH ANY OTHER COACH FARES THESE PASSENGERS MAY USE CONFIRMED FLIGHT CHANGE.
STANDBY CONDITIONS FOR ELIGIBLE PASSENGERS - 1. PASSENGERS MUST BE HOLDING CONFIRMED RESERVA- TIONS AND TICKETS FOR FLIGHTS OPERATED BY AMERICAN AIRLINES/ AMERICAN EAGLE OR AMERICAN CONNECTION 2. STANDBY IS PERMITTED FOR EARLIER/LATER SAME DAY AA NONSTOP AND/OR CONNECTING FLIGHTS BETWEEN THE SAME ORIGIN AND DESTINATION AIRPORTS PROVIDED THE ROUTING IS APPLICABLE FOR THE FARE CHARGED.[/FONT][/COLOR][/LEFT]
So if you're any elite status with any OneWorld airline, when you're on an AA fare, you can waitlist for any other flight on the same routing for that day
Do people find that they have more success in the QP or J lounge in MEL? I've only ever tried once in the J lounge and got rejected. Couldn't be bothered going to the QP.
The incentive is known flexibility vs flipping a coin. These is a vast gulf of difference between the two.Then there's no incentive for people to buy higher fares. I buy the cheapest with the knowledge that most likely I won't be able to change it, and I accept that.