Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,390
January 2019 was largely a holiday month, but still busy.
BITRE figures show that punctuality on Australia's busiest air route was shocking in January.
From MEL north to SYD, 34 per cent of TT flights were more than 15 minutes late arriving at gate in SYD.
33.6 per cent of JQ flights were similarly late when measured like this, as were 22.2 per cent of QF's and 19.9 per cent of VA's.
Then we have cancellations. Northbound, TT had an appalling cancellation rate of 16.8 per cent. That's one in every six scheduled northbound flights.
QF had an unacceptable cancellation percentage of five per cent and VA 3.4 per cent, still poor.
Weather played a part but it does not account for every 'no show' of a timetabled flight, nor for every instance of inability to keep to the timetable.
Southbound - slower schedules where all but TT typically allow 95 minutes gate-to-gate compared with 85 minutes northbound - the JQ SYD down to MEL cancellation percentage jumped to 6.7 per cent, QFs was 4.9, VA was the best at 3.4 and TT remained the worst at (again) 16.8 per cent of southbound SYD - MEL scheduled flights.
Timekeeping was a little better southbound but the two best, QF and JQ still had respectively 18.2 and 19.2 per cent of flights that ran more than 15 minutes late to destination. Tt and JQ hovered around the 30 per cent mark of late flights: unimpressive.
Just terrible that this subpar performance goes on month after month.
As a nation we miss out on the benefits of true high speed trains that so many other nations have or are embracing. If we had a properly operated HSR (high speed rail) network, reliability and punctuality would soar as they have overseas. But airlines here fight tooth and nail so that it's not funded, built and opened, as they know how the community would embrace HSR.
BITRE figures show that punctuality on Australia's busiest air route was shocking in January.
From MEL north to SYD, 34 per cent of TT flights were more than 15 minutes late arriving at gate in SYD.
33.6 per cent of JQ flights were similarly late when measured like this, as were 22.2 per cent of QF's and 19.9 per cent of VA's.
Then we have cancellations. Northbound, TT had an appalling cancellation rate of 16.8 per cent. That's one in every six scheduled northbound flights.
QF had an unacceptable cancellation percentage of five per cent and VA 3.4 per cent, still poor.
Weather played a part but it does not account for every 'no show' of a timetabled flight, nor for every instance of inability to keep to the timetable.
Southbound - slower schedules where all but TT typically allow 95 minutes gate-to-gate compared with 85 minutes northbound - the JQ SYD down to MEL cancellation percentage jumped to 6.7 per cent, QFs was 4.9, VA was the best at 3.4 and TT remained the worst at (again) 16.8 per cent of southbound SYD - MEL scheduled flights.
Timekeeping was a little better southbound but the two best, QF and JQ still had respectively 18.2 and 19.2 per cent of flights that ran more than 15 minutes late to destination. Tt and JQ hovered around the 30 per cent mark of late flights: unimpressive.
Just terrible that this subpar performance goes on month after month.
As a nation we miss out on the benefits of true high speed trains that so many other nations have or are embracing. If we had a properly operated HSR (high speed rail) network, reliability and punctuality would soar as they have overseas. But airlines here fight tooth and nail so that it's not funded, built and opened, as they know how the community would embrace HSR.