ozbeachbabe
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2009
- Posts
- 6,459
Whilst codeshare flights have been around for awhile who actually instigated them and for what purpose?
Airlines, like any other companies are in business to make money so obviously it was a financially motivated decision - profit is not a dirty word after all!
Once upon a time when BA/QF first code shared on the Kangaroo route eg SIN/LON if it was a flight operated by BA metal but had a QF codeshare flight BA would receive 67% of the revenue & QF 33%. If QF metal but also ops as a BA codeshare flight swap the above percentages around.
Passengers when told it was a QF flight number but operated by BA or vv didn't flinch - after all they still got free meals, ff points, could through check bags, get all their boarding passes. It was very much a case of "same same, but different."
This day and age code shares seem to do more harm than good with these flights causing confusion amongst the travelling public with regard to:
* Which airline do they checkin with (marketing airline or airlines whole metal they are flying on
* Do they earn frequent flyer points or not
* Do they get meals or not
* Do they get the same baggage allowances
* Can they through check luggage or is it point to point only
In some cases it's almost a case of the 'wolf in sheeps clothing' scenario whereby people assume that if the flight prefix is for example QF, then the operating carrier will be QF. I'm sure there are many other examples with many airlines, that is just one that springs to mind.
Would be fascinating to hear your views on the subject.

Airlines, like any other companies are in business to make money so obviously it was a financially motivated decision - profit is not a dirty word after all!
Once upon a time when BA/QF first code shared on the Kangaroo route eg SIN/LON if it was a flight operated by BA metal but had a QF codeshare flight BA would receive 67% of the revenue & QF 33%. If QF metal but also ops as a BA codeshare flight swap the above percentages around.
Passengers when told it was a QF flight number but operated by BA or vv didn't flinch - after all they still got free meals, ff points, could through check bags, get all their boarding passes. It was very much a case of "same same, but different."
This day and age code shares seem to do more harm than good with these flights causing confusion amongst the travelling public with regard to:
* Which airline do they checkin with (marketing airline or airlines whole metal they are flying on
* Do they earn frequent flyer points or not
* Do they get meals or not
* Do they get the same baggage allowances
* Can they through check luggage or is it point to point only
In some cases it's almost a case of the 'wolf in sheeps clothing' scenario whereby people assume that if the flight prefix is for example QF, then the operating carrier will be QF. I'm sure there are many other examples with many airlines, that is just one that springs to mind.
Would be fascinating to hear your views on the subject.

