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Yes, Here but no answer to your question.Emirates decided to take off after 2300.
I know charges were laid but unknown outcome. Maybe it was settled out of court?
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Yes, Here but no answer to your question.Emirates decided to take off after 2300.
That would also depend on whether the new airport has wide and long enough runways for the aircraft.With West Sydney airport starting from 2026 could this be a back up if late for curfew.
Business passengers probably happier to take to take the late night flight ex London.
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That would also depend on whether the new airport has wide and long enough runways for the aircraft.
The problem is they may only be able to take passengers flying to/from Australia on QF on those flights if allowed to do them, whereas they would want to fill the plane.Instead of sitting at LHR all day, get those aircraft moving on a tag flight QF. To DUB, EDI, BER or CPH.
You know you want to!
True, but should be no problem for the world class bu!!$h*t team at QF. (mini-first…)The problem is they may only be able to take passengers flying to/from Australia on QF on those flights if allowed to do them, whereas they would want to fill the plane.
There used to be a tag to MAN (to avoid the LHR ground fees presumably).True, but should be no problem for the world class bu!!$h*t team at QF. (mini-first…)
Get fifth freedom lobbying! Stat!
EDI will is part of the UK (for now) so should be easy.
The CEO can go talk in DUB.
Give Princess Mary’s family a free flight from Tassie to CPH to grease those wheels.
And as for BER, do I have to think of everything?
TIC
(the fact that QF could never price a tag flight to compete with U2, FR, LH, or even BA should not be entered into during whimsical thought)
I believe that at some time the domestic UK flight was operated to keep a QF-owned LHR slot pair active. If left unused for a period time, slots would be forfeited and the cost to regain them could be massive. It was cheaper to use the slots in that manner than to lose them and buy new ones later if/when needed for long-haul operations. Those flights were operated by a mix of aircraft types. I seems to recall QF may have leased a small aircraft type to operate locally at one time so they didn't need to operate the local flights with B744 aircraft.There used to be a tag to MAN (to avoid the LHR ground fees presumably).
Presumably all incurred costs to operate eventually exceeded revenue plus ground costs saved.
I think I read somewhere that QF still owns four daily slots, but as they only operate two of them, the others are leased out. I wonder if the rules were different in the past in terms of leasing the slots?I believe that at some time the domestic UK flight was operated to keep a QF-owned LHR slot pair active. If left unused for a period time, slots would be forfeited and the cost to regain them could be massive. It was cheaper to use the slots in that manner than to lose them and buy new ones later if/when needed for long-haul operations.
I expect the "value" of slots changed significantly over recent times, and so likely the rules relating to use-or-lose them.I think I read somewhere that QF still owns four daily slots, but as they only operate two of them, the others are leased out. I wonder if the rules were different in the past in terms of leasing the slots?
Define short haul. I think we'll see low cost medium/long haul flying out of western sydney for sure. Tokyo, Singapore, Bangkok.No mystery here, the initial runway at Western Sydney Airport (with its still-missing IATA airport code), will be 3,700m (12,000 ft) long, Code F standards, suitable for any commercial aircraft up to A380/B747-8. In fact, media releases are touting it as "Australia's Best Runway" as besides the capability to handle any aircraft it will also have "Category III(B)" ILS, probably actually classification III/E/4, meaning auto-land capabilities in very low visibility conditions. This is a better rating than Sydney Airport, so Western Sydney would also be useful as a possible diversion point in case of thick fog.
However, the EIS section 5.3.2 says, "Although Code F has been adopted as the critical design aircraft, it is expected that only a small number of Code F aircraft are likely to use the proposed airport, equating to about 0.5 per cent of movements for Stage 1 operations and up to one per cent of the expected fleet mix in the long term."
So I agree that Western Sydney could be used as a diversion location in event of unexpected late arrival or fog conditions, as passengers could be bussed back to SYD which would be preferable to diverting to another city entirely. Perhaps this is where the 0.5% of movements comes from. Premium services will always be scheduled into SYD, for the foreseeable future, Western Sydney will only attract low-cost and short-haul international services, not premium long haul.
Yes that's what I meant, sorry for being unclear. Low cost international airlines to to those kinds of destinations across Asia, and potentially all airlines for trans-Tasman and Bali.Define short haul. I think we'll see low cost medium/long haul flying out of western sydney for sure. Tokyo, Singapore, Bangkok.
IIRC At one stage - when QF dropped QF29/30 extending HKG/LHR? - QF leased the slots to BA. Of course this was back when they played nicely together and BA owned 25% of QF anyway.I think I read somewhere that QF still owns four daily slots, but as they only operate two of them, the others are leased out. I wonder if the rules were different in the past in terms of leasing the slots?
IIRC Aircraft used - BAE 146I believe that at some time the domestic UK flight was operated to keep a QF-owned LHR slot pair active. If left unused for a period time, slots would be forfeited and the cost to regain them could be massive. It was cheaper to use the slots in that manner than to lose them and buy new ones later if/when needed for long-haul operations. Those flights were operated by a mix of aircraft types. I seems to recall QF may have leased a small aircraft type to operate locally at one time so they didn't need to operate the local flights with B744 aircraft.
I can't see how they could possibly receive enough revenue from an A380 UK tag operation to offset the cost of an idle aircraft. Just the risk of paying out passenger compensation for delays if their aircraft was delayed/unavailable would make it nonviable.