CaliguyNYC wrote:I get why UA is successful on EWR-BOM without having connections on the BOM end (EWR is a strong hub and EWR-BOM has strong O&D on both ends).
Why do you think UA has no feed on the BOM end?
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CaliguyNYC wrote:I get why UA is successful on EWR-BOM without having connections on the BOM end (EWR is a strong hub and EWR-BOM has strong O&D on both ends).
IPFreely wrote:CaliguyNYC wrote:I get why UA is successful on EWR-BOM without having connections on the BOM end (EWR is a strong hub and EWR-BOM has strong O&D on both ends).
Why do you think UA has no feed on the BOM end?
Irehdna wrote:IPFreely wrote:CaliguyNYC wrote:I get why UA is successful on EWR-BOM without having connections on the BOM end (EWR is a strong hub and EWR-BOM has strong O&D on both ends).
Why do you think UA has no feed on the BOM end?
Even though AI no longer has a real hub at BOM, UA codeshares a lot with 9W, who has a major hub at BOM. There is a good deal of 9W feeder traffic at BOM, and it would be interesting how DL affects this.
Irehdna wrote:Even though AI no longer has a real hub at BOM, UA codeshares a lot with 9W, who has a major hub at BOM. There is a good deal of 9W feeder traffic at BOM, and it would be interesting how DL affects this.
flyfresno wrote:I saw somewhere that DEL is pushing for ATL service
DIRECTFLT wrote:I asked a businessman that lives here in the DFW area if he wished there was non-stop service to India from the US.
He said no. He, like many people from India have ties to the UK and have relatives in the UK. So, it makes sense for him to stop over in the UK, on the way to India, to catch up with family and friends.
CaliguyNYC wrote:
Come on this is just one person. Trust me “most” indians do not have close relatives in the UK and “most” indians do not break up their trips to India with stops in the EU (professionals only get 2-3 weeks off - they might visit BOM/DEL plus their home Indian town/city). Indians are just like everyone else - they have different needs. Some want cheap flights and don’t care about IRROS or where/whom they fly. Others, just like most Americans and Europeans, prefer nonstops, want service that fits their culture, airlines that value them, FF programs, like connecting in their home country or destination country, flight times that do not involve departures / arrivals between 11pm and 6am, etc. India used to be very backward in aviation so INdian pax had to “take” what they got. With liberalization, trust me, India will start to look like other markets.
LAXdude1023 wrote:In case anyone is interested, here are the largest foreign born Indian communities in the US. This is foreign born only:
1. New York: 361,910 people
2. Bay Area: 249,903
3. Chicago: 142,508
4. Dallas: 108,570
5. Washington DC: 104,432
6. Los Angeles: 94,007
7. Philadelphia: 82,091
8. Houston: 75,609
9. Atlanta: 64,614
LAX772LR wrote:I didn't say anything about them being fully depreciated, I said they're paid off.
The two aren't synonymous: one's a measure of cost, the other a measure of value.
evanb wrote:LAX772LR wrote:I didn't say anything about them being fully depreciated, I said they're paid off.
The two aren't synonymous: one's a measure of cost, the other a measure of value.
Where is your evidence that they're paid off? You're very quick to ask other people for evidence when the make assertions. Please provide some evidence or data to show that they are paid off.
Lootess wrote:Yeah, DL is culturally sensitive. When ATL-DXB was running, it was Emirates that catered for Delta at DXB. Korea is just one example because ICN is part of a JV and they have to compliment Korean Air when they ran the A380.
The 777s are getting exactly what the A350s have now, so the inflight product will be consistent.
9W is now very close to Delta, so everything will easily be taken care of from an Indian service standpoint right away, in-fact their recent CEO was an Asian VP at Delta.DIRECTFLT wrote:I asked a businessman that lives here in the DFW area if he wished there was non-stop service to India from the US.
He said no. He, like many people from India have ties to the UK and have relatives in the UK. So, it makes sense for him to stop over in the UK, on the way to India, to catch up with family and friends.
We could use more US no stops, even ATL-DXB had many Indian connections sent on Emirates. Lots of US companies have round the clock support thanks to branch offices in places like Mumbai, Delhi, and Bangalore.
CaliguyNYC wrote:DIRECTFLT wrote:I asked a businessman that lives here in the DFW area if he wished there was non-stop service to India from the US.
He said no. He, like many people from India have ties to the UK and have relatives in the UK. So, it makes sense for him to stop over in the UK, on the way to India, to catch up with family and friends.
Come on this is just one person. Trust me “most” indians do not have close relatives in the UK and “most” indians do not break up their trips to India with stops in the EU (professionals only get 2-3 weeks off - they might visit BOM/DEL plus their home Indian town/city). Indians are just like everyone else - they have different needs. Some want cheap flights and don’t care about IRROS or where/whom they fly. Others, just like most Americans and Europeans, prefer nonstops, want service that fits their culture, airlines that value them, FF programs, like connecting in their home country or destination country, flight times that do not involve departures / arrivals between 11pm and 6am, etc. India used to be very backward in aviation so INdian pax had to “take” what they got. With liberalization, trust me, India will start to look like other markets.
tphuang wrote:And as repeated many times before, wealthier Indian expats are more concentrated in New Jersey.
Atlwarrior wrote:LAXdude1023 wrote:In case anyone is interested, here are the largest foreign born Indian communities in the US. This is foreign born only:
1. New York: 361,910 people
2. Bay Area: 249,903
3. Chicago: 142,508
4. Dallas: 108,570
5. Washington DC: 104,432
6. Los Angeles: 94,007
7. Philadelphia: 82,091
8. Houston: 75,609
9. Atlanta: 64,614
Source and what year.
lavalampluva wrote:DTW is not the center of the aviation world.
phluser wrote:tphuang wrote:And as repeated many times before, wealthier Indian expats are more concentrated in New Jersey.
How do you know that? I'd wager to guess that there are just more Indian expats in New Jersey, than say Long Island, but the very wealthy Indian expats in that market, would likely be owning property and living in NYC.
777Mech wrote:klakzky123 wrote:Presumably JFK and maybe ATL? Agree on DL needing to stop talking about the ME3.
In the celebration at the museum, Ed stated it would be from one of the east coast hubs. I'm assuming it would be JFK or ATL. Much to the dismay of the DTW crowd.
klm617 wrote:lavalampluva wrote:DTW is not the center of the aviation world.
Neither is ATL but NYC is for sure. DTW stands the best chance for success if Delta returns to India.
klm617 wrote:The only logical add is DTW-BOM. In the ATL-BOM market Delta can not compete with TK and QR and in the NYC-BOM there is just to much low fare competition and with the Indian population increasing in the metro Detroit area daily and the new opening of the Mahindra plant and no real DTW-India low fare competition except WOW Air anything thing less than DTW-BOM will be another failure
Nola wrote:Irehdna wrote:Though to be fair, launching ATL-BOM before ATL-TLV is somewhat interesting. However, I don't know how much connecting demand there would be for ATL-TLV.
Delta seems to be very happy with the yields on JFK-TLV service and adding ATL-TLV would surely dilute them. DL's JFK connectivity to most of the eastern US probably rules out ATL-TLV as, whether out of ATL or JFK, it's a one connection trip. Probably the same, although a longer trip, from the west coast, although from there the option of flying through JFK is really no different than the option of flying through AMS and CDG (although the seating is certainly different).
aemoreira1981 wrote:given that the 77L has less space for cargo than the 77E
LAX772LR wrote:aemoreira1981 wrote:given that the 77L has less space for cargo than the 77E
No it doesn't.
They both offer the exact same cargo capacity: 151 cubic metres.
MIAFLLPBIFlyer wrote:One reliable feature of A.net now as I post and for years as a lurker is the prevalence of DTW fanboys. Makes us MIA proponents who are often over the top look rational by comparison. The flight will either be from JFK or ATL. I really don't see much logic DTW at all though I guess since RJ ended India service and since none of the ME3 or TK go to DTW you could make a case for it being linked AFTER either JFK or ATL service begins. That is if DL wants to tie up two more wide bodies.
LAXdude1023 wrote:In case anyone is interested, here are the largest foreign born Indian communities in the US. This is foreign born only:
1. New York: 361,910 people
2. Bay Area: 249,903
3. Chicago: 142,508
4. Dallas: 108,570
5. Washington DC: 104,432
6. Los Angeles: 94,007
7. Philadelphia: 82,091
8. Houston: 75,609
9. Atlanta: 64,614
AntonioMartin wrote:(as an aside if you are at an airport and flying to Mumbai, I bet you cant say "Im going to BOM"")
gokmengs wrote:I'm surprised whenever a carrier starts a new International destination people focus so much on the VFR side of things and mention population by that demographic etc, I've seen this come up especially when TK launches a destination and or a thread like this. While VFR doesn't hurt for sure a destination like BOM does attract a bunch of pax going there for business and vacation, and I think either location (JFK-ATL) will be a success. Good luck to DL, although I have to question the way they did the announcement with no set date, no specifics given, as if its just a ME3 agreement publicity stunt....
klm617 wrote:lavalampluva wrote:DTW is not the center of the aviation world.
Neither is ATL but NYC is for sure. DTW stands the best chance for success if Delta returns to India.
cha747 wrote:klm617 wrote:lavalampluva wrote:DTW is not the center of the aviation world.
Neither is ATL but NYC is for sure. DTW stands the best chance for success if Delta returns to India.
The world's busiest airport for 20 years is not the center of the aviation world? What have you been smoking.
It doesn't matter ATL, JFK, DTW, SEA - the fact of the matter is that DL is now heading back at a much different time. At one point DL, NW/KLM, UA, and AA were all in this market along with Tower Air (remember that??). It's a different time in a different world. Personally, I'm looking forward to what DL will do to set this route apart because they will have to have top notch service at bottom notch price in order to woo cheap Indians (yours truly included - even when I book in C/D) to fly their metal. I have no dog in the fight but if I had to bet money, it would be ATL first and JFK second. Why? The figures show ATL has lower O&D from the NYC Metro area but the connection traffic in a 500 mile radius of ATL to BOM can't be insignificant.
klm617 wrote:777Mech wrote:In the celebration at the museum, Ed stated it would be from one of the east coast hubs. I'm assuming it would be JFK or ATL. Much to the dismay of the DTW crowd.
Ed says a lot of stuff that never materializes but suit the ocastion
tphuang wrote:phluser wrote:tphuang wrote:And as repeated many times before, wealthier Indian expats are more concentrated in New Jersey.
How do you know that? I'd wager to guess that there are just more Indian expats in New Jersey, than say Long Island, but the very wealthy Indian expats in that market, would likely be owning property and living in NYC.
If you walk around in Jersey city, where a lot of investment banks moved their operation after 9/11, there are a lot of Indian ethnic people living there. If you walk around Upper East side, where the old money is, or Upper West Side or midtown or Union Square, there just aren't as many. A lot of this really has to do with where most of the finance/tech companies are located and also the fact that Indian expats tend to be more likely in a family. Families like to move out of Manhattan for bigger places. A little that's my experience with my Indian colleagues. The great majority live in Jersey.
LAX772LR wrote:Granted, who knows what DL's long term plans are; but one thing that's consistent is that DL's never demonstrated any interest in DEL, despite having attempting 6 different routes to India on its own metal. Five were to BOM, the other to MAA.
Spiderguy252 wrote:LAX772LR wrote:Granted, who knows what DL's long term plans are; but one thing that's consistent is that DL's never demonstrated any interest in DEL, despite having attempting 6 different routes to India on its own metal. Five were to BOM, the other to MAA.
I can list:
JFK-BOM
ATL-BOM
JFK-AMS-BOM
Which were the other two, including the one to MAA?
CaliguyNYC wrote:I get why UA is successful on EWR-BOM without having connections on the BOM end (EWR is a strong hub and EWR-BOM has strong O&D on both ends). If you believe JFK is a weaker hub for DL than EWR is for UA, ATL might be the origin for the flight. I would say what is missing from India-US flight options today are connections on the India side. AI, and to a lessor extent the ME3, have all benefitting from having flight options that land in India at times when you can connect on (by plane, car, train). What else can explain the success of AI’s nonstops (other than preference of some O&D for the nonstop option). Most of the EU flights get into BOM way too late for most connections (I think its like BLR, AMD and maybe DEL for 9W). Who wants to wait 6 hours to connect. IF JFK-BOM is timed right, DL would be able to offer a slew of Indian cities. If you are going IND-CCU you have at least a two stop flight no matter how you cut it. DL could offer a two stop connection with short connections in JFK and BOM that finally competes with ME3 and is better than what EU carriers can offer (because they have long overnight connections in BOM). So in summary I think DL should go for JFK over ATL since JFK/BOM premium pax plus potential both end connections is a better mix than even more connections at ATL with less premium pax.
Spiderguy252 wrote:JFK-AMS-BOM
Alphazone wrote:Spiderguy252 wrote:JFK-AMS-BOM
What do you mean JFK-AMS-BOM, it was DTW crew who flew AMS-BOM.
alfa164 wrote:MIAFLLPBIFlyer wrote:One reliable feature of A.net now as I post and for years as a lurker is the prevalence of DTW fanboys. Makes us MIA proponents who are often over the top look rational by comparison. The flight will either be from JFK or ATL. I really don't see much logic DTW at all though I guess since RJ ended India service and since none of the ME3 or TK go to DTW you could make a case for it being linked AFTER either JFK or ATL service begins. That is if DL wants to tie up two more wide bodies.
In at least one case, I would say, "irrational DTW fanboy..."
LAXdude1023 wrote:In case anyone is interested, here are the largest foreign born Indian communities in the US. This is foreign born only:
1. New York: 361,910 people
2. Bay Area: 249,903
3. Chicago: 142,508
4. Dallas: 108,570
5. Washington DC: 104,432
6. Los Angeles: 94,007
7. Philadelphia: 82,091
8. Houston: 75,609
9. Atlanta: 64,614
Somebody must have accidentally left DTW off that list. Or maybe it was a nefarious plot...
dtw2hyd wrote:cha747 wrote:klm617 wrote:
Neither is ATL but NYC is for sure. DTW stands the best chance for success if Delta returns to India.
The world's busiest airport for 20 years is not the center of the aviation world? What have you been smoking.
It doesn't matter ATL, JFK, DTW, SEA - the fact of the matter is that DL is now heading back at a much different time. At one point DL, NW/KLM, UA, and AA were all in this market along with Tower Air (remember that??). It's a different time in a different world. Personally, I'm looking forward to what DL will do to set this route apart because they will have to have top notch service at bottom notch price in order to woo cheap Indians (yours truly included - even when I book in C/D) to fly their metal. I have no dog in the fight but if I had to bet money, it would be ATL first and JFK second. Why? The figures show ATL has lower O&D from the NYC Metro area but the connection traffic in a 500 mile radius of ATL to BOM can't be insignificant.
Just for brainstorming. Ignoring highly publicized 2000 census, DTW-India would beat other routes in yields in all classes, less competition and best US airport to connect.
I am a OK with JFK, though I sincerely doubt Y class yields. In future DL should try ATL 4 weekly and DTW 3 weekly to test both markets.
777Mech wrote:
Also, I wouldn't be surprised to see 9W on BOS-BOM soon as well.
Antarius wrote:DTW is much smaller than other major metropolitan areas, and as a result, isn't the center of the USA aviation world.
dtw2hyd wrote:If this discussion need to be limited to Ed Bastian's comments, ATL is neither in the east nor at a coast.