Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
Quoting klm617 (Thread starter): With all the talk about Delta and how they retaliate with things they don't agree with could this be one of the main reasons Detroit attracts little or no new serivce. |
Quoting klm617 (Thread starter): Is it possably the fact that the WCAA is in fear of anything the airport authority might do to attract better options for the people who use DTW and the above average fares that are being charged might bring a backlash from Delta. |
Quoting klm617 (Thread starter): It is cerataily fesable that either QR or TK should've added service to Detroit by now as they have mentioned it as an immanant destination several times. One would also think that FI could maintain a flight at Detroit also. |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 1): The reality is that DTW is not a large O&D market that many of these routes can stand along without feed on the US side. DL has the power of the hub to suppliment the O&D with connecting traffic all over the Midwest. |
Quoting klm617 (Thread starter): With all the talk about Delta and how they retaliate with things they don't agree with could this be one of the main reasons Detroit attracts little or no new serivce. |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 1): The reality is that DTW is not a large O&D market that many of these routes can stand along without feed on the US side. DL has the power of the hub to suppliment the O&D with connecting traffic all over the Midwest. |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 1): The reality is that DTW is not a large O&D market that many of these routes can stand along without feed on the US side. DL has the power of the hub to suppliment the O&D with connecting traffic all over the Midwest. |
Quoting IPFreely (Reply 5): I don't think any airline is afraid of competing with DL. Especially on domestic flights against the shambles that is the DL Connection operation at DTW. |
Quoting WA707atMSP (Reply 9): What people lose sight of is that Detroit has more international service than it's ever had, despite the city's decline. |
Quoting DocLightning (Reply 2): As for O&D, DTW does have an enormous catchment. DTW basically is the point of departure for just about anyone within a 3 hour drive radius. But the population density is not huge and it just isn't a huge business center anymore. |
Quoting jfk777 (Reply 3): Detroit is a great hub for Asia which has to be one reason Delta wanted Northwest so badly, a better Asian hub then MSP. With the coming A350-900 fleet and the 777-200LR Delta should be able to go nonstop to any place it needs to in Asia. |
Quoting Freshside3 (Reply 4): It will be interesting to see what will happen next, with YXU getting their schedule cut, and with them being(roughly)the halfway point between YYZ and DTW. |
Quoting IPFreely (Reply 5): I don't think any airline is afraid of competing with DL. Especially on domestic flights against the shambles that is the DL Connection operation at DTW. The main reason there isn't more service to DTW is that the amount of O/D traffic isn't there to support more. Detroit was once a thriving city of business and industry. Today it's a shell of what it used to be with little to no hope of ever recovering. |
Quoting TWA772LR (Reply 6): I agree it's better than MSP with the Auto industry alone, but isn't DL trying to make SEA their Asian gateway? |
Quoting ncflyer (Reply 7): Wouldn't Delta be big enough to have more than 1 Asian gateway? They have more than one to Europe. . . . JFK and ATL. I don't think it's an either or situation. |
Quoting WA707atMSP (Reply 9): What people lose sight of is that Detroit has more international service than it's ever had, despite the city's decline. |
Quoting UA444 (Reply 11): Wasn't their talk of EK or some of the gulf carriers serving DTW with the huge middle eastern population there? Also CZ? |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 1): The reality is that DTW is not a large O&D market that many of these routes can stand along without feed on the US side. DL has the power of the hub to suppliment the O&D with connecting traffic all over the Midwest. |
Quoting WA707atMSP (Reply 9): Even though the Detroit auto companies are much less dominant now than they were 43 years ago, and the metro area's population is smaller and less well off, DL's ability to gather passengers from throughout the country has enabled them to offer an almost unimaginable array of international flights. |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 18): Yes DTW has a large middle eastern population but I'm highly skeptical of their propensity to travel back to the Middle East. |
Quoting ridgid727 (Reply 19): DTW has found itself to be what CVG used to be. Lots of service but very high "opportunistic" O & D fares |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 18): The DTW catchment area is about 6 million people, but the reality is some leisure travelers will drive 3-4 hours or more in search of cheaper fares. Population alone isn't a good measure as the propensity to travel is based on many socioeconomic factors. Much of the DTW catchment population is blue collar. On the other hand there is a solid white collar population that does travel alot for business and leisure. Metro Detroit and Michigan is very provincial; it is not the transient and/or global population found in larger global cities. Many are born-and-raised people from the Midwest. |
Quoting A332DTW (Reply 23): Too many people seem to be underestimating the future welfare of Detroit and SE Michigan. Since the city has exited bankruptcy there has been substantial continued investment into the city. When the city itself is on a path towards growth the region stands to benefit. Realistically, it won't be over night but a good indication of what direction a city or region is going in is population. The latest census numbers are not peachy, as Detroit is now outside the 20 most populous cities in the US, but it appears to be bottoming out: http://www.freep.com/story/news/loca...etroit-population-census/84546630/ |
Quoting TWA772LR (Reply 6): but isn't DL trying to make SEA their Asian gateway? |
Quoting ncflyer (Reply 7): I don't think it's an either or situation. |
Quoting A332DTW (Reply 23): The airport saw its highest passenger count in 2005 if I'm not mistaken. |
Quoting michman (Reply 24): DTW's BTS average fares are about in the middle of the pack. It's nowhere near as bad as CVG once was. With NK, WN, F9, and B6 around, there enough competition to keep things reasonable. You may have to connect to get where you are going, but there are usually cheaper options if you are willing to look around. |
Quoting N415XJ (Reply 22): Well, RJ has been able to sustain a flight to Detroit for years, probably feeding off the large Palestinian and Jordanian population and their business/VFR traffic |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 29): Another question is why does Delta not allow more of it's skyteam members into the Detroit market |
Quoting MIflyer12 (Reply 20): otal passenger numbers, DL daily flight count, and DL passenger count are comparable to MSP. BTS reports show that domestic O&D passenger counts are 4.0-5.0 million passengers annually, a bit smaller than MSP but alongside MCO and IAH. |
Quoting VictorKilo (Reply 21): While the metro area's population may be "smaller and less well off", the auto industry, of which I am a part of, is much more of a global enterprise now than it was is 1973. Much of DL's global offerings from DTW are focused on flights where there is front-of-cabin demand to major centers of the global automobile industry - PVG, ICN, NRT, NGO, FRA, GRU, and to some degree PEK all fit this bill. This demand includes people from US auto makers and suppliers flying to operations around the globe, as well as people from foreign auto makers and suppliers flying to the center of the industry in the US. It is this demand, augmented with one-stop demand from across the US, that allows DL to sustain these flights. |
Quoting N415XJ (Reply 22): Well, RJ has been able to sustain a flight to Detroit for years, probably feeding off the large Palestinian and Jordanian population and their business/VFR traffic. Many Arabs in metro Detroit are blue collar, but many also maintain close ties with the 'old world', and when they travel they tend to bring the whole entourage(=more seats filled). I really think that one of the ME3 could easily replace the RJ flight and draw customers traveling to MENA/India/Africa away from DL. QR/EK/EY have much better options for flights within the region than the European airlines DL passengers are most likely connecting onto. I'm putting my money on EK swooping in by surprise to give DL another poke in the eye |
Quoting michman (Reply 24): DTW's BTS average fares are about in the middle of the pack. It's nowhere near as bad as CVG once was. With NK, WN, F9, and B6 around, there enough competition to keep things reasonable. You may have to connect to get where you are going, but there are usually cheaper options if you are willing to look around. |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 28): While I agree decent fares to most major markets can be had it is internationally where we are being gouged compared to other markets in the region which I really think needs to be addressed and bringing in FI or one of the ME3 could help a great deal and I think is very sustainable as far as domestic addtions I see maybe a DTW-LAX on American but other than that there is not much more given the limited opportunities as far as domestic carriers that still exsist |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 29): Another question is why does Delta not allow more of it's skyteam members into the Detroit market KL,AM and now the loss of VS if I had my choice I would much rather use a KL or AF flight out of Detroit than a Delta flight internationally and when given a comparable price option would without a doubt book away from Delta and rather chose the European carrier than fly Delta |
Quoting PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 31): They determine who best to operate flights based on aircraft type/capacity, operations/scheduling, brand influence, maintaining the balance of flights/ASMs between the carriers and other factors. For the most part, it makes more sense to have DL operate the flights out of their domestic hubs with a few exceptions. |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 33): Correct but Detroit is a major international gateway for Delta the third in the system to be exact I think our lack of choice here in Detroit centers more around not wanting to dilute the Delta brand in peoples minds so you associate Delta with everything which again limits choice of service. Is the airport able to collect more money in any way when both JV partners operate out of the same airport or are all the airport fees for both airlines paid out of one fund ? |
Quoting DTW.SCE" class="quote" target="_blank">PSU.DTW.SCE (Reply 34): Some of it has to do with branding and other airports too. At a macro level there tends to be more point of sale traffic from Europe to the USA. However that may not necessarily be true in a market like DTW where it isn't a popular destination, outside of some business traffic. If they don't need the power of the local brand in Europe, DL is going to have more brand power in DTW than say KLM or AF. Plus, to keep things in balance, like VS may carry more brand value in a market like LHR-SEA versus DTW so they will make the swap accordingly. |
Quoting FSDan (Reply 32): In the short term, if an ME carrier is to start DTW, TK seems like the best choice. I believe the 332 would have the range for DTW-IST. However, with EK claiming that they want to get to 20 U.S. destinations, DTW has to be on that list. |
Quoting Freshside3 (Reply 36): Not to mention the fact that, for several years, the US carriers cut frequency to ATH, and none of the Greek carriers that have the equipment with enough range. |
Quoting A332DTW (Reply 23): The airport saw its highest passenger count in 2005 if I'm not mistaken. |
Quoting HeeseokKoo (Reply 41): In the meantime, 15 gates at the north end in concourse C have been deactivated. Discussed a year ago, and the map offered at the airport website reflects it. |
Quoting WA707atMSP (Reply 40): People who are first generation immigrants travel far more to their homelands than people who have been in the US for several generations. |
Quoting A332DTW (Reply 42): Word around the airport is that DL wanted to demolish that northern end of concourse C, but WCAA put the brakes on it. Apparently WCAA is not so quick to destroy potential gate lease, they do own the building after all (last I checked). I think that would clear up any suspicion on whether the county is wrapped around DL's finger or not. |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 44): That is good news that the WCAA put the brakes on that but that in no way effects Delta bottom line in Detroit just like the new Spirit hanger doesn't where as bringing in anyone who directly competes with Delta and may effect Delta's bottom line by offering lower fares which Delta might feel compelled to match causing them to lose revenue now that's a whole different story |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 35): Wth that being said ATL is no more a tourist destination than DTW is but yet the skyteam partners for the most part all serve ATL. So from your comment that would lead me to believe that Delta wants to capture as much of the transfer traffic as they can in ATL at the expenesne of DTW and MSP. Because in reality DTW-AMS and ATL-AMS probably are pretty close in O&D traffic so then why does ATL have 2 KLM flights and DTW has zero same aircraft and everything but with the KLM brand operating to ATL I think they want the brand recognition to be as broad as possible thus allowing all skyteam members into ATL to generate more traffic there. |
Quoting Freshside3 (Reply 36): Also keep in mind that there is a fairly large Greek population in Michigan, too. So not just the Lebanese, Iraqis, etc. And many Greek-Americans ignore the "political correctness" factor, and will fly TK because it is a good airline, that gets them where they want to go. Not to mention the fact that, for several years, the US carriers cut frequency to ATH, and none of the Greek carriers that have the equipment with enough range. |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 37): Also what re the thoughts on a B6 Detroit to Orlando flight. |
Quoting HeeseokKoo (Reply 41): In the meantime, 15 gates at the north end in concourse C have been deactivated. Discussed a year ago, and the map offered at the airport website reflects it. |
Quoting A332DTW (Reply 42): Word around the airport is that DL wanted to demolish that northern end of concourse C, but WCAA put the brakes on it. Apparently WCAA is not so quick to destroy potential gate lease, they do own the building after all (last I checked). I think that would clear up any suspicion on whether the county is wrapped around DL's finger or not |
Quoting VictorKilo (Reply 43): In my own experience living in Detroit, a large percentage of the first generation immigrants that I've met have come from places like Syria, Yemen, and Iraq. The current political situations in these countries, and the fact that many of these immigrants have come to the US fleeing these conflicts, limit the demand for travel to these countries. |
Quoting johns624 (Reply 45): Face it, DTW is Delta's home, just like it was NW's. My wife is Platinum and to her, and most business travelers, nonstop flights to almost everywhere is worth money. When she first moved here, she tried connecting through ORD a couple of times in winter, even though I warned her. Never again. I've flown both AF and DL to Europe and really couldn't tell the difference. |
Quoting klm617 (Reply 47): I totally agree with this but the reality is Northwest was way more committed to enhancing Detroit as a hub than Delta will ever be. |
Quoting TWA772LR (Reply 6): Detroit is a great hub for Asia which has to be one reason Delta wanted Northwest so badly, a better Asian hub then MSP. I agree it's better than MSP with the Auto industry alone, but isn't DL trying to make SEA their Asian gateway |