Back to Squawk list
  • 27

United Airlines sacrifices cargo capacity to replace grounded 777s

Soumis
 
United Airlines could lose some altitude on its cargo sales as it shuffles around its fleet to cover the loss of 777s now parked for safety reasons. (www.freightwaves.com) Plus d'info...

Sort type: [Top] [Newest]


geharper
Gary Harper 2
From what I understand from listening to some aircraft engine experts, the engine failure on the Denver 777, was NOT an uncontained failure.
jptq63
jptq63 1
While there might be another reason(s), this implies financially United is still earning more off passenger flights somehow. I also make note that article indicates cargo demand (air type) is greater now vs. year ago and there are also fewer providers (capacity) than a year ago, and if supply-demand hold, rates should be greater. Wonder how FexEx & UPS make money with their air freight? Anyone else got ideas on the business sense here?
ekulisch
Eric Kulisch 2
Airlines always place more value on passenger than cargo, but there could be some changes in mindset as cargo business improves. That said, these widebody planes can carry a lot of cargo still in passenger mode, so it's not so much a loss of capacity as in flexibility and how and where United can deploy them. Even if the passenger planes aren't filled that much, it's likely cargo will dictate what routes United runs for the time being. . . FedEx and UPS are completely different animals - they are mostly flying cargo for their own shipments, so they are supporting their high-yielding package business, not dependent on outside cargo shippers so much and they are focused on cargo, not divided with passenger considerations.
jhal
John Haller 1
I looked at last Monday's Hawaii flights. The non-stop to Maui was changed to a 757-200. The Chicago nonstops didn't exist at all. From Denver, SFO, and Houston, the nonstops remaining were all in a Polaris 777 configuration, and

jhal
John Haller 1
Hit post too soon. The Houston flight was a 767, none in a premium economy configuration.

But the real problem is that if they are to keep flying to Hawaii nonstop, they will be diverting planes from profitable freight flights to Hawaii with no increase in cargo capacity to Hawaii. It could also put United in the market for some used 777 with other engine types, even if it means moving the passenger compartment from one 777 to another, and a repaint.

Se connecter

Vous n'avez pas de compte? Inscrivez-vous maintenant (gratuitement) pour des fonctionnalités personnalisées, des alertes de vols, et plus encore!
Saviez-vous que le suivi des vols FlightAware est soutenu par la publicité ?
Vous pouvez nous aider à garder FlightAware gratuit en autorisant les annonces de FlightAware.com. Nous travaillons dur pour que notre publicité reste pertinente et discrète afin de créer une expérience formidable. Il est facile et rapide de mettre les annonces en liste blanche sur FlightAware ou d’examiner nos comptes premium.
Abandonner