Notices

Reply
Tools...
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old Jul 15, 2009, 1:08 PM
xterratop xterratop is offline
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 1
Thumbs down Fly bigger planes and open more routes!!!

I've been flying AA for years and I noticed that there is only one city on the west coast that flies to Honolulu- Los Angeles. That is a JOKE! I was originally flying to LAX then to HNL but right when the plane started to move out, the pilot noticed that one of their lights was not working. The pilot admitted to everyone that "this has been a reoccurring problem lately". Why? Because AA is short on mechanics! Why wasn't this fixed in the first place? Are we flying planes that aren't working correctly?

Second, when there is a price war during peak months, why aren't they flying planes that can handle more volume? DFW used to fly 767 planes that hold more passengers. Now DFW to HNL only flies two 767's and they pack these two flights like a can of sardines. Why not fly 767's for the LAX flights since most of their flights are flying out of LAX to HNL and other places on the west coast. What ever happend to flying out of San Jose or San Francisco?

Rollovers. That's all AA does is roll the passenger over to another flight. Why not get another plane to replace the broken plane that needs servicing? There were a lot of unhappy people on my flight and many of them were very upset. AA, if you want to survive, make your executives get cut backs on their large salaries, treat their employees better, and service to the customer. Its all about money for the big executives that don't care about others but themselves.

Stimulate the economy. In order to do that, open up more routes and get more customers. After today, I know that you've lost many customers. Shame on you!!!
  #2  
Old Jul 15, 2009, 7:28 PM
Gromit801 Gromit801 is offline
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 745
Default

Just change airlines.
  #3  
Old Jul 16, 2009, 7:49 AM
justme justme is offline
Delta Air Lines Employee (NOT OFFICIAL REP)
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: ATL
Posts: 257
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by xterratop View Post
The pilot admitted to everyone that "this has been a reoccurring problem lately". Why? Because AA is short on mechanics! Why wasn't this fixed in the first place? Are we flying planes that aren't working correctly?
Seriously? You act like you're surprised that AA is short mechanics. They've been cutting jobs like its going out of style. Just like almost every other airline in the world. Cutting costs means cutting jobs. Every airline is short workers in all departments. Why wasn't it fixed in the first place? Maybe it wasn't broken in the first place. Did it ever occur to you that maybe this light you speak of blew out or broke after you left the gate? As far as flying planes that don't work correctly, you'd be surprised how much stuff doesn't work and is just written up and dealt with the way it is until the a/c goes in for major scheduled maintenance. The FAA/DOT allows the planes to fly with certain things not working. It's a common practice across the industry.

Quote:
Originally Posted by xterratop
Second, when there is a price war during peak months, why aren't they flying planes that can handle more volume?
Again, seriously? You think they've just got extra 767s sitting around waiting to be flown? Well, the answer is no, they don't. They also don't have enough pilots to fly all these airplanes you suggest they should make magically appear.

Quote:
Originally Posted by xterratop
Rollovers. That's all AA does is roll the passenger over to another flight. Why not get another plane to replace the broken plane that needs servicing? There were a lot of unhappy people on my flight and many of them were very upset. AA, if you want to survive, make your executives get cut backs on their large salaries, treat their employees better, and service to the customer. Its all about money for the big executives that don't care about others but themselves.
One more time, seriously? Again with the just making multi-million dollar airplanes appear in your fleet like they're a dime a dozen. As far as what executives make, I think if you compare their salaries to other large corporations of similar size, you will find that on average the airline execs have smaller salaries.

Quote:
Originally Posted by xterratop
Stimulate the economy. In order to do that, open up more routes and get more customers. After today, I know that you've lost many customers. Shame on you!!!
The old saying "build it and they will come" is not necessarily true in the airline market. Just because an airplane is flying there does not mean people will pay to get on it. There are many many years of research that go into deciding which type of airplane and how much frequency a specific route deserves. It's not an overnight decision to just say, "Oh man, get an extra plane to fly to HNL tomorrow!"

Use some common sense and you will see that the type of aircraft, frequency, layover points, etc is all very well planned and thought out. Although it doesn't always go as planned, trust that there is indeed a plan.
__________________
I think Bigfoot is blurry, that's the problem. It's not the photographer's fault. Bigfoot is blurry, and that's extra scary to me. There's a large, out-of-focus monster roaming the countryside. Run, he's fuzzy, get out of here.
- Mitch Hedberg
  #4  
Old Jul 17, 2009, 5:57 AM
airhead airhead is offline
Former Airline Employee (NOT OFFICIAL REP)
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 228
Default xterratop

you have no concept of economies of scale or business 101. Do you have any idea the costs of having extra planes, large ones for the matter, to operate for stand by purposes? You have to pay the Captain, the Second Officer, Flight Attendants, Hanger space, Ground Crew to prepare, Fuel, and the extra dispatcher to give the air craft the ok to go out.
  #5  
Old Oct 13, 2012, 11:17 AM
info_guy info_guy is offline
 
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 8
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by xterratop View Post
I've been flying AA for years and I noticed that there is only one city on the west coast that flies to Honolulu- Los Angeles. That is a JOKE! I was originally flying to LAX then to HNL but right when the plane started to move out, the pilot noticed that one of their lights was not working. The pilot admitted to everyone that "this has been a reoccurring problem lately". Why? Because AA is short on mechanics! Why wasn't this fixed in the first place? Are we flying planes that aren't working correctly?

Second, when there is a price war during peak months, why aren't they flying planes that can handle more volume? DFW used to fly 767 planes that hold more passengers. Now DFW to HNL only flies two 767's and they pack these two flights like a can of sardines. Why not fly 767's for the LAX flights since most of their flights are flying out of LAX to HNL and other places on the west coast. What ever happend to flying out of San Jose or San Francisco?

Rollovers. That's all AA does is roll the passenger over to another flight. Why not get another plane to replace the broken plane that needs servicing? There were a lot of unhappy people on my flight and many of them were very upset. AA, if you want to survive, make your executives get cut backs on their large salaries, treat their employees better, and service to the customer. Its all about money for the big executives that don't care about others but themselves.

Stimulate the economy. In order to do that, open up more routes and get more customers. After today, I know that you've lost many customers. Shame on you!!!
Based on your title this is impossble!

AA is pretty much like broke.
Have you read the news?

Regards
Reply

More options...
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 4:53 AM.

 

About Us

We are the oldest and largest Airline Complaints organization in the world. We have been making your airline complaints matter since 2006. Learn more.

 

Advertising

Advertise with us to reach a highly-targeted audience of airline passengers.

Copyright © 2006 - 2023