T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2217.1 | Dump 'em | MAIL::LANGSTON | Notes @night | Wed Nov 11 1992 19:04 | 3 |
| Right on!
Sell the planes, NOW.
|
2217.2 | A matter of culture | SULACO::JUDICE | It's not a blimp, it's a Zeppelin | Wed Nov 11 1992 19:06 | 7 |
|
I remember from my RCA days how the company owned (1) Gulfstrean IV,
(2) G-III's, (2) Citations, (2) others - I forget what type, plus
(3) Sikorsky S-76 helicopters. Corporate Aviation had it's own paint
scheme, logos, napkins, etc. All this lasted through years of massive
losses, but was gone almost instantly when GE took over.
|
2217.3 | | MIMS::DUCAT_D | | Wed Nov 11 1992 19:21 | 5 |
| Well, I'd let em keep the Citations. after all, probably
couldnt get more than $1000, unless they have low mileage
and no rust :)
|
2217.4 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Nov 11 1992 22:55 | 24 |
| RE: .1
>> I'd even let them splurge and go Business Class.
Screw that. I've had to travel my fair share for DEC and only
twice did I get Business Class. (to Europe in '88) Believe
me, I LIKE Business Class. You arrive ALOT more refreshed and
ready for your task. BUT, just because someone is "higher up"
in the food chain doesn't mean they should fly any different
from me.
Should this company ever get back into the black and make money
hand over fist, then bring back Business Class. It's worth the
extra money I think. Till then, let EVERYONE share the pain.
Yes, including those right at the top. It's time to lead by
example.
To offer my opinion, I think the aircraft situation should be
and I'm sure has been, addressed. Even a "If we aren't making
money by such a date, we sell the following assets" message.
mike
|
2217.5 | Keep the planes, don't forget value of leverage | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Wed Nov 11 1992 23:27 | 10 |
| Security issues can generate from much more than a "crazed
ex-employess, etc." In perspective of airline schedules, flexibility
gained, general security and what they leverage vs the relatively few
dollars gained through sales of the aircraft, I think it would be a bad
business decision to sell the fixed wing aircraft. In addition to
other benefits named for the heliocopters, customers really like the
treatment of being flown when weather permits. How do you measure how
many sales are attributible to heliocopter rides? Who knows exactly,
but I KNOW from personal experience of several customers that it sure
helps "ice the cake".
|
2217.6 | | PLUGH::NEEDLE | Money talks. Mine says "Good-Bye!" | Thu Nov 12 1992 00:11 | 5 |
| Don't know about the jet fleet, but I had my helicopter flights cancelled last
week because "the entire helicopter situation was under review". As far as I
know, they haven't flown in the last 2 weeks.
j.
|
2217.7 | I used to like riding the choppers too, but . . . | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Nov 12 1992 05:19 | 10 |
| re: .5, Dave
> -< Keep the planes, don't forget value of leverage >-
Well, then, let's account for them on the balance sheet in terms of
"Cost of Sales" and restrict them to customer usage only.
Fat chance, right?
-Jack
|
2217.8 | get rid of 'em | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Thu Nov 12 1992 08:42 | 5 |
|
I vote for selling the damn things (if we haven't already).
In fact, I think they should have been gone by now. If
we need to fly a customer who buys something other than
no-margin PCs, charter a flight.
|
2217.9 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | A man from Hope, A new beginning... | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:04 | 3 |
| As I'm writing this a helicopter is landing outside my window in MRO. I haven't
really noticed any reduction in helo flights over the last couple of weeks.
|
2217.10 | They cancelled out on me with 1 day's notice... | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Buddy, can youse paradigm? | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:47 | 5 |
| ... while I was away on a trip. My wife called me while I was away to relay
the call, that the Helo fleet was cutting back "for budgetary reasons." When
I inquired later, they said (after the apology, they couldn't help the
cutback) that they were still flying, but at a reduced service level.
|
2217.11 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:54 | 17 |
| As said previously, with fewer folks, fewer customers :-(
and fewer locations, we don't need as big a GA fleet as we used
to. Someone mentioned to me once that one reason we had as
large a fleet as we once had was for delivery service,
before the days of Federal Express, etc.
But for Palmer, and a few other key folks, the one thing
that is really finite is their time. You can generally borrow
more money, but you can only get a certain amount of a
person's time. The GA fleet helps them optimize this precious asset.
So keep the G-IV, the Long Ranger and one of the Jet Rangers.
Maybe keep one of the Citations. Sell the rest. Move the
GA ops out of Hanscom to a cheaper locale (Pease International
Tradeport might work out nice).
Tom_K
|
2217.12 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Nov 12 1992 10:54 | 5 |
|
Hey, what are laptops, pagers and cellular phones for?
-Ed
|
2217.13 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:21 | 3 |
| Doing those things that need not be done in person.
Tom_K
|
2217.14 | Sell now! | DESERT::HORN | | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:45 | 20 |
| .5
-- How many helo rides sold tthe products -- Well if it takes a
helo ride to sell our products, then we need to either find some sales
folks that know how to sell without taking a customer to the county
fair or make products that are worth buying....is the customer buying
the computer or the helo ride (and getting a vax for free with the
ride...sounds like a used-car sales technique).
.11
Palmer's time too precious.....get serious, his job 1 is to make a
profit, as much as we can, and to do that he (and everyone) has to be
efficient. Sell the DEC fleet and use an American airlines.
Is anyone really serious about trying to save this company???!!! We
do not have much time left -- 250M of the 1000M debt has been issued
and that took care of Q1 only. Q2 will not be different. We are cash
poor and running out of our debt opportunity. DEC needs to act fast
and hard now!
|
2217.15 | There are benefits, though | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:54 | 21 |
| Wne you consider the fixed wing craft, and their hourly cost, I wonder
how often Palmer (or others) fly ALONE. When Palmer goes to Geneva
or Colorado, or wherever, aren't there others that go also ??
Consider that if, at the stated costs you:
1) Fly 4-5 people minimum
2) Have the vonvenience of setting YOUR OWN schedule
3) Have the convenience of, potentially, landing closer to your
destination than commercial flights
4) Can GUARANTEE the bagage content of the plane (vs
pyrotechnic content).
I remember talking with one of the DEC/Airforce folks about one trip of
Smith's which starter at Hanscomb 4PM Friday and ended there at 6AM
Sunday with 5 (or 6) stops invoved across the entire country (not incl
Hawaii). One of the "goodies" was the trip avoided O'Hare totally.
Bill
|
2217.16 | limited by policy | PIANST::JANZEN | For Hire: S/W Senr Eng | Thu Nov 12 1992 12:14 | 4 |
| U.S. Policies and Procedures 5.17 recommends against allowing too many key
people on one aircraft. New additions are explicit about the number of
executive officers travelling together.
Tom
|
2217.17 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | | Thu Nov 12 1992 12:30 | 11 |
| > Palmer's time too precious.....get serious
I *am* serious. Time *is* an asset. Palmer gets 24 hours in each
of his days, same as the rest of us. Assuming he needs to sleep,
eat, etc, there are only a finite number of hours per day he can
devote to company business. Additional time cannot be purchased *at*
*any* *price*. It is to the company's benefit that maximum
utility of his time be made.
Tom_K
|
2217.18 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Nov 12 1992 13:06 | 14 |
|
Seems to me a corporate jet travels no faster than a commercial liner.
Therefore, no time is saved. The issue is scheduling. Careful
planning and using tools like beepers, cellular phones and laptop
computers can reduce the perceived "downtime" experienced waiting
for departure times.
Yes, there may be times when we need something special, but we should
simply charter flights for those situations.
my $.02
-Ed
|
2217.19 | | CSC32::J_BASCHAL | | Thu Nov 12 1992 14:34 | 11 |
| Last year my group was visited by a VP who had flown in on a company jet.
The VP indicated that the main reason he did not use commercial flights
was that the work he was involved in was highly proprietary to Digital.
If it got outside the company, it could cause harm to Digital. On a
commercial flight (or even in the airport) there was no way to protect
against "wondering eyes" and so if he flew on a commercial flight, he
could not do any company work.
Just a thought...
|
2217.20 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Nov 12 1992 14:45 | 9 |
|
Re: .19
I'd imagine there are ways of keeping wandering eyes off your work.
Seems like paranoia to me.
-Ed
|
2217.21 | not justifying the corporate planes but... | AKOCOA::SWHITE | Sue White, PC Advanced Development | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:06 | 5 |
| Try it....I can't tell you how many times I have read entire product
strategys over peoples shoulder on aircraft...anything you have out
on a crowded plane (and most are these days) is being read by at least
the guy next to you ..and maybe the guy behind you as well...
|
2217.22 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:11 | 8 |
|
I'd say it would be harder in 1st class. I don't have a problem with
letting important folks fly POSH. Heck, for the money we pay for the
corporate jet, you could hire security guys and buy them seats too.
-Ed
|
2217.23 | | EMDS::MANGAN | | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:32 | 3 |
| WHAT? BP step out of his 80K Porche 911 into coach class? Such
nonsense!
|
2217.24 | | KNGBUD::B_SIART | Say something that makes me think! | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:47 | 14 |
|
Reply .23
Did you know that Bob Palmer was a self
made multi-millionare before he even started working for
Digital? Before you chastise someone for what seems like
frivolous spending you should check your sources about
where he actually made his money. Digital certainly
didn't make him a wealthy individual.
|
2217.25 | | AZUR::KING | I feel better than James Brown ! | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:56 | 14 |
|
Here's my idea. Keep the corporate jet. Modify it for
in-flight refuelling. Keep it airborne on a holding pattern
somewhere above Greenland so that, at any time, it's
equidistant in flying time from Boston or Geneva. Put Bob
Palmer on board with a full range of SAT and RT links.
Let him run the business from the comfort of his own jet.
And anytime he needs to drop in to take care of important
business, he can be there in a matter of a few hours. No
long check-ins and airline delays anymore.
;-)
|
2217.26 | consider this. | EMDS::MANGAN | | Thu Nov 12 1992 17:26 | 22 |
| RE.24 Brian,Brian,Brian......calm down.
However IMHO with "his" employees being TFSO'd left and right he might
want to think about what kind of an image he presents to "his" average
employee.
>>> Did you know that Bob Palmer was a self made multi-millionare
before he even started working for Digital??
Yes I did, this gives me more reason to believe that a person of his
success might think about how his average employee perceives him.
After all the comany is in dire financial straights. Its the
principal of it. It might? help if he were a little more humble.
ie" not to flaunt".
Consider the following senerio:
Your leaving the Mill in Maynard into the cold, dark December evening.
It's your last day at Digital. You have been TFSO'd. You are
un-voluntarily leaving the Mill Yard your bags packed after how many
years of honorable service? Quietly the gates to the main entrance
open onto Main St. A 911 Porche makes its way slowly past the gate.
You catch the gleam of chrome out of the side of your eye as the car
moves slowly unexpectably away.
|
2217.27 | | KNGBUD::B_SIART | Say something that makes me think! | Thu Nov 12 1992 17:35 | 9 |
|
reply.25 Ed, Ed, Ed..... (How are you, by the way?)
Well, I'd feel no differently as I passed him on my way out
the gate in my 350 SEL. I earned the money to buy it, so I'll
drive it. ;-)
-Bri
|
2217.28 | | MAAIDS::RWARRENFELTZ | | Fri Nov 13 1992 11:35 | 9 |
| I have to side with Ed on this issue. The cost and upkeep of an entire
winged fleet is enormous and in our economic woes, an expense that
should be eliminated. We can have these assets sold, fly the key
people Business class, and for extraordinary events, charter a jet on
an as needed basis only.
You live by example and you survive by all pitching in, rolling up
their sleeves and doing what is necessary. The example BP could set
here would be a tremendous lift to the morale of the company.
|
2217.29 | Tell him . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Fri Nov 13 1992 12:29 | 1 |
| Henry Wifholm is responsibile for Digital's Aviation Services.
|
2217.30 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | To the bright side of the road | Fri Nov 13 1992 13:18 | 16 |
|
As a concerned DEC employee, who believes that BP is looking out for the
best interest of employees, stockholders and customers, I'd prefer to have him
and other senior management types spending a couple hours on a bizjet tending
to whatever business is at hand than sitting around an airport boarding lounge
waiting for delayed/overbooked flights resulting in missed appointments and
opportunities..chartering aircraft is not an inexpensive proposition, and I
believe that their (BP et al) is to valuable to be wasted on risky commercial
air travel.
Jim
|
2217.31 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Fri Nov 13 1992 13:29 | 8 |
|
How big is HP's fleet? How many other companies with revenues in the
$12B range have corporate jets? Who has gotten rid of their fleet
lately, and how much did it help/hurt.
Asking questions like this might be a good first step.
-Ed
|
2217.32 | I think it's being looked at... | ICS::MORRISEY | | Fri Nov 13 1992 13:35 | 15 |
|
I have heard from a friend in the Aviation department:
1. Digital fixed wing and helicopter aircraft (have been/are being)
sold (some, not all).
2. Scheduled helicopter flights to/from Logan are being further
reduced.
3. The departent is now in the middle of across-the-board layoffs
of personnel.
|
2217.33 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | What happened to summer? | Mon Nov 16 1992 09:27 | 4 |
| Does the Digital air-fleet sit around waiting to be used, or do we
charter parts of it out to help recoup costs?
Laurie.
|
2217.34 | They should at least consider it... | ASDG::SBILL | | Mon Nov 16 1992 12:18 | 8 |
| If it isn't they should at least look at the possibility. A lot of the
resources Digital has probably aren't used to their complete capacity.
Some of this capacity could be "sold" to other corporations when not in use.
The planes and helocopters would be a good example of this. I'm no expert,
but I think chartering our planes to others when DEC isn't using them would
be a good idea.
Steve B.
|
2217.35 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | | Mon Nov 16 1992 12:46 | 4 |
| I'd hope not. I'd expect that the liability aspect of such
an undertaking would far outweigh any possible benefit.
Tom_K
|
2217.36 | | PEEVAX::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Mon Nov 16 1992 17:58 | 9 |
| WHat suprises me, is that we did have an efficient corporate flight
serves division. People travelling from Merrimack to Marlboro for a
meeting, would not have to waste almost three hours travelling. Out to
the Helipad, pick up the chopper, zip down the way, in a fraction of
the time. Why don't we bring the full service back, and fully utilize
it, rather than nickel and diming it out of existence...
q
|
2217.37 | Flight was wonderful, no bird would have tolerated the schedule | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Mon Nov 16 1992 18:07 | 9 |
| Re .36:
The one time I flew from MR to MK for a meeting, the only afternoon service
dropped me off in the middle of a meeting already in progress, and Tom Blinn
had to drive me back down to MR in his BMW because the flight I arrived on
around 3 was the last of the day to the site.
I'm talking '85 here - not last week.
/AHM
|
2217.38 | | DIODE::CROWELL | Jon Crowell | Mon Nov 16 1992 19:32 | 13 |
|
The regular flight between Hanscom and Kanata Canada are used to
keep manufacturing connected with engineering, etc. This plane
is almost always full. The RT fare is about $500 on the commercial
service. I'm sure it doesn't cost too much to fly that old King
Air up and back, it must save us money.
Jon
P.S. I hope the days of the socialist Digital are over. Everyone
shouldn't be treated equal. Pay for performance, jets for CEOs.
---------
|
2217.39 | Kanata to Hanscom | RGB::MENNE | | Thu Nov 19 1992 12:02 | 3 |
| I flew from Kanata to Hanscom before. Just the 2 pilots and me.
Mike
|
2217.40 | I can name that tune in one note...!!{;^) | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Nov 19 1992 13:16 | 4 |
| re: .39
in 75-76(?) time frame I flew from some airport in Bedford(?) to
Westfield in "KO's plane" just me and KO's pilot....
|
2217.41 | okay, how about the limos? | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Thu Nov 19 1992 13:44 | 6 |
| All right, this is silly, reporting "empty" flights that took place
years ago. THEY WERE ALL KO'S PLANE, and in addition to taking care of
the chief executive's needs, they also transported people like you and
me, and delivered packages, interoffice mail, etc.
Mark
|
2217.42 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | JANE!!! Stop this crazy thing! | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:38 | 32 |
| Eventhough this topic has seemed to die before I got here, I'd
like to add some items to help put things in perspective and
give us something to think about:
Here at CXO (Customer support center) they have traditionally
provided dinner for the few dozen people who have to work onsite
on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years. (We are a round-the-clock
operation.) This year they did away with the dinner as a cost-
cutting measure.
Here at CXO we are being doubled up in cubes. (Cubes are being
enlarged by 50%, and then 2 employees share that space.) This
is also a cost cutting measure, as it will enable DEC to close
another facility and combine it in our building.
We can expect not to see holiday turkeys next year. (Rumor only
as far as I know.)
We can expect not to see company picnics next year.
We can expect to see less training next year.
We can expect to see fewer and fewer employee benefits like
free museum admissions.
Do any of these (or all combined) really affect the bottom line?
Would killing the air fleet really impact the bottom line?
The last question is really the point of this entry. Are people
looking for the sacrifice of the air fleet to feel a sense of
vindication in making the upper management lose one of their
perceived toys?
|
2217.43 | One gone... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:51 | 3 |
| I've been informed that we 'recently' sold one of our King Airs.
Bob
|
2217.44 | Bad analogy... | MR4DEC::FBUTLER | | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:37 | 17 |
| re: .42
I haven't used Aviation Services for awhile (2yrs) but at least up
until that time, they were not really a "percieved toy" for "upper
management" The service was available to anyone who chose to use it.
The helicopter service is probably the most widely used. There is
(was?) no charge for this service, unless you failed to cancel a
reservation and did not show up (your cc got hit with a "no-show"
charge. I am definitely NOT management, let alone upper mgmt. The
seats were always available on a first come, first serve basis, and
for people travelling to/from the airport frequently, it was absolutely
the best bet...
$.02,
Jim
|
2217.45 | work tool, not toy | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | mazap�n y turr�n | Wed Dec 02 1992 16:45 | 8 |
| The time I rode on the King Air we asked the pilot if it wasn't odd to
have a bunch of individual contributors like us on the plane instead of
lots of suits. He said no, that most of the people he ferried were
ordinary workers who had to go somewhere far away to do their jobs. In
our case, several of us from a development group made a day trip to a
customer site on Long Island to support a salesman. If we'd gone on a
commercial flight we'd have had to go to a hotel, so, as far as our cost
center was concerned, we could send more people for cheaper and less time.
|
2217.46 | | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Thu Dec 03 1992 10:41 | 7 |
| Joe,
Whenever I read this kind of topic, I think about personal
responsibility. I'll betcha most people don't think twice when it
comes to spending their own cost center's money.
Mark
|
2217.48 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed Apr 07 1993 12:44 | 13 |
| Digital's geographic location (lots of building 30-40 miles away from
any major commercial hub; i.e. Logan), the roads (busiest secondary
roads in the nation according to the NTSB), our large non-US business
(60% of revenue) travel requirements, and the type of business we're
in (very competitive, time driven) are all factors that are for
maintaining a helicopter fleet. My peeve is with our fairly robust
fixed wing fleet, as I pointed out in .0. I can understand a fixed
wing fleet for Corning Glass (on Corning/Elmira airport, far from
anything), likewise with Marathon Oil in Findlay Ohio. But given
our location from Logan, and hence given that a helicopter fleet
makes some sense for the reasons cited above, I'd love to see our
$25m GIV canned and see the money finance the helicopter fleet into
the next century. .02 kb
|
2217.49 | the '60s | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Wed Apr 07 1993 14:48 | 5 |
| I had to laugh. The only reason Findlay Ohio HAS an airport is for
Marathon. :-) When I was growin' up there, we had to travel to Toledo
for commercial flights.
Mark
|
2217.50 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed Apr 07 1993 16:33 | 8 |
| Yeah, I've flown into Findlay... pretty much a one horse town!
Not quite as bad with Corning/Elimira, but close. I used those
two examples cuz they represent corporations that can justify a
bizjet fleet (with corporate hq's in the middle of nowhere, out
of practical helicopter range from a large commercial hub) (and
they [at least used to] both fly GIV's). I imagine fuel is easier
to come by for Marathon's jets tho ;-)
|
2217.51 | Ouch That Hurts | CSC32::D_SLOUGH | Buddy Can You Paradigm | Wed Apr 07 1993 19:45 | 2 |
| Findlay, one horse? They've got a White Castles. What else do you want?
%^) -- Dennis, (ex Old Mill Streamer)
|
2217.52 | gas was 37� | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Thu Apr 08 1993 11:13 | 7 |
| I don't remember a White Castle, but they had "Wilson's" (much like
Wendy's) just across the street from the Marathon HQ. Since Findlay
was the largest town in the area (county seat of Hancock Co.), the high
school kids from all over would drive to Findlay after ballgames and
cruise the main drag from the Marathon parking lot to the Big Boy.
Mark
|
2217.53 | Could be worse | 17736::SOJDA_L | | Thu Apr 08 1993 12:31 | 12 |
| >> Yeah, I've flown into Findlay... pretty much a one horse town!
>> Not quite as bad with Corning/Elimira, but close.
Oh come on now, the Elmira-Corning airport isn't all *that* bad..
If you haven't been there within the last two years or so, it been
entirely remodeled. New ticket counters, huge baggage area, waiting
lounge, and a real jet-way. Do they have one of those in Findlay?
I've seem a lot worse (have you ever been to Ithaca?).
Larry
|
2217.54 | New purchase? | CSOADM::ROTH | ELVIS:: is alive... and reachable!! | Thu Apr 08 1993 12:51 | 8 |
| Heard a rumor that the company recently bought a new Gulfstream for Palmer's
use...
Can anybody confirm/deny?
Thanks-
Lee
|
2217.55 | | XLIB::BRUNELL | Outlanders MRO D Division Champs, Again | Thu Apr 08 1993 17:36 | 5 |
| I was on a copter about a month ago and they were talking about selling
off our fixed wing planes. That 2 or 3 were already gone. I'd be more
likely to believe that one plane was refitted to Palmer's specs.
Dave
|
2217.56 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Fri Apr 09 1993 11:00 | 5 |
| I'd be surprised if the fixed wing fleet uses Logan much.
After all, it is based at Hanscom, and I expect Hascom
is much more convenient to Maynard than Logan...
Tom_K
|
2217.57 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Fri Apr 09 1993 12:26 | 5 |
| re .55
Thanks for the update. As a pilot, I hate to see planes go away.
But as an employee of a company that lost $3b in the last two years,
and has very little need for a fixed wing fleet, I'll get over it.
May they find good new homes.
|
2217.58 | | STIMPY::QUODLING | | Tue May 11 1993 05:50 | 14 |
| re .57
Has very little need for a fixed wing fleet?
Cmon folks, we are still a $13B corporation. My father recently retired
as CEO of a $1B corporation. It had 3 Fixed wing aircraft, including a
Gulfstream, and 6-7 helicopters...
WHen I see the number of people, that have to drive from Marlboro to
Merrimack etc for meetings, one wonders just how "unviable" the chopper
fleet was.
q
|
2217.59 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Tue May 11 1993 12:12 | 8 |
| Revenue status does not equate to need for a bizjet fleet [that
was Ken, this is now]. See an earlier reply that mentioned
Marathon Oil, a great example of a small company in the boondocks
[sorry Findlay...] that can easily justify a robust fixed wing fleet.
Also see earlier replies on the redundancy of DEC's bizjets
with the choppers' ability to access the nearby major international
commercial hub. What was your father's business and where was
it located?
|
2217.60 | WFIN AM & FM | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, ISV Tech. Support | Thu May 13 1993 15:50 | 2 |
| Findlay's not in the boondocks! Hey, it had cable-TV long before some
of you did. Now, Benton Ridge, ... that's out there. :-)
|
2217.61 | | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu May 13 1993 16:17 | 18 |
| Marlboro to Merrimac -- isn't that about 75 minutes by car?
Back when there were helicopters to ride, I believe it took over
half an hour by copter. But add to that the time spent waiting
(we had to arrive early because they would not wait, and they didn't
necessarily arrive on time) and the time spent riding a copter wasn't
that dramatically different from driving.
Then there was the rainy day when I tried to fly from Nashua to
Hudson and ended up, after an hour in the air, at Hanscom (some
mist rose up and we couldn't see the ground). Another 45 minutes
(renting a car and driving it) and we were finally home.
Given the claimed very high cost of copter flights (wasn't the cc
charge over $200 per flight?), I can see why they cancelled them.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
2217.62 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Thu May 13 1993 17:30 | 12 |
| >Given the claimed very high cost of copter flights (wasn't the cc
>charge over $200 per flight?), I can see why they canceled them.
If I recall, the cc was only charged if you *didn't* show up.
I would have loved to have taken the chopper, but it was no time
saver. You couldn't take it to the mill unless you went to
Parker Street and took the shuttle from there to the mill.
Close to twice the elapsed time it would take to drive from
ZKO, so I always drove...
Tom_K
|
2217.63 | Easiest way to Logan. | SPECXN::BLEY | | Thu May 13 1993 18:28 | 9 |
|
Well it did have it's advantages. When I used to be in PK03, and
had to travel, I would park my car at PK03, catch the chopper into
Logan, and then back to PK03 when I returned. Sure beat fighting
the traffic etc. getting into and out of Logan...and I didn't have
to worry about my car getting broken into or stollen.
ART
|
2217.64 | Traffic 12:00 high. | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Employee says 15000 analysts must go! | Thu May 13 1993 19:06 | 9 |
|
The choppers still fly on occasion... I saw one landing at
NIO last thursday. (Probably a V(I)P charter of some sort.)
-al
|
2217.65 | Seemed like money well spent to me... | NEWVAX::SGRIFFIN | DTN 339-5391 | Thu May 13 1993 23:40 | 16 |
| It really makes sense for those of not from the GMA when on short visits to
Digital sites serviced by the choppers. Over the last 6 years, I have
utilized them many times, and it has made my life much easier and saved the
company money in rental cars, hotels, meals, etc., when without the chopper I
would have been forced to rent a car, or stay an extra night.
It is subject to certain restrictions as mentioned a couple of notes back, but
I always had a rental car reserved in case the weather closed in, etc. If the
choppers were flying, I'd cancel the car and be on my way.
I think I had one bad experience in maybe a dozen or two chopper trips, and it
was only inconvenient. I was leaving from MRO, the pilot asked us what time
our flights were and I had some spare time, the woman on the flight was
meeting friends in town for dinner, so she did not have a pressing schedule,
so we detoured to Maynard to pick someone up, drop him at MRO and then we were
off to Logan. And, we got extra DEC frequent flyer miles to boot!
|
2217.66 | Last time aboard, I was the only passenger! | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Jul 09 1993 00:58 | 18 |
| Just last month I caught the helicopter from PKO3 to Logan, and then
returned to PKO3 a few days later.
On the return flight, when I got to the DIGITAL DESK at Logan, the man
there signed me in, checked that I was on the manifest, and called to
wherever the chopper was at the time and told them "Mr. Bean" had
arrived. I waited about 15 minutes, and the chopper flew in, picked me
up and ferried me to PKO.
I WAS THE ONLY PASSENGER SCHEDULED!
How cost effective was that? I'f I had had the slightest inkling that
I'd be alone on the flight, I'd have cancelled and rented an Avis car!
And this from a company that is cutting costs?
tony
|
2217.67 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Fri Jul 09 1993 12:20 | 20 |
|
Re: .66
> I WAS THE ONLY PASSENGER SCHEDULED!
>
> How cost effective was that? I'f I had had the slightest inkling that
> I'd be alone on the flight, I'd have cancelled and rented an Avis car!
Don't jump to the conclusion that it was not cost effective. We
already have the helicopter. We are already paying the pilot. The
actual additional cost might be just the fuel it took which might be
less than the cost of renting a car.
Now if your argument is that your experience might suggest that we
look into whether we should eliminate the helicopter service altogether,
that is a different discussion than whether for this one case it would
have been wiser to rent a car.
Steve
|
2217.68 | Choppers are expensive | GENRAL::INDERMUEHLE | Stonehenge Alignment Service | Fri Jul 09 1993 12:58 | 7 |
| Several years ago I worked closely with helicopter service doing some
on-the-side volunteer work. I found out then, (several years ago) that
it cost approx. $1000 per hour to operate one chopper. You can rent
a lot of AVIS time for that.
John I.
|
2217.69 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Fri Jul 09 1993 13:23 | 29 |
|
Re: .68
> I found out then, (several years ago) that it cost approx.
> $1000 an hour to operate one chopper. You can rent a lot
> AVIS time for that.
That is true, but this is comparing apples to oranges is my
point. The figure of $1000 an hour is a way of expressing the
total cost of operating one helicopter in the context of offering
helicopter service. That does not mean that a single one hour
trip by itself equates to $1000 of additional cost that would not
have been incurred if that chopper had been left sitting for that
hour. The $1000 includes all the related costs i.e. insurance,
maintenance, depreciation, fuel, salaries, etc. Using the $1000
an hour operational cost is data that you would use in the context
of whether or not to continue the helicopter service at all.
What I am saying is that taking one particular trip as a case in
point and assuming that it would have been cheaper to rent a car
than to incur the additional out of pocket expense that that single
trip incurred above what you are already paying anyway is not
necessarily correct. Sending the chopper in that one case may have
been cheaper than renting the car. Without actual data we can only
make assumptions.
fwiw,
Steve
|
2217.70 | Can't extrapolate from one data point | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Stress, Silicon and Software | Fri Jul 09 1993 14:10 | 31 |
|
If the helicopter came into logan presumably carrying people,
it still had to get back to its base somehow.
You could either rent a car and pay extra, or hitch a ride on
the chopper. Either way, the chopper wasn't going to sit at
logan...
Operating an air service is a funny thing. Ideally you want
to operate the aircraft only when it's full. However, sometimes
it's actually cheaper in the long run to make an almost empty run
in order to keep your reputation for reliability, rather than
always cancelling flights to the point where your passengers don't
consider you a viable alternative any more...
Even if the chopper flew home empty, if it went in full,
the trip still might have been worthwhile. I've seen cases
where Aviation Services asks travellers to cancel commercial tickets
to help fill up a corporate jet returning from a 1-way
"VIP" charter... For the lucky guy who gets to ride home all
alone in the westwind it seems like wild extravagance, but
if the jet was going to fly home empty otherwise, it suddenly
becomes a worthwhile effort.
I don't know if the corporate "air-force" is cost effective
or not, but I do know that you really can't extrapolate that
information from a single data point...
-al
|
2217.71 | | CSOADM::ROTH | Light fuse and retire quickly | Fri Jul 09 1993 21:17 | 5 |
| If you ride the bus late at night you might conclude that public
transporation is a waste of money.... you have to look at the overall
usage.
Lee
|
2217.72 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Sat Jul 10 1993 00:14 | 20 |
| The helicopter was on the ground somewhere, or was perhaps in route to
somewhere else. My distinct impression was that, had I not appeared
for the flight, the chopper would not have landed at Logan. It was
empty when it arrived.
In fact, on the outbound trip a week earlier, there was just one other
passenger, and we were ferried from PKO to MLO where we picked up or
delivered some packages, and then flown to Logan.
If the cost of flying a helicopter is anywhere near 1000 per hour
(that's the highest number I've heard... I've a friend who flies one
and I'll ask her if she knows what it actually does cost to own,
maintain, license and fly one)... it seems an exhorbitant (sp?) way to
conduct business.
Of course, the FIRST time I flew from PKO to Logan (last year), there
was a upper level manager on board, and about five other passengers as
well.
tony
|
2217.73 | | TROPPO::QUODLING | | Sun Jul 11 1993 07:22 | 16 |
| OF course, all of this is because of the fear of spending being put
into people. The CHoppers are there, they cost money, even if sitting
idle. IN fact, the ROI is lower, the less work that they do.
Let's get back to using them, as the tool that they are... i.e. start
behaving like a $14B corporation again...
re the economies of travelling empty. A friend of mine, (Who lives in
Alabama), air-hitchs to New York every two weeks, He then flies an
empty 747 Freighter (owned by Nippon Air Cargo) to anchorage alaska,
loads with crab and salmon, flies to Narita (Tokyo). Loads with
consumer electronics, and either goes to LAX or Amsterdam. Then flies
back to NY empty. THis is still extremely cost effective, even though
the 747 is empty for 40%+ of it's flying time...
q
|
2217.74 | $1000/hour is probably a good guess | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Stress, Silicon and Software | Mon Jul 12 1993 08:18 | 8 |
|
FWIW, between $600/hour and $1000/hour is probably pretty
close to the operating cost for a turbine helicopter.
-al
|
2217.75 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed Jul 14 1993 01:52 | 6 |
| I talked to my friend (the helicopter pilot) on Saturday. She said it
costs about $500 per hour to RENT a small turbo-jet powered helicopter.
The kind DEC has are much larger than the kind she was talking about.
So, I guess the $1000 per hour estimate is not too far off.
t.
|
2217.76 | | TROPPO::QUODLING | | Wed Jul 14 1993 02:36 | 4 |
| Yes, but that is a rental rate. Avis charges you $30/day for a mid size
sedan. It doesn't cost that to own and operate one...
q
|
2217.77 | Don't forget scheduling and gate charges | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Stress, Silicon and Software | Wed Jul 14 1993 09:59 | 12 |
|
It costs $500 to rent a turbine helicopter...
I'm not sure how digital calculates the costs of running the
choppers, but I wouldn't be surprised if the salary costs of
the reservation system and possibly the costs of the gate services
at Logan get added in.
-al
|
2217.78 | | TLE::TOKLAS::FELDMAN | Opportunities are our Future | Wed Jul 14 1993 13:20 | 11 |
| I don't understand why the author of .66 didn't just drive his own car,
get a ride from a friend or colleague, or take a limo, since travel time
doesn't seem to have been a compelling issue.
Once you book a ride on a chopper, it's not reasonable to expect them
to call you at your hotel in some other city to cancel the flight just
because they couldn't get other passengers. While many people in the
system have responsibility for reducing costs, the person doing the
booking shares in that responsibility.
Gary
|
2217.79 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Tue Jul 20 1993 10:06 | 13 |
|
Re: $1000 per hour for choppers
Again, it makes sense to discuss whether Digital is getting
enough for its money to continue to offer helicopter service
if the operating cost is $1000 an hour.
It does not make sense to jump to the conclusion that a single
run to Logan to pick up one passenger was not cost justified.
You simply do not have the data needed to know that.
Steve
|
2217.80 | Talk to Aviation Services | BJ6000::DAVE | Outlanders, Do it Again | Tue Jul 20 1993 11:49 | 15 |
| Working in MRO I've flown the helicopters fairly recently. They did do cost
analysis recently and they cut out 40% of their flights, layed off pilots, and are
trying to sell some of the fixed wing fleet.
As a capital asset, I believe that all our helicopters are 5 or more years old,
which means they are fully depreciated. Our hangar at Hanscom is nothing to write
home about and neither is our gate in terminal A. So that can't cost much. The
$500 quote includes someone's profit and coverage for the time the bird is on the
ground unrented. I would think that our cost of operation per flight must be
closer to the $150 you get charged for a no show.
Has anyone tried to charter the helicopter recently? That would give another
indication on the price involved.
Dave
|
2217.81 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Tue Apr 19 1994 16:41 | 4 |
| According to Thomas Cook, helicopter and corporate jet services have
been suspended. It looks like some of our upper management's butts
get to see an airline seat, as I suggested in .0 a year and a half ago.
_kb
|
2217.82 | No more helicopters and corporate jets... | MUNCH::FRANCINI | Screwy Wabbit | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:01 | 16 |
| I recently received a mail message on one of my distribution lists indicating
that the entire Digital helicopter and corporate jet fleet was grounded today.
All flights were cancelled.
The way it was worded implied that this was permanent.
On the one hand, it's a symbolic indication that we're "circling the wagons"
again. On the other hand, how much does this save, especially since those
taking the helicopter and/or jet will now have to take various commercial
services?
Curious,
John
|
2217.83 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Profitability?...fawgeddaBOW'dit! | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:11 | 4 |
| This and other manifestations of eletism should have been jettisoned
two years ago!
|
2217.84 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:21 | 8 |
| RE: .1 by MIMS::PARISE_M
>This and other manifestations of eletism should have been jettisoned
>two years ago!
Yeh! Tell those visiting customers to take a cab from Logan and we'll
reimburse 'em later.
|
2217.85 | why should this be a wise decision? | TROOA::MSCHNEIDER | What is the strategy this hour? | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:45 | 1 |
| Penny wise and pound foolish? But then perception is reality!
|
2217.86 | | MIMS::PARISE_M | Profitability?...fawgeddaBOW'dit! | Wed Apr 20 1994 01:08 | 6 |
|
The dictum is to cut costs. Why should axing the corporate jets be
such a bad decision. Obviously someone who is accountable has looked
at the ROI and said, "No justification."
|
2217.87 | Forget the choppers, just show up on time! | DPDMAI::UNLAND | | Wed Apr 20 1994 02:48 | 18 |
| re: taking a cab for a change ...
As a former customer being courted by IBM, HP, and DEC, I have a fond
recollection:
We went to visit IBM in New York City. Met by the sales rep at La
Guardia, we jumped in a cab and went downtown. Traffic was bad, and
the sales rep fretted about making the meeting with the IBM VP's. We
made it a few minutes late, and meeting went forward.
Went to visit DEC two weeks later. Met by DEC sales rep at Logan,
got us over to the helicopter, and off we flew. Landed in plenty of
time, walked into the conference room, and nobody was there. The sales
rep spent the next 45 minutes trying to locate the two DEC VP's we
were supposed to meet. It wasn't a total loss, as I got my very first
opportunity to wander lost in the halls of the Mill, but ...
Geoff
|
2217.88 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Apr 20 1994 11:13 | 23 |
|
Re: .82
> On the one hand, it's a symbolic indication that we're "circling the wagons"
> again. On the other hand, how much does this save, especially since those
> taking the helicopter and/or jet will now have to take various commercial
> services?
How much does this save? Probably a lot. There was a note floating
around perhaps a year or more ago about how much it cost for a
helicopter trip from Maynard to Logan. I seem to remember the
operating cost estimated at about $1000 an hour. The important
question is how often do we really NEED to have helicopter or fixed
wing service at our convenience. It's the same as if you live in
the city and can walk to work but maintain your own car that you only
drive 2000 a year or so. Renting a car when you need it is LOTS
cheaper. We could probably hire helicopter or chartered corporate
jet service for customers etc. when we really need it and save money
over having our own fleet sitting by just in case.
fwiw,
Steve
|
2217.89 | Kanata too? | BOSDCC::CHERSON | the door goes on the right | Wed Apr 20 1994 14:56 | 6 |
| Waht about the Bedford-Kanata service? Some of use it for (real)
business purposes, like a cheaper way of travelling to a customer in
Canada to do delivery/revenue-generating work. And that service had
been subsidized by manufacturing for the Kanata plant.
/d.c.
|
2217.90 | Too little too late | SIERAS::MCCLUSKY | | Wed Apr 20 1994 15:00 | 16 |
| re: .88
Yes, rental service is available and more economical. Trouble is that
we have taken almost three years to notice an obvious savings. Does
this tell you anything about the Digital management team. I know that
this suggestion was made to Delta almost 3 years ago.
Digital management is so defensive, so protective of the status quo, or
their group, that they can't see the trees in the forest. Let alone,
figure out that we can cut the trees down, make lumber, design and
build houses, create a community, provide services to the community,
etc.
How much did we loose, running the flight services for three years?
Will the SLT now lay-off the equivalent number of people to make up for
their oversight?
|
2217.91 | Why not? | BOSDCC::CHERSON | the door goes on the right | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:21 | 13 |
| Re: rental aviation service
I thought that we could save money by renting and asked one of our
pilots about it. I got a large shrug and some myriad reasons why it
wouldn't pay (why not? it was his skin...).
In the case of the Kanata service we could approach Delta (who flies to
Ottawa) and tell them that we'd guarantee 2-3 full roundtrips a week in
exchange for a significant discount.
I'll probably drive to Ottawa until it snows...
/d.c.
|
2217.92 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed Apr 20 1994 18:03 | 5 |
| Ironically, the only aircraft in the Bedford hanger still flying?
Ken Olsen's Piper, which (as of not too long ago) was still permitted
to be kept in Digital's hanger. Ken supposedly reimburses Digital
market value for the hanger use. kb
|
2217.93 | | SNELL::ROBERTS | our Whitehouse is the Arkansas outhouse | Fri Apr 22 1994 15:48 | 5 |
|
>Yeh! Tell those visiting customers to take a cab from Logan and we'll
>reimburse 'em later.
Doesn't matter. Sooner or later the customer picks up the tab.
|
2217.94 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Fri Apr 22 1994 16:25 | 19 |
| re .88
$1000/hr for the Bell 206's is too high; they can generally be rented
for instruction for $150-$200/hr, and that includes higher insurance
rates than a corporate fleet is entitled. The 212's are a bit higher;
in the $200-$250/hr range.
However, the real thirst comes when we fly the $25m Gulfstream IV
business jet. It drinks 2666 pounds/hr of Jet A1 at cruise.
Figure 6 pounds per gallon, and [depending on where you buy it]
at $1-$2/g, translates to $500-$1000/hr for fuel alone. Figure in
maintenance, hanger, pilot pay, insurance, depreciation, etc and
you're *well* over $1000/hr.
I suggested two years ago that selling the GIV would subsidize the
helicopter fleet well into the next century, have the least impact
of jobs at Av Services, and the helicopters could still provide the
major time savings in the access to the local commerical hub.
Instead, we have nothing flying, [what looks to be] no Av Services
jobs saved, and no time savings. kb
|
2217.95 | only *PAYING* customers need apply! | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:23 | 5 |
| Well,well,well! Looks like we're on the way back to the "free donuts
for customers only" deal only now it'll be "free helicopter rides for
customers only"
Ken
|
2217.96 | I just dont believe it! | 45464::ELLIOTT_G | Getting phone calls from Elvis.. | Wed Apr 27 1994 06:11 | 8 |
| Here in the UK we have no aircraft for the use of "executives" and we
manage to do business all over Europe just fine. As someone among many
who hasn't had a raise in 3 years I'm afraid I cant muster much
sympathy for the "executives" who now have to use the same airlines as
the rest of us now.What were they thinking of running an aircraft fleet
anyway in these desperate times,talk about being on a different planet
to the rest of us.No wonder we're in the pooh.
Geoff
|
2217.97 | Not only "executives" ... | CARROL::SCHMIDT | Cynical Optimist | Wed Apr 27 1994 09:25 | 14 |
|
Ummmm, just to point out that not all company aircraft travel
is for executives and the like. The flights between Kanata
and GMA (Greater Maynard) have been very helpful to plebeian
project engineers and leaders in getting their work done,
because travel to Kanata by company aircraft received less
micro-management scrutiny by the management food chain than
commercial airline travel.
So please let's not tar everything with the same brush.
Peter
|
2217.98 | THER IS A DEC UK PLANE SERVICE! | ROCKS::KEANE | | Wed Apr 27 1994 10:54 | 14 |
| re .96
Geoff
You have overlooked the regular UK Dec Charter plane that flies,
(flew), between Galway. Ayr, Blackbush and various other locations..
I think it is still in operation.
rdgs
Patrick.
|
2217.99 | Charter! not owned,theres a difference. | 45464::ELLIOTT_G | Getting phone calls from Elvis.. | Thu Apr 28 1994 10:06 | 2 |
|
|
2217.100 | Some copters are flying again | HANNAH::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Wed May 11 1994 15:57 | 5 |
| Yesterday, the big copter was at MRO, and today the small one was back.
So something is still flying. These looked like the same ones we used to see
several times a day.
|
2217.101 | | SMURF::BLINN | Former child recalls: It was hell! | Wed May 11 1994 17:54 | 7 |
| Yes, I saw a chopper landing at ZKO today. So there must be SOME
of the fleet flying. But there is a difference between running
scheduled service and running demand flights.
Gee, maybe it was Corporate Personnel coming to visit edp..
Tom
|
2217.102 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed May 11 1994 18:08 | 5 |
| I wouldn't doubt that the chopper fleet is being used to shuttle
around potential buyers of the various company tidbits, now that
we're about to enter spin-off mode in a big way. Could sitting
in the chopper pad and refusing to move be considered job security?
kb ;-)
|
2217.103 | .... charter flights - at cost center expense .. | ICS::MORRISEY | | Thu May 12 1994 16:21 | 5 |
|
As I recall, all SCHEDULED helicopter flights have been cancelled.
Charter flights, at cost center expense, may still be requested at
this time.
|
2217.104 | The more it changes, the more it stays the same ... | DPDMAI::UNLAND | | Thu May 12 1994 16:39 | 7 |
| re: charter flights ...
Now that we don't have Lucente (with his taste in limousines) to kick
around any more, maybe we'll have to keep a close eye on the helipads
to spot some new VP's indulging in expensive perks ...
Geoff
|
2217.105 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Mon May 16 1994 17:54 | 8 |
| Fortune Magazine, May 30, has an interesting article on Gulfstream IV's
entitled (appropriately): "The Best Way to Fly... But It Sure Is
Something CEO's Don't Like To Discuss". Digital isn't mentioned
in the article as owning one, but other companies that can better
afford the $2500/hour operating cost and $3m/year depreciation are.
Seems to be a good topic of discussion for the next Palmer DVN ;-)
-kb
|