T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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609.1 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Sep 10 1992 08:18 | 9 |
|
I've heard of and flown Air Canada and thought they were excellent,
however not of Canadian.
What sort of size id Canadian to Air Canada, and do they fly the
same routes and time?
Heather
|
609.2 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu Sep 10 1992 10:36 | 18 |
| Canadi>n Airlines International is owned by Pacific Western Airlines
which was a small Western based carrier with BIG aspirations. They
bought up from Canadian Pacific what was known as CP Air, which formed
the backbone of Canadi>n's service. PWA then went on to force Wardair
out of the market by buying them up. Max Ward was Canada's Freddie
Laker, however, Ward, unlike Laker sold out and came out of it with
a healthy bankbook!
PWA also owns a number of smaller connector airlines and has
affiliations with a number more small airlines that fly under the
Canadian Partner banner.
I don't have numbers, but it is a significant size, smaller
than Air Canada though.
Stuart
|
609.3 | They don't compete internationally | VAOU09::BOTMAN | pieter | Thu Sep 10 1992 18:07 | 17 |
| Canadian and Air Canada compete domestically, both flying to major cities
within Canada. Before Canadian dumped off some northern routes to
feeder or second tier carriers, Canadian and Air Canada could be
distinguished by their service to remote or smaller communities.
The Canadian govt' regulated service (and still does north of (55
degrees?) and so could prescribe service and routes, etc in the old
days.
Air Canada and Canadian do not compete internationally, as Canada
negotiates bilateral agreements on a route by route basis, there is no
"open skies" agreement for most countries. So, in effect Canadian and
Air Canada "split the world" between them from a canadian carrier
perspective.
Pieter
|
609.4 | numbers, numbers | VAOU09::LAM | | Thu Sep 10 1992 22:57 | 9 |
| Here are the numbers:
Air Canada Canadian
Assets 4.9b 2.8b
Revenue 3.6b 2.9b
1991 loss 218m 162m
Long Term Debt 2.3b 1.5b
Employees 18200 15000
Fleet 102 88
|
609.5 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Sep 11 1992 09:03 | 15 |
| Looking at the business view:
Air Canada does international,
and the both do internal, but not conflicting, services
and the numbers posted in .4 look unhealthy.
So, the merger could help cut admin, join some services and cut expense.
Otherwise they'll both get more unhealthy
Phew, I wouldn't buy shares in either at the moment.
Heather
|
609.6 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Sep 11 1992 10:34 | 14 |
| Canadian also flies internationally and on comparable almost competing
routes ...
For example, Air Canada flies Ottawa to London Heathrow, and Canadian
flies Wardair's old Ottawa to London Gatwick route. Canadian flies
a lot into the Pacific where Air Canada dominates on the North
Atlantic.
The numbers are unhealthy, but what is interesting is the relatively
high staff / revenue and staff / fleet numbers for Canadian compared
with Air Canada ... no wonder Canadian staff are bleating so strongly
about loss of jobs.
Stuart
|
609.7 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Sep 14 1992 06:23 | 13 |
| > Canadian also flies internationally and on comparable almost competing
> routes ...
>
> For example, Air Canada flies Ottawa to London Heathrow, and Canadian
> flies Wardair's old Ottawa to London Gatwick route. Canadian flies
> a lot into the Pacific where Air Canada dominates on the North
> Atlantic.
These are not comparable, Gatwick is the charter flyers nightmare.
I would pay a LOT more money to fly from Heathrow.
Heather
|
609.8 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | I'll just sit here and rust | Mon Sep 14 1992 09:48 | 17 |
| .7 suggests its author has more money than experience of Gatwick
airport.
Situations equivalent to the quoted text are common. E.g. from
Boston
British Airways and American fly to Heathrow
Virgin and Northwest fly to Gatwick
On my last trip to Britain I happened to fly Northwest. I did
not find the facilities at Gatwick any worse than Terminal 3
at Heathrow.
The situation Heather talks about is restricted to a few summer
weekends. Bad situations can arise at Heathrow also. For instance
when British Airways have lots of aircraft frozen to the jetways.
Tony
|
609.9 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon Sep 14 1992 10:36 | 13 |
| At one time Heather, I'd have agreed with you, delays through Gatwick
were inevitable ... but that was about 8 or more years ago. We've been
back to England 5 times. Twice from Heathrow and 3 times from Gatwick.
On both occasions, our flights out of Heathrow were delayed by over an
hour "due to operational difficulties". The first time from Gatwick
we were several hours delayed, but the last two times we were rolling
out on the apron precisely on schedule.
The only thing that now decides which airport I choose is where my
first destination is, given comparable fares ... going to certain parts
of the country from Gatquick is a royal pain.
Stuart
|
609.10 | aeroplan | ULYSSE::DOROSH | | Tue Sep 15 1992 09:27 | 3 |
| Has Air Canada made any changes to its frequent flyer programme???
dkd
|
609.11 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Tue Sep 15 1992 10:24 | 3 |
| Since When ?
|
609.12 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Sep 17 1992 08:43 | 16 |
| > .7 suggests its author has more money than experience of Gatwick
> airport.
I have a lot of experience of Gatwick, I didn't have much to compare it
against until I started to use Heathrow on business.
The last time I used it was two years ago in March - and I swore I
would never use it again unless I really couldn't find anywehere else
at any price - and then I may decide I'd rather not travel at all.
Last year I went to Toronto via Air Canada from Heathrow for 250 quid
return, at the end of June.
Compared to my many experiences from Gatwick, it was a dream.
Heather
|
609.13 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu Sep 17 1992 10:40 | 14 |
| The hitch with Gatquick is that when delays start occurring, they
can quickly snowball to the point where no plane can arrive or
depart on time. Because it does handle such a vast number of charters
too, delays mean that the place gets jammed very quickly with
holidaymakers who have little option but to wait at the airport.
The business traveller usually attempts to make alternate arrangements
which usually eases the "people" congestion.
There are definitely times I've sworn at delays out of Gatwick.
You should have tried Toronto terminal 1.
Stuart
|