sn26567 wrote:Thanks, Mr_Boeing, for providing actual data showing replacement of RJ fleet.
MR_Boeing wrote:NCB: You say bigger aircraft do not work if you can't fill smaller ones...but why does it work at other airlines. Increasing loadfactor and increasing profitability despite operating bigger aircraft...
I still didn't find any exemple in real world wich shows your idea works. But there are many exemples wich prove that operating bigger aircraft works (off course not on every route and every flight).
I was also wondering, and it would be really nice if someone could explain in a clear manner how increasing the size of an aeroplane will increase profitability.
Many people on this thread are pretending that it is indeed
the case with airlines like Austrian. But nobody is explaining why. More fuel, more cabin crew, higher airport fees, same number of passengers, something must be wrong in the equation...
That is a common concern among many people, not just me and you, and it must be taken seriously.
Mr. Boeing is right that LH and OS took out their entire 50 seat fleet.
I can explain what the 50 seat problem was about.
On a 50 seater, at LH and OS yields, they needed to fill 45 seats to break even. 90% LF.
Embraer and Bombardier then came up with CRJ700, CRJ900, E170, E175, E190.
These aircraft have only a slightly higher operating cost but have 20 to 40 more seats they could sell for a profit. This means that the break even point moved to 50 seats on 70 seats aircraft and 60 seats on 90 seat aircraft. So the break-even moved down to a LF of 67-71%.
The CASM leap is significant.
So then, it was simple, at Cityline they merged the frequencies and replaced 45 CRJ100/200 by 15 E190/195.
Austrian was a more drastic scenario.
They replaced 13 CRJ200's by 4 Q400's. But they could afford to because they still have the Fokkers.
The problem with SN doing the same is
A. it can't merge 2 RJ85 flights into 1 A319 flight or 2 RJ85 flights into 1 CS100 flight, without seriously affecting its timetable and pax convenience because it has a small fleet of RJ's that aren't only operating short, thin routes but mainline routes.
B. the CASM leap between a cheap to lease RJ85/100 and a CS100 is not significant enough
So no Mr. Boeing, it doesn't work that easily.
MR_Boeing wrote:Look, it's very easy. If SN don't need bigger aircraft on routes lik MXP, CPH, TXL,... they will not deploy bigger aircraft on them. What's that for a strategy, replacing RJ's with A319's because you have to replace your 737's over 3 years? 737 replacement is A32S wich will come at the moment the 737's leave
It depends. Now A319/A320's are abundant on the lease market and cheap, because of the crisis.
In 2013/2014, the leases could be 50% and even more expensive than now, and then the B737 replacement is going to be a very expensive deal. If SN takes long leases now, they can save several millions per year after 2013, for 5 or 8 more years paying 30% off the lease price that they would pay if they took it in 2013.
Example:
SN leases 4 A319 at 2.5 million (USD) per year each in 2011 for 9 years, total cost until 2020 is 90 million.
SN leases 4 A319 at 3.5 million per year each in 2013, for 7 years, total cost until 2020 is 98 million.
So by taking the lease in 2011, SN gets 2 years of lease free, plus saves 8 million dollars, or almost 1 million dollars per year. And since it can't get rid of the 737's before 2013, it gets rid of RJ85's.
But this is only half the picture. I think that you need more than this to justify SN's choice of temporarily replacing RJ85's by A319's and I think that we will have a clearer picture in a few months.
But to press on it again, SN can't do with the RJ85's what LH Cityline and Austrian Arrows did with their CRJ200's, because they can't merge frequencies into less frequencies and use bigger airplanes to operate them.
That's why I'm telling you guys for a long time now that it will be wrong to replace RJ85/100 by CS100 or by any aircraft larger than the RJ85/100 on a 1 to 1 basis, because it has low load factors.
If SN was flying at 90% load factors in several frequencies (Like Cityline was doing) I would have been the first to beg for larger aircraft and consolidation of frequencies.
Like I said, SN needs to get trip cost down first, then increase load factors and frequencies, and then again merge frequency and capacity by using larger aircraft like A320.
HOW MUCH LONGER DO YOU NEED TO HEAR THIS BEFORE YOU UNDERSTAND???