Originally Posted by
AirCav
Been here over 20 years and while I do admire guys that are always positive and have "glass-half-full" outlooks on life...lots of Delta pilots are always foretelling a future with tons of WB purchases. Unfortunately, I have seen the opposite at Delta. Look at our WB ratio in 2000 and look at it now. We have been slowly getting out of the widebody business year after year. Like a falling stock, there may be some upturns to that trend here and there but an overall downward trajectory is what I have experienced. COVID proved to EB that we do better by leaving the WB flying to our partners (who have ratios that are way more skewed to WB than we do). ALPA has been misled by great sounding platitudes from our leaders but we continue to slide and put evermore Delta customers on other metal.
We may have some WB orders in the books but look at the NW A340s and 787s on order...what happened to those? In my short career, we have parked L-1011s, MD-11s, 767-200s, 747s and 777s. I strongly suspect the remaining 767s are soon to go as well as the older 330s. IF we receive all the airplanes on the order books, we very well may still be below today's count.
Its interesting that everyone blames a reduction in widebodies at Delta on our international code share agreements. The strange part is that the actual reduction in widebodies has been on domestic routes. We used to fly L1011’s and the 767-200/300/400 all over the US. We used to have L1011’s all over LGA. The 767-400 was picked specifically because it could fit in LGA and the A330 could not. It was purchased as a domestic L1011 replacement.
In 1986 I believe we had a total of 8 widebody international aircraft. It would be interesting to see the actual international widebody numbers flying international the last 30 years. In 1994 post PanAm and when Delta first started code sharing we had 62 widebody international aircraft. Today we have around 150 with 39 more coming quickly. By the end of 2024 our international widebodies will have tripled since 1994 and the start of code-sharing.