Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
Two episodes that gave me the creeps:
The one where the psycho guy walks down the hallway and the lights go out because of his psychic darkness.
The one where they find some lady's missing husband on a planet, but he turns into a skeleton when they leave in an Eagle. She looks down and she's holding a skeleton hand. Scary.
The one where the psycho guy walks down the hallway and the lights go out because of his psychic darkness.
The one where they find some lady's missing husband on a planet, but he turns into a skeleton when they leave in an Eagle. She looks down and she's holding a skeleton hand. Scary.
Line Holder
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 378
Likes: 5
I have flown with enough ex "Boeing or I am not going" types to tell you, once you go bus you never go back. Well until bigger pays better.
T I hear this statement all the time but it is from guys that have never flown an Airbus product. After flying both I love Boeing but they could learn a lot from Airbus.
Production Test Pilot
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 111
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From: Production Test Pilot, Boeing
T it's ok I will save a seat for you on the dark side. After flying the baby bus I can't imagine shoehorning my self into a 737 cockpit.
I have flown with enough ex "Boeing or I am not going" types to tell you, once you go bus you never go back. Well until bigger pays better.
I have flown with enough ex "Boeing or I am not going" types to tell you, once you go bus you never go back. Well until bigger pays better.
Plus, Boeing's one of the last bastions of american manufacturing (okay, outsourcing notwithstanding). And it's a damn fine product, too.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 239
Likes: 0
From: MD musical chairs
T it's ok I will save a seat for you on the dark side. After flying the baby bus I can't imagine shoehorning my self into a 737 cockpit.
I have flown with enough ex "Boeing or I am not going" types to tell you, once you go bus you never go back. Well until bigger pays better.
I have flown with enough ex "Boeing or I am not going" types to tell you, once you go bus you never go back. Well until bigger pays better.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 3,716
Likes: 0
Boeing needs to price it's product to the competition. They have an arrogance about them that is inexcusable. Besides, the aircraft division is only a part of their business. They have many others that are very profitable. If support of their aircraft division is at taxpayer expense and American airlines expense, and directly benefits of foreign states and corporations, I say to hell with 'em, and I am a Boeing guy (hopefully) until I walk out the door.
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
The EU would surely like to be rid of their IM-EXBank Facility also. Seems like we could make a deal to put ours away if they'll put away theirs. (then there's still the Brazilians and Canadians ... who Delta does do business with).
Don't understand why T-Square thinks Boeing's pricing is unreasonable. If you look at acquisition costs, since the Douglas people took over Boeing not only are the airplanes becoming Douglas products (failures from an engineering standpoint ... due to penny pinching on design...then getting killed on the back end) they are priced like Douglas products.
Boeing's not going out of business, but their Board needs to clean house over there
Over the past few quarters, Boeing has substantially improved its cash costs for the 787s, which averaged about $200 million, but that remains worlds away from the breakeven values which the company expects to achieve by 2015. Cash burn has improved by about $1 billion per year through 2015, according to UBS’ estimates, which now expects Boeing to go through $4 to $5 billion this year and next, and between $2 and $3 billion in 2015; this year, 787 cash drag will approximate $5 billion, as a $7 billion inventory build offsets a $2 billion advance draw.
Estimates indicate Boeing’s 787s will sell for an average $116 million per unit, a 48% discount to the average list price of $225 million. With 787-9 deliveries not expected until 2014, Boeing’s 787 physical inventory is expected to reach $900 million, with physical inventory then flattening out in 2014 as deliveries match production, while UBS expects a $900 million reversal in 2015 as deliveries move higher.
Estimates indicate Boeing’s 787s will sell for an average $116 million per unit, a 48% discount to the average list price of $225 million. With 787-9 deliveries not expected until 2014, Boeing’s 787 physical inventory is expected to reach $900 million, with physical inventory then flattening out in 2014 as deliveries match production, while UBS expects a $900 million reversal in 2015 as deliveries move higher.
Have to admit, that's a very Douglas like performance ... (MD90, MD11, MD95 ...)
I should short BA.
Line Holder
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 1,281
Likes: 0
From: C560XL/XLS/XLS+
Absolutely, but what's that got to do with the IM-Bank?
The EU would surely like to be rid of their IM-EXBank Facility also. Seems like we could make a deal to put ours away if they'll put away theirs. (then there's still the Brazilians and Canadians ... who Delta does do business with).
Don't understand why T-Square thinks Boeing's pricing is unreasonable. If you look at acquisition costs, since the Douglas people took over Boeing not only are the airplanes becoming Douglas products (failures from an engineering standpoint ... due to penny pinching on design...then getting killed on the back end) they are priced like Douglas products.
Boeing's not going out of business, but their Board needs to clean house over there
Boeing Bleeding Cash As 787 Dreamliners Cost $200M But Sell For $116M, But Productivity Is Improving - Forbes
Have to admit, that's a very Douglas like performance ... (MD90, MD11, MD95 ...)
I should short BA.
The EU would surely like to be rid of their IM-EXBank Facility also. Seems like we could make a deal to put ours away if they'll put away theirs. (then there's still the Brazilians and Canadians ... who Delta does do business with).
Don't understand why T-Square thinks Boeing's pricing is unreasonable. If you look at acquisition costs, since the Douglas people took over Boeing not only are the airplanes becoming Douglas products (failures from an engineering standpoint ... due to penny pinching on design...then getting killed on the back end) they are priced like Douglas products.
Boeing's not going out of business, but their Board needs to clean house over there
Boeing Bleeding Cash As 787 Dreamliners Cost $200M But Sell For $116M, But Productivity Is Improving - Forbes
Have to admit, that's a very Douglas like performance ... (MD90, MD11, MD95 ...)
I should short BA.
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