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Originally Posted by Dirtdiver
(Post 2168255)
The info is nearly worthless. It only counts those who have it as one of their top 3. It ignores any condition or restriction.
Bottom line is if you want it, bid it. |
Thanks crewdawg.
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Originally Posted by Flybywine
(Post 2168400)
Thanks Dirtdriver. Good point about the possible conditions or restrictions one might stipulate.
Does anyone know if these numbers include pilots with the specific category listed as a Displacement preference (either voluntary or mandatory)? |
Originally Posted by pokin
(Post 2167926)
Thanks for the info guys. I appreciate it. I guess I have to decide if the family wedding and a long weekend cabin trip are worth another winter of commuting to reserve in NYC.
Hired in May 2015. Considering going from 85% on the NYC 7ER to 60-70% on either the DTW 73n or DTW 320. I have a buddy who got the 320 on the last bid in May and doesn't start training till September but I have a feeling that has a lot to do with the summer schedule and training could come much quicker this fall. |
Originally Posted by crewdawg
(Post 2168403)
What he said! When I got my current bid, that thing said I had 75 people senior to me bidding that seat. Recently I looked at it for another bid and it had 125 senior to me bidding. There ended up being 12 people junior to me that were awarded that position.
Does the number above you include those currently in a seat lock and unable to switch platforms (they just have a standing preference in)? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Originally Posted by NavyFlyer
(Post 2168899)
Does the number above you include those currently in a seat lock and unable to switch platforms (they just have a standing preference in)?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Bid what you want, want what you bid. They would have to run a mock bid to provide any accurate info |
If I switched to a different category now and then a few years later decided to switch back, do I go through an abbreviated qualification course? How long can you be out of a category and still go through the short course if you come back?
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Originally Posted by 321pilot
(Post 2168918)
If I switched to a different category now and then a few years later decided to switch back, do I go through an abbreviated qualification course? How long can you be out of a category and still go through the short course if you come back?
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One of the top network guys at Delta (Joe...missed his last name) was in the JFK pilot lounge yesterday and gave a presentation.
Here are some of his points: AIRCRAFT - 747: there are 7 still flying; they retire Dec 2017. I'm not sure if that will be all 7 or if they'll be down to 1 or 2 by then. - A359: service from DTW, beginning 3rd Qtr 2017. - 767: oldest ones in the fleet will be retired, replaced by remaining 333 deliveries (we have 26 now, 5 more coming) and then the 33neo deliveries (25 from '19-'22). - 757: Network says this jet fills a niche like no other airplane does. Boeing is looking at a 757 replacement aircraft because of this niche. If they build one, Delta wants it. - A321: 5 now in service; 82 by 2019. - 739: 60 of the 120 delivered - MD88: retiring from 2017 - '21. When they come up for their H inspections, they will be "put down." His words...that got a chuckle. Replacing them with the deliveries of A321s, 739s, and CS-100s. - 717: all 91 delivered - CS-100: initial bases in LAX, SEA, and then JFK. NETWORK: - Delta plans to grow at DFW but, to answer a question from a Texas commuter, has no plans to put a pilot base there. Staying at Love Field and would actually like to get more gates there, pending court action between Dallas and Southwest. - Growth at LHR enabled by Virgin Atlantic JV. Heathrow is the biggest European business hub. - Growth in China enabled by China Eastern JV. - Service to Cuba from JFK starts in December. |
Originally Posted by ColdUpHere
(Post 2168976)
One of the top network guys at Delta (Joe...missed his last name) was in the JFK pilot lounge yesterday and gave a presentation.
Here are some of his points: AIRCRAFT - 747: there are 7 still flying; they retire Dec 2017. I'm not sure if that will be all 7 or if they'll be down to 1 or 2 by then. - A359: service from DTW, beginning 3rd Qtr 2017. - 767: oldest ones in the fleet will be retired, replaced by remaining 333 deliveries (we have 26 now, 5 more coming) and then the 33neo deliveries (25 from '19-'22). - 757: Network says this jet fills a niche like no other airplane does. Boeing is looking at a 757 replacement aircraft because of this niche. If they build one, Delta wants it. - A321: 5 now in service; 82 by 2019. - 739: 60 of the 120 delivered - MD88: retiring from 2017 - '21. When they come up for their H inspections, they will be "put down." His words...that got a chuckle. Replacing them with the deliveries of A321s, 739s, and CS-100s. - 717: all 91 delivered - CS-100: initial bases in LAX, SEA, and then JFK. NETWORK: - Delta plans to grow at DFW but, to answer a question from a Texas commuter, has no plans to put a pilot base there. Staying at Love Field and would actually like to get more gates there, pending court action between Dallas and Southwest. - Growth at LHR enabled by Virgin Atlantic JV. Heathrow is the biggest European business hub. - Growth in China enabled by China Eastern JV. - Service to Cuba from JFK starts in December. Any word on a 737 Max/A320 NEO orders? It's concerning not to have a true 88 replacement...one that seats in the 140-160 seat range. How many 767s will they retire? If they retire a lot, our widebody fleet will only get smaller. We have 74 767-300/300ERs...but we only have 25 A330-800s, 25 A350s, and 5 more of the 10 total of the A330 IGW. That's 60 new tails. We are also losing all of our 747s here in the next year and a half. Don't vote on anything that limits widebody scope...our fleet is shrinking. |
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