Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Airline Pilot Forums > Regional
The MRJ90 and E175-E2 are done >

The MRJ90 and E175-E2 are done


Notices
Regional Regional Airlines

The MRJ90 and E175-E2 are done

Old 11-25-2016 | 04:49 PM
  #1  
Thread Starter
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 3,153
Likes: 16
Default The MRJ90 and E175-E2 are done

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/delta-...230920598.html
Reply
Old 11-25-2016 | 04:54 PM
  #2  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,610
Likes: 15
Default

Easy solution: operate them on a mainline certificate.
Reply
Old 11-25-2016 | 05:12 PM
  #3  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 2,049
Likes: 0
From: I pilot
Default

Or lease them out foreign carriers.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 06:33 AM
  #4  
Line Holder
 
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,832
Likes: 5
From: 737 Left
Default

We may be forgetting the success that jetBlue had with the E-190 when few others were flying it. It is possible for the same thing to occur with one of the LCC's or ULCC's. It is also possible for these aircraft to be utilized in other locales by non-US carriers, or in a start up endeavor. I don't think the aircraft are done.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:17 AM
  #5  
rickair7777's Avatar
Prime Minister/Moderator
Veteran: Navy
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,127
Likes: 796
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Default

Originally Posted by TallFlyer
Easy solution: operate them on a mainline certificate.
I've been saying for years that foreign airframers who gloss over scope limits when designing large RJs are making a big mistake.

It's no longer a simple matter of making a trip through the BK drive-through to eliminate annoying labor contract provisions.

And it's tough for mainline to make money directly operating RJ's close to 100 seats. At the 100 seat point, you have to pay another FA, and that puts the economics in a whole. This is why narrow-bodies's keep getting bigger of the years, to get further away from that 80-149 seat economic trough.

Outsourced flying is the only way to make a lot of RJ routes economical.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:18 AM
  #6  
rickair7777's Avatar
Prime Minister/Moderator
Veteran: Navy
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,127
Likes: 796
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Default

Originally Posted by zondaracer
Or lease them out foreign carriers.
Little problem...the vast majority of the market for RJ's is in the US, the land of the big scope clause.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:22 AM
  #7  
rickair7777's Avatar
Prime Minister/Moderator
Veteran: Navy
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,127
Likes: 796
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Default

Originally Posted by AtlCSIP
We may be forgetting the success that jetBlue had with the E-190 when few others were flying it. It is possible for the same thing to occur with one of the LCC's or ULCC's. It is also possible for these aircraft to be utilized in other locales by non-US carriers, or in a start up endeavor. I don't think the aircraft are done.
The problem is it takes hundreds, or many hundreds of production aircraft just to break even on the R&D cost of developing a new aircraft.

If you cut out most of the US market, and turn what you thought was a 1000 airplane production run into a 300 airplane run, you're not going to make any money. You'll be lucky to break even.

For example, the A380 with about 300 orders is billions of dollars in the hole and will never even begin to recover it's costs.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:33 AM
  #8  
billyho's Avatar
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 2,450
Likes: 0
Default

Time to break out the Q400 and ATR 600 orders! LOL
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:45 AM
  #9  
ClickClickBoom's Avatar
MK Ultra Candidate
 
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,167
Likes: 0
From: Prime Leader of Boko Harumph
Default

Originally Posted by rickair7777
I've been saying for years that foreign airframers who gloss over scope limits when designing large RJs are making a big mistake.

It's no longer a simple matter of making a trip through the BK drive-through to eliminate annoying labor contract provisions.

And it's tough for mainline to make money directly operating RJ's close to 100 seats. At the 100 seat point, you have to pay another FA, and that puts the economics in a whole. This is why narrow-bodies's keep getting bigger of the years, to get further away from that 80-149 seat economic trough.

Outsourced flying is the only way to make a lot of RJ routes economical.
Aircraft design/manufacture is a decades long process. Pilot contracts are short term instruments, and given the history of pilots selling their souls for a few dollars, those airplanes will fly where ever the companies that buy them, want them. Never underestimate greed.
Reply
Old 11-26-2016 | 07:50 AM
  #10  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 20,879
Likes: 194
Default

Originally Posted by ClickClickBoom
Aircraft design/manufacture is a decades long process. Pilot contracts are short term instruments, and given the history of pilots selling their souls for a few dollars, those airplanes will fly where ever the companies that buy them, want them. Never underestimate greed.
Yet at the moment the manufactures needed that cave it did not happen.
Reply

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Your Privacy Choices