I know that you do, but still no facts.I know because I deal with the adversity of these airplanes constantly from the balance issues with the 321 and 319, or the fact that the 330 is slightly underpowered in the USAirways varient.
Winds can affect any aircraft in any region at any given time. WX is something that should not be an argument here. You're all over the place, I can't see what you are getting at.This airplane order should have went the other way. Did I forget to m ention that winter winds mean many unscheduled Vegas stops which creates crew time issues, aircraft out of place issues, and if it cancels due to mx you have to shuffle all over the place.
My reply had nothing to do with A350's, I was replying to your criticizm of the 32S.USAirways is looking to expand and do it fast. Airbus was not in the best intrest of that. Boeing offered earlier slots and the order was on the books untill last night when it dissapeared.
I will quote one of aviation world's well respected CEO's here- Tim Clark on the A350:They had confirmed slots and garuntee on frames which they cancelled for that peice of garbage french airplane that is not even more than a theroy at this point and for all we know with the French track record this thing may take in upwards of over ten years to get in service for US so I think I am qualified to say what I say in this instance.
"We know as much as we need to know about the plane (the A350) to contribute to the decision process,Clark said."
http://investing.reuters.co.uk/news/art ... IRSHOW.XML
It means much more; training mechanics, pilots etc, fa's who weren't previously trained on the 737 type. All this at a cost. This is why fleet commonality, once again, is very very important to the industry.Originally Posted by hiss srq



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