I was going through a box the other day and came across some old timetables, including the northern summer timetables of AN & QF from 2000 (ie Mar 26 2000). This was just prior to the advent of the first LCC (impulse who started their 717 operations IIRC in about June 2000).
It got me thinking, apart from the lost off AN and the rise of DJ & JQ and the associated move downmarket, what has fundamentally changed for travellers in Australia over that time? The main thing seems to more routes and more flights.
I did a quick comparison for flights originating in MEL and this is what I found:
New Routes: (ie domestic destinations you can fly to nonstop now, that you couldn't in May 2000)
Darwin, Broome, Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton, Ballina, Coffs Harbour, Karratha, Kalgoorlie, Griffith, Wagga (used to be via ABX)
Vastly increased frequences:
Alice Springs: 10x weekly (was 1 x weekly)
Cairns: 24x weekly (was 4 x weekly) (not counting coming Tiger expansion)
Gold Coast: 100x weekly (was 42 x weekly)
Sunshine Coast: 27x weekly (was 4x weekly)
Newcastle: 24xweekly, on jets, (was 10xweekly on 36 seat Dash 8's)
Increased frequencies (weekdays):
Adelaide: 24 daily (was 20 daily, increase solely due to TT)
Brisbane*: 29 daily (was 25 daily)
Canberra: 18 daily (was 13-14 daily)
Perth: 15 daily (was 10 daily)
Sydney*: 74 daily (was 58 daily)
Hamilton Island: 5 weekly (was 2)
Reductions in frequencies:
Hobart: 12 daily (was 15 daily, but seat numbers increased as many were on CRJs)
Launceston: 10 daily (was 13 daily, ditto re CRJs)
Devonport: 4 daily (was 7 daily)
Burnie: 4-6 daily (was 6 daily)
Albury: 3 daily (was 6 due to onward WGA flights)
Merimbula: 7 weekly (was 10 weekly)
Mt Gambier (if you count O'Connor flights that are no longer)
Same frequency: Mildura (although big increase in capacity due to aircraft mix), King Island
Destinations lost: Portland*
Destinations started within the period and lost: Wollongong, Ayers Rock, Kangaroo Island
* Does not include flights from Avalon or Essendon
Just looking at the range of destinations available one can only conclude it has become easier and by and large cheaper to get to a lot of places than it was 10 years ago, no surprises there. I am sure the figures for other cities tell a similar tale.
It got me thinking, apart from the lost off AN and the rise of DJ & JQ and the associated move downmarket, what has fundamentally changed for travellers in Australia over that time? The main thing seems to more routes and more flights.
I did a quick comparison for flights originating in MEL and this is what I found:
New Routes: (ie domestic destinations you can fly to nonstop now, that you couldn't in May 2000)
Darwin, Broome, Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton, Ballina, Coffs Harbour, Karratha, Kalgoorlie, Griffith, Wagga (used to be via ABX)
Vastly increased frequences:
Alice Springs: 10x weekly (was 1 x weekly)
Cairns: 24x weekly (was 4 x weekly) (not counting coming Tiger expansion)
Gold Coast: 100x weekly (was 42 x weekly)
Sunshine Coast: 27x weekly (was 4x weekly)
Newcastle: 24xweekly, on jets, (was 10xweekly on 36 seat Dash 8's)
Increased frequencies (weekdays):
Adelaide: 24 daily (was 20 daily, increase solely due to TT)
Brisbane*: 29 daily (was 25 daily)
Canberra: 18 daily (was 13-14 daily)
Perth: 15 daily (was 10 daily)
Sydney*: 74 daily (was 58 daily)
Hamilton Island: 5 weekly (was 2)
Reductions in frequencies:
Hobart: 12 daily (was 15 daily, but seat numbers increased as many were on CRJs)
Launceston: 10 daily (was 13 daily, ditto re CRJs)
Devonport: 4 daily (was 7 daily)
Burnie: 4-6 daily (was 6 daily)
Albury: 3 daily (was 6 due to onward WGA flights)
Merimbula: 7 weekly (was 10 weekly)
Mt Gambier (if you count O'Connor flights that are no longer)
Same frequency: Mildura (although big increase in capacity due to aircraft mix), King Island
Destinations lost: Portland*
Destinations started within the period and lost: Wollongong, Ayers Rock, Kangaroo Island
* Does not include flights from Avalon or Essendon
Just looking at the range of destinations available one can only conclude it has become easier and by and large cheaper to get to a lot of places than it was 10 years ago, no surprises there. I am sure the figures for other cities tell a similar tale.