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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    That's literally what the data shows! A380 has maintained 60% availability in May, June, July and August. While C, K, L have all been out for that time, other frames have rotated through for C-checks. The point that I was making was that 7/10 were in the fleet, however availability was only 60%...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    No, all A380 D-checks are outsourced. What's noticeable is that globally A380 D-checks have been very concentrated among a few MROs. We're seeing BA, LH, QF, EY, EK use the same few MROs for C and D-checks on A380s. Suspect this is because the aircraft became a bit of a niche pretty quickly...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    The analysis I posted counts the fleet availability on a day by day basis. Measured number of days per fleet type by month versus maximum. I'm not sure the A330s have been pulled from Transcon that much. We've seen a lot less Trans Tasman though, but the point that I was making is should they...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    Thanks for reading :-) Yeah, it certainly was a Black Swan event but there's a strong argument to be made that QF took an unnecessarily conservative approach. That certainly affected their recovery. But we're well beyond the recovery and beyond them being unlucky in terms of some D-check...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    100% they'd still be sitting awaiting their D-check. Even LH and EK are running well behind on A380 D-checks. No idea how people expect QF to somehow jump the queue.
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    I get it, but also think that people get blinkered by recency bias. It was funny when people celebrated Joyce's demise. I argued at the time that it's all good and well, but that people shouldn't expect any change. Companies are more than one person and that Hudson wasn't likely to be different...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    Net cargo revenue by FY ($ million): 2018: 895 2019: 971 2020: 1045 2021: 1316 2022: 1963 2023: 1380 2024: 1211
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    Agreed. The A380s have become a huge drag and the impact on capacity is relatively magnified. But there's an incongruency in the argument that people are making that capacity is down yet the fleet is over utilised. I was interested in the fleet availability and did an analysis on it a few weeks...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    I'm not ignoring that. I'm questioning what's systematic/non-systematic, and what's causing them. From my vantage point working in the industry (not with Qantas) we're seeing a very different world compared to a few years ago generating a myriad of evolving operational challenges and...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    So just anecdotes framed by recency bias? I'm not trying to argue that things are rosy, but I'm not sure that anecdotes are useful other than confirming one's priors. Most of the A330 coming into international aren't coming off transcon, but off the triangle and Tasman. The corollary is whether...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    So just vibes? Is there any evidence of systematic changes in reliability? Propping up? Or testament to an adaptable fleet?
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    Entire 747 fleet? It was 5 aircraft remaining in March 2020 and their retirement was accelerated a whole 6 months. Point is that fleet has evolved - that was always the plan. You're somewhat missing the point - that market level capacity is down a lot and Qantas (airline and group) have...
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    Qantas A380 reliability issues creeping up again?

    This is somewhat didactic. The pandemic created a cargo boom and airlines are earning a lot more from cargo now than pre-pandemic. Similarly the now orphan B767F was likely suffering from a high fixed cost base. Converting the A330s was a good option rather than waiting for or competing for slim...
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    Qantas' New A321XLR

    Why does it infer that Qantas should do it because they do? They're operating different cabin densities with different operational constraints. Then add in different regulatory requirements, EDTO, etc. I should have been a little more specific - it's not a payload restriction in a typical sense...
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    Qantas' New A321XLR

    Missed the discussion earlier in the week. Our article didn't cover some of the background at the time but it's certainly part of the context now. Following up on some of the discussion: The oldest B738s are nearly 23 years old. They'll be due their next D-check around 24 years old...
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    Canberra to Singapore Direct Flights (sometime???)

    Exactly! The underlying article that it quote (from ET) shows Hudson being pretty clear the XLR is a B737-800 replacement for trunk domestic routes. The interview got into speculation about what the XLR could be with lie flats but I though Hudson and Wallace were pretty clear that they wouldn't...
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    Canberra to Singapore Direct Flights (sometime???)

    I think everyone is over interpreting this along with some broken telephone. The original interview by ET with Hudson is good and they're clearly distinguishing between Qantas's plans for the XLR and some speculation regarding potential routes they'd consider if they went with a lie flat...
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    Is it time for the ACCC to lose its power to veto international JVs?

    As to what's up with the civility? Well, you have this knack of misquoting and quoting out of context. When this is raised, you ignore it and move on to another track. You're a smart guy, so one can only assume that it's somewhat international, either to misrepresent, or to ignore. You want to...
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    Is it time for the ACCC to lose its power to veto international JVs?

    Your attempt to twist things around are so bad that they're comical. Yes, the restrictions of not including the Americas and South Africa are self-imposed since they did not include it in their application!!! Since they didn't include it, the ACCC couldn't consider it. The secondary part was...
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    Is it time for the ACCC to lose its power to veto international JVs?

    This is hilarious. You seem to misunderstand the process entirely. Businesses are applying to ACCC for exemptions from the law. In order to be assessed, they have to outline the specific conduct in the application. The ACCC can only make a decision on what is asked of them.! The application...
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