TheInsider
Established Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2010
- Posts
- 4,204
Not really relevant.I don't want to be negative but Malaysian does have a few question marks over its safety eg see most recent investigation over inadequate inspection of pressure vents.
Not really relevant.I don't want to be negative but Malaysian does have a few question marks over its safety eg see most recent investigation over inadequate inspection of pressure vents.
Similar to us just as we were about to board in Adelaide on Qatar on an award J flight. We had already been through border control. Qantas made the new arrangements on our behalf and liased with Qatar in the process. Qatar even put us up in a city Hotel for the night and we then were booked on a flight to Melbourne on Qantas and Qatar across to Europe. So first port of call would be to Qantas if that's who you booked through.This discussion has addressed what happens when cancellations or changes occur before departure of the first flight.
May I go further and ask what happens if you are enjoying yourself at one of your stopovers and a future flight is cancelled? Does the airline concerned and/or QF have the responsibility to get you back on track, or could you be left stranded?
That’s a bit different though as you were checked in. The issue is people book oneworld awards that can have weeks or months of stopovers in them, and meanwhile QF and partners are busy gnawing away at your carefully crafted itinerary and breaking all of your forthcoming sectors.Similar to us just as we were about to board in Adelaide on Qatar on an award J flight. We had already been through border control. Qantas made the new arrangements on our behalf and liased with Qatar in the process. Qatar even put us up in a city Hotel for the night and we then were booked on a flight to Melbourne on Qantas and Qatar across to Europe. So first port of call would be to Qantas if that's who you booked through.
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Yeah, this. My understanding is once the flight is under airport control they have a lot more power to fix these issues for you.That’s a bit different though as you were checked in. The issue is people book oneworld awards that can have weeks or months of stopovers in them, and meanwhile QF and partners are busy gnawing away at your carefully crafted itinerary and breaking all of your forthcoming sectors.
Unfortunately these types of shenanigans stem from archaic practices and principles dating back to the times when travel agents would have sold most of the tickets. Travel agents were free to sell prices lower than the airlines might be offering (basically reducing their commission), or may have had special deals such as charter flights or access to consolidator seats.This happened to me recently as my business classic reward flight got cancelled by China airline (BNE-TPE). Qantas offshore call centre was unhelpful. Back and forth a few times and eventually I called China airline and requested their help. Although they didn’t have the power to help me, they did suggest me to request a waitlisted seat to be issued by Qantas and then eventually China airline opened up a reward seat after one week.
I was lucky I called Qantas during business hours and was connected to call centre in Hobart and the agent was able to action and got me a waitlisted seat after she contacted China airline and the ticket with the waitlisted seat was issued after 48 hours (after another phone call to Qantas to their offshore call centre in Fiji).
I am sorry to disappoint you but my best guess: The check-in staff will tell you that they can’t locate a ticket and hence can’t check you in. They will tell you to contact Qantas or to buy a ridiculous expensive upfront ticket for this or a later flight.I am currently having the same issue as described in the article. JAL rescheduled HEL/HND but not the connecting flight HND/SYD. After many calls and many hours (where more than one off-shore operator tried to convince me that the “system shows you can make the connection” as the HEL/HND flight arrives on the sam day!) and being promised call backs that never came each time, I got nowhere. In desperation, I emailed JAL directly, who of course told me to go back to Qantas. At some stage, the whole itinerary HEL/HND/SYD in J with the correct connecting flight showed up in the booking, but the flights booked in U (with the HND/SYD flight on the wrong date) are still there too. Shortly thereafter, I left to Europe (flights to Europe on a separate booking), hoping the issue will resolve. After seeing the AFF article, I checked to see if the tickets have been reissued - they have not. I then tried to call Qantas yet again, and after another hour and 2 operators (got hang up on by the first operator after 20mins), was told that they can’t re-ticket because the flights are in J and not in U, and they have to ask JAL to convert the seats. While on hold, the call dropped again.
If this is not re-ticketed, what will happen when I turn up at the airport in Helsinki? I am a bit worried that Qantas will just cancel the flights. Any advice would be appreciated!
agree. this is the most likely outcome.I am sorry to disappoint you but my best guess: The check-in staff will tell you that they can’t locate a ticket and hence can’t check you in. They will tell you to contact Qantas or to buy a ridiculous expensive upfront ticket for this or a later flight.
I wonder if travel insurance covered those kind of ticket change if we need to purchase a ridiculously expensive replacement flight due to cancellation of the airline and no replacement reward seat is booked.
Thanks for the advice! I called Qantas at 7am AEST and managed to get through straightaway, only to get disconnected while on hold by the operator after 25mins explaining the situation. The second call went much the same way (disconnected while on hold). This has happened a number of times before and I am starting to suspect the operators are dropping the call on purpose because they don’t want to deal with the problem. Anyway, what I was told (before I got put on hold) was that the flights with the correct connection needs to be concerted from J to U by JAL before Qantas can re-ticket. Instead of calling again, I have emailed the QFF email address and got an automated message that said a response may take a few days. Will I get a response or should I persist with calling? Is there a better way to contact them?I am sorry to disappoint you but my best guess: The check-in staff will tell you that they can’t locate a ticket and hence can’t check you in. They will tell you to contact Qantas or to buy a ridiculous expensive upfront ticket for this or a later flight.
Thanks for the advice! I called Qantas at 7am AEST and managed to get through straightaway, only to get disconnected while on hold by the operator after 25mins explaining the situation. The second call went much the same way (disconnected while on hold). This has happened a number of times before and I am starting to suspect the operators are dropping the call on purpose because they don’t want to deal with the problem. Anyway, what I was told (before I got put on hold) was that the flights with the correct connection needs to be concerted from J to U by JAL before Qantas can re-ticket. Instead of calling again, I have emailed the QFF email address and got an automated message that said a response may take a few days. Will I get a response or should I persist with calling? Is there a better way to contact them?
