markis10
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You really have a bee in your bonnet over this Qantas A320 issue. If you actually took the time to read rather than shoot me down you would see every time I have mention it I use the word RUMOUR. Do you know what RUMOUR means? Really, give it a rest, because as it was a rumour there is no way I can prove it and there is no way you can categorically disprove it, because it was just a rumour. However based on scale of accuracy/probability I would put it at about 99%, if you want to disagree with percentage then fine, would love to hear what number you have in mind?
Also I think your timings are out a bit. Qantas announced their take over of AA 737-800 slots in late 2001, with the first one ready in Feb 2002. Jetstar wasn't announced until October 2003 with first A320 delivery in June 2004. Pretty quick don't you think, unless of course the slots already belong to Qantas. So again refer to above RUMOUR.
However when it comes to Jetstar again I think you have shot your response without reading actually what I was saying. I was not talking about Jetstar being the core from a route perspective, but Jetstar the company being formed from the core of Impulse.
Shall I remind you of the history of Impulse and Jetstar? In early 2001 Qantas brought Impulse and integrated them into the QantasLink brand, but still separate from other QantasLink "operators". Remember their boarding passes where they said operated by Impulse? And the routes that "QantasLink operated by Impulse" were running, yep they were mainly leisure routes like SYD-OOL, sound familiar? Then when they invented Jetstar they did it by re branding Impulse and repainting the 717's. Then came new aircraft, and yes the A320's and where did they get delivered and serviced, umm yep Newcastle which is where Impulse was based and where the main Jetstar base is today.
Then of course once Jetstar was finished with the 717's they then returned to Qantas but this time under the control of NJS/Cobham. So as I said Impulse is 100% the core of Jetstar, it was not a new company, so getting back on topic Virgin's purchase of Tiger is very much like Qantas' purchase of Impulse.
Yes my timings are out, I was confusing the additional order of 737s announced at the time of the A320 order announcement with the initial tranche of 738 order. My appologies.
And you make some good points about JQ, in terms of it being core though, the only thing left from Impulse that is relevant to JQ today is their staffing companies (ie their low ops cost) JQ do still utilize the maintenance outpost at NTL but its hardly their main base for such operations, JHAS in Melbourne has done most of the line work locally while Seletar gets the heavy stuff the single aircraft facility in NTL cannot handle, with QF doing the heavies in Brisbane.
Time will tell whether Virgin does the same thing with Tiger as Qantas did with Impulse (shedding planes, routes and assets while keeping the AOC and people structures), they will have to buy the remaining 40% first, which requires funds that could be best spent elsewhere.
I thought the order for A380/A330 aircraft had preceded this, so Qantas was already heading down the non Boeing path?
You are spot in, it was before that, 2000 in fact.
To be fair that's more by design than misfortune - JQ was specifically designed to use secondary ports where possible - a la the European LCC model. Unfortunately Australia only really has two sensible secondary airports for major ports - AVV and OOL, so that was eventually thrown away and they started operating routes alongside QF.
I would agree, although NTL and MCY are also good secondary airports if you live north of BNE/SYD CBDs. East West, Compass Mk1 and Mk2 and Impulse are all examples of a third wedge being squeezed out by a big two, we are just adding Tiger to the list!
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