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Reddit mentions of Inside American Airlines
Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1
We found 1 Reddit mentions of Inside American Airlines. Here are the top ones.
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Height | 0.5 Inches |
Length | 7.5 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | October 2009 |
Weight | 0.2 Pounds |
Width | 5.5 Inches |
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- The figure comes from this documentary which profiles American Airlines operations. The figure is for AA's regular NYC-LAX flight, and, yes, it makes very little profit per flight. They didn't quote for international flights, but as these flights usually have fewer seats and carry more fuel (a fully loaded 772-ER can hold more than 200,000 pounds of fuel) I don't know if the profit ratio would be any better. Airplanes are maintenance-heavy and expensive to fly. It's one of the reasons airlines seem to go through bankruptcy once a decade.
- There's a reason the vast majority of planes, and flights, by most airlines are in the short- to medium-distance, which use 737s, A320s, etc. Airlines get much higher profit margins on these flights, as they can carry over 200 people and only use, say, 50,000 pounds of fuel. They can also do much quicker turn around on these flights, so you may be able to squeeze two or three times the number of trips per day out of a 737 than you could a 777.
- Most airlines don't actually own the planes they fly. The lease them from one of a number of large airline leasing companies, so AA isn't paying the full price of that 777.