PDA

View Full Version : The minutia of an airline merger (NYT)



pgengler
2011-05-19, 11:40 AM
NYT: Delta-Northwest Merger’s Long and Complex Path (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/19/business/19air.html)


How many chimes should pilots ring to signal the plane is about to land — two or four? Should flight attendants first pour drinks into a cup or just hand over the can?

...

All airlines have their own way of doing things, developed over time and through labor negotiations. All have specific working rules, flying procedures, maintenance schedules and computer programs. And all have their own cultures. Delta always thought of itself as the gracious host. Hence its flight attendants poured the requested drinks. Northwest was the practical carrier; its attendants just handed over the can.

...

Delta’s chief information officer, Theresa Wise, said the airline had to merge 1,199 computer systems down to about 600, including one — a component within the airline’s reservation system — dating from 1966.

...

Pilots at Delta, for instance, used to ring the cabin bell four times as they began their final approach, while those at Northwest rang it twice. The merged airline now signals just two times.

....

No decision, seemingly, was too small. Before the merger, Delta used to cut its limes in 10 slices while Northwest cut them 16 ways. The lime debate was even mentioned at a meeting attended by Mr. Anderson, the chief executive, who was told it saved Northwest about $500,000 a year. In the end, Delta stuck with its 10 slices. But the airline also realized that it had been loading more limes on its flights than it needed. So it is now carrying fewer limes.

...

moose135
2011-05-19, 11:59 AM
The lime debate...
I heard it got more heated than an A.net Airbus vs. Boeing debate! :tongue:

hiss srq
2011-05-21, 05:28 AM
Little operational intracacies like cabin chimes become big deals when you are a crew member. Placement of items in cabins and cockpits vary greatly from airplane to airplane. Even the same aircraft type might have very different configurations. For example, United's 757 and 767 fleet has the RA tape while Continental's fleet does not, they use a numeric display for RA that is located on the PFD. Another interesting example is Delta's 767 and 757 doors... The door and emergency equipment config's are very varied across the fleet as a result of picking up airplanes from different carriers.