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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message -septe mber.org, at 19:06:49 on Sat, 28 Oct 2017, Recliner remarked: It seems that even back then, airlines had alliances, but were more open about code-shared flights than they are today. https://www.flightstats.com is pretty transparent about codeshares. It even tells you which company operates the flight (rather than markets it). eg: "Operated by (YV) Mesa Airlines on behalf of (AA) American Airlines, a codeshare flight by the following airlines: (GF) Gulf Air, (AS) Alaska Airlines, (BA) British Airways" Yes, you can usually find out, and sometimes the flight number gives it away, but The main issue I've had reported to me (Virgin codeshare, at Gatwick again) is which desk to check in at when the operator and codeshare are in different terminals. Yes, that can be very confusing. many pax are still surprised to discover whose metal they'll be flying on. More recently on a Delta flight to the USA which turned out to be operated by AF. However, the shorter the flight number, the more likely it's not a codeshare from someone else. Yes, four digit flight numbers are a clue it's a code-share. |
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