micheal_can
Senior Member
Why can't the demand be accommodated with larger airplanes at Pearson and an expansion of service in Hamilton? That's what I want answered.
Consider, for example, Air Canada's service to London Heathrow. The schedule for today has two 789 flights, one on a 77W and one on a 77L. Using Air Canada's seat counts from Wikipedia, that amounts to 1346 seats today to Heathrow. Let's assume that all four flights were switched to 450-seat 77Ws. That would increase the seat counts to 1800, an increase of 33.7%. Air Transat and Westjet fly to London Gatwick with smaller B763s, A310s and A332s. Upgauge those too and you can add a good bit more seats to the London area.
And what if AC needs another flight to London? Ask yourself if they really need three 37-seat and one 50-seat flights per day to Sault Ste. Marie. Would they not be better off with three 78 seat Q400 flights per day (adding 73 additional seats to Soo) and one additional slot (adding upto 450 seats) to London?
This is what I keep talking about. Pearson has plenty of room to increase capacity by the airlines there simply upgauging to existing destinations and rationalizing slots.
This doesn't really work though.
The location at Terminal 1 where Air Canada runs its flights to Sault Ste. Marie only handles small planes (Dash-8's, Q400's etc.). This is gates D1-D10.
So even if you got rid of a flight to Sault St. Marie (or Thunder Bay, London, Windsor, etc). you wouldn't be able to switch it to a larger Airbus or Boeing plane.
I am not suggesting switching Soo, TB, London, Windor flights to Airbus or Boeing. I am suggesting replacing 37 seat Dash-8-100s and 50 seat Dash-8-300s with fewer rotations of the 78 seat Q400s, which can still use the D gates. That saves landing slots.
Landing slots are not paired with specific gates. They are just landing slots. AC could then add other Boeing or Airbus narrowbody or widebody flights to other destinations operating out of other gates.
Long term, Pearson has time to discuss adding more gates for narrowbodies, so that places like Timmins and Sudbury can eventually get mainline service with the CSeries.
Letss take my current Airport of Sudbury. Currently, Air Canada flies 5 flights in and out. Now, lets say to add capacity, they cut the number to 4, but have bigger planes in. That could work, but you might then have passengers not liking those times and drive.
Porter also flies to Sudbury, so, someone might decide to just fly with them instead. Now Air Canada looses business.
You might think that people might be flying Air Canada for the connections, but with the UP, you could feasibly take Porter, then UP, then get on Westjet. That is even more loss. Removing times they fly is not a reasonable thing to suggest. Bigger planes at the same time, might work.
But this is why an airport that is close to Pearson connected with rapid transit, such as UP would work. I come in to Pickering, hope RT to Pearson to fly on the big plane. Hamilton's is too far away and has no RT to it, so it would not work.