oops, Leann32 - sorry to make a near duplicate post! Must have been typing at the same time
Yikes, I assume an M81 (that is the name on my ressie) is the plane that they are going to take out of service? We have a flight for the end of October for the 7:55am(MKE) and 7:20pm(MCO) flights. We purchased insurance, however because we used cc reward points for three of them only one of them will be covered should we have to rebook. Oh, I sure hope and pray this works out ok.
Thu, Apr 23
Northwest Airlines 7852
operated by Midwest Airlines -- YX 0890
![]()
Depart: 7:55am Arrive: 11:30am
Milwaukee, WI (MKE)
Orlando, FL (MCO)
Non-stop Boeing Douglas MD-81
Return
Sun, May 3
Northwest Airlines 7849
operated by Midwest Airlines -- YX 0891
![]()
Depart: 12:15pm Arrive: 2:05pm
Orlando, FL (MCO)
Milwaukee, WI (MKE)
Non-stop Boeing Douglas MD-81
$176
+ $24 taxes & fees = $200
per person
Thu, Apr 23
Midwest Airlines 890
![]()
Depart: 7:55am Arrive: 11:30am
Milwaukee, WI (MKE)
Orlando, FL (MCO)
Non-stop Boeing Douglas MD-81
Return
Sun, May 3
Midwest Airlines 891
![]()
Depart: 12:15pm Arrive: 2:05pm
Orlando, FL (MCO)
Milwaukee, WI (MKE)
Non-stop Boeing Douglas MD-81
$240
+ $25 taxes & fees = $265
per person
Check this out from Cheaptickets. These are the same flights I purchased tickets for our trip in April/May '09 for $1022 (4 @ $236+tax/fees). Very interesting that they are now being sold for cheaper on NWA but its the same flight! Are they trying to acquire the Midwest Airlines's customer loyalty so that it will make it easier in the future when they disolve Midwest into NWA????
Private equity firm TPG Capital in January completed its roughly $450 million acquisition of Midwest Air Group Inc. and paid 53 percent of the purchase price. Northwest Airlines Corp. owns the rest.
And?![]()
It's certainly not news that Northwest is a partner in the group that purchased Midwest. That's been all over the news since last year.
The Midwest flights are non stop to MCO, too. And they still say they are being flown on MD-80's. The same flight number can't be on two different types of planes.
That's the very definition of a codeshare. NW doesn't fly the route itself but offers it on a Midwest plane as a codeshare with Midwest. Notice that the documentation is that Midwest is flying the route, not NWA. Unless I missed something, that's all I've read so far for the MKE/MCO routes we're talking about.Can it be a codeshare if this flight never existed for NWA? It's not like Midwest is borrowing seats on a previously scheduled NWA flight. To my knowledge, albeit very limited, NWA didn't have any non-stop flights from MKE-MCO. I think this is more significant. In my mind, NWA is adding flights to cover the previous MD80 leisure destinations Midwest is eliminating. Midwest will now "share" that plane--selling tickets but at a premium. This accomplishes a few things. It keeps the dollars in house to block out competing airlines like Airtran. It keeps the current Midwest ticket holders happy by providing a very similar flight schedule/experience. It will eventually make the brand loyalty transfer more successful.
The Midwest flights are non stop to MCO, too. And they still say they are being flown on MD-80's. (snip)
OK - replying to myself is poor form, but I thought I should update.
I just went back to Orbitz to see if it still shows a 757 for the NW codeshare in Nov, and it doesn't - now the flights are listed as M81s![]()
Not that this really means anything - it could have been a misprint originally, or someone could have instructed them to wait to release a change in aircraft until Friday (yes, probably wishful thinking).
Who knows? 1 more day & hopefully things will be much clearer...