try asking the airlines :)
2006-07-28 08:59:23
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answer #1
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answered by ~*~ Stormy Weather~*~ 4
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Right now they dont make much profit with fuel prices so high. Look at how many times an airline has went bankrupt in the past. Not all airline tickets are just a few hundred dollars. Look at how many fly in one flight, now calculate that by many flights a day. They just about hold there heads out of water with no big profits but are still operating so it is possible and it is happening.
2006-07-28 09:32:09
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answer #2
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answered by yeppers 5
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If all the fares on the plane were the cheap economy fares that would be true. But the vast price of business & first passengers subidises those in the cheaper seats.
Some of the new generation of airlines run without 1st & business. Their revenue is paid for by advertising & government subsidies- plus they only fly a very select set of routes which they know they can always sell out.
2006-07-28 09:05:37
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answer #3
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answered by Oli 3
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because the seats proper off on a flight they fee further and further - in case you watch a flight on-line and refresh it you'll see how without be conscious the seats leap from say 99p to £9.ninety 9 and so on - at particular situations of 12 months they could bypass as a lot as over £2 hundred merely to get to eire. they actually have their new bag charging scheme for each bag that receives checked in and that ought to upload as a lot as plenty as very few human beings can bypass with only a flight bag. they don't look to be shy of charging a fortune in keeping with kg over the reduce both. also the airports they used are subsidised with suggestions from their governments which probable reduces the prices too them.
2016-11-26 21:10:38
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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ok, 1 ticket - $100-$400, seats per plane: 100+
dollars per flight: $10,000-$40,000 (low estimates)
Flights per day, 1-3 -> as much as $120,000 per day.
Days required to make the cost of the plane: 100
Of course this requires that the seats always be filled, and ignores cost of food, fuel, and staff, but you get the picture.
2006-07-28 09:39:54
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answer #5
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answered by John J 6
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They amortise, or spred out, costs over the life of the plane. All costs must be accounted for. Many airlines go bankrupt.
2006-07-28 09:00:33
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answer #6
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answered by helixburger 6
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I don't recall any airlines making a profit since Sept 2001?
2006-07-28 09:25:10
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answer #7
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answered by cognitively_dislocated 5
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NEW FLASH!
One flight does not pay for the aircraft.
Aircraft can fly over it's lifetime, well over 1,000,000 miles.
A full flight pays for all expenses for that flight. A profit is generated.
2006-07-28 09:03:15
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answer #8
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answered by ed 7
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they crash planes from time to time to get assurance.
try not to be in the bad flight!
2006-07-28 09:03:06
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Have you ever gone to school? Must have been a public one.
2006-07-28 09:12:57
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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