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#1
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International airline tickets?
Hi all
I am looking to go to Australia next year. Of course I am need of an international airline ticket. Any recommendations on site to purchase these. Also someone suggested flying to San Fran. or LAX and then spending the night before flying out. What do you think? Thanks Cleda N. |
#2
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International airline tickets?
Australia is a long haul from the USA. When we fly this route we always
overnight somewhere. Alternatives you may want to consider are flying Korean Air (which could, depending on the timeing) score you a free overnight in the Hilton Incheon at KAL's expense; or fling either Eva Air or China Airlines and scoring a free bunk at Taipei. All three of those Asian airlines fly from various East and West Coast ports in the US - to Australia. The main carriers on routes to Australia a QANTAS, Air NZ, V Australia, United and Delta - all of which fly to one or more of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Continental flies in via Guam to Cairns. Air Pacific and Hawaian Air also fly the route to the Australian East Coast. Fares on the route are low right now - because of intense competition; both Delta and V Australia having entered the route recently. "C.Nelson" wrote in message ... Hi all I am looking to go to Australia next year. Of course I am need of an international airline ticket. Any recommendations on site to purchase these. Also someone suggested flying to San Fran. or LAX and then spending the night before flying out. What do you think? Thanks Cleda N. |
#3
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International airline tickets?
My wife and I will be flying to Sydney ten days from now, leaving from
Austin in central Texas. According to my Qantas schedule it is 14:55 flight time LAX-SYD. a long haul indeed. I'm hoping that we can sleep at least six or seven hours of that time. I estimate that we will have been up and moving most of 36 hours from home to Sydney hotel. |
#4
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International airline tickets?
On Oct 31, 9:23*pm, " A Mate" wrote:
Australia is a long haul from the USA. When we fly this route we always overnight somewhere. Alternatives you may want to consider are flying Korean Air (which could, depending on the timeing) score you a free overnight in the Hilton Incheon at KAL's expense; or fling either Eva Air or China Airlines and scoring a free bunk at Taipei. Which is better? I have heard of Korean Air of being good, but have not anything good or bad about the rest. All three of those Asian airlines fly from various East and West Coast ports in the US - to Australia. The main carriers on routes to Australia a QANTAS, Air NZ, V Australia, United and Delta - all of which fly to one or more of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Continental flies in via Guam to Cairns. Air Pacific and Hawaian Air also fly the route to the Australian East Coast. Fares on the route are low right now - because of intense competition; both Delta and V Australia having entered the route recently. Delta is not a good option, as their return schedule gives me only 1 hour or so to connect in LAX. I have not flown internationally too much, but that sounds too tight to me. Correct me if I am wrong. Still looking for sites on the internet that offer good priced tickets for this trip. Cleda |
#5
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International airline tickets?
"C.Nelson" wrote in message ... On Oct 31, 9:23 pm, " A Mate" wrote: Australia is a long haul from the USA. When we fly this route we always overnight somewhere. Alternatives you may want to consider are flying Korean Air (which could, depending on the timeing) score you a free overnight in the Hilton Incheon at KAL's expense; or fling either Eva Air or China Airlines and scoring a free bunk at Taipei. Which is better? I have heard of Korean Air of being good, but have not anything good or bad about the rest. All three of those Asian airlines fly from various East and West Coast ports in the US - to Australia. The main carriers on routes to Australia a QANTAS, Air NZ, V Australia, United and Delta - all of which fly to one or more of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Continental flies in via Guam to Cairns. Air Pacific and Hawaian Air also fly the route to the Australian East Coast. Fares on the route are low right now - because of intense competition; both Delta and V Australia having entered the route recently. Delta is not a good option, as their return schedule gives me only 1 hour or so to connect in LAX. I have not flown internationally too much, but that sounds too tight to me. Correct me if I am wrong. Still looking for sites on the internet that offer good priced tickets for this trip. Cleda _____________ International air fares to/from the USA often permit a stay of up to 24 hours at a connection point at no extra cost. In such cases the overnight is at your expense. I've used that facility to spend a night in Chicago on my way home from Denver to London. Earlier this year I went from the UK to New Zealand and back flying Air New Zealand all the way. We stopped in Hong Kong for 4 nights on the way out and on the way back we flew Auckland/San Francisco and took 11 nights to drive down to Los Angeles and then flew home from there. Those stops and the break cost no more than flying both ways in one hit and made the whole journey much more relaxed. So, yes, I would certainly suggest stopping somewhere en route. Now, when it comes to purchasing, the internet may not be your best friend. The internet tends to assume you want to make a journey in one hit. The idea of stopping over isn't always allowed for. Even where the website has a multi stop option I've found that it doesn't always seem to permit what I want to do (certainly, at the time I booked the Air New Zealand site couldn't handle the idea that the San Francisco/Los Angeles leg wasn't going to be flown so I had to phone them). It's also the case here in the UK (and I think in the US as well) that there are agencies known as "consolidators" who negotiate fares with airlines and put together odd fare combinations that are not easily represented using a web site but who can often offer good fares or interesting routings depending on your needs. Here in the UK I'd look in the travel section of weekend newspapers for ads and then make a few phone calls. Quite apart from any issues relating to comfort etc there may be another reason for stopping over. It is quite possible to buy a ticket for the whole journey (that's what I did). However, it is also possible to buy separate tickets for separate bits of your journey and this would probably be required if you choose V Australia for the trans Pacific legs. With one ticket if you miss a flight because the inbound is delayed the inbound carrier is responsible for finding you a new flight. However, every time you buy a new ticket you enter into a new contract. Part of that contract requires you to present yourself for checkin at the correct time. If you don't the fact that your inbound flight was delayed becaomes irrelevant - the carrier you are trying to board has nothing to do with that inbound flight so it will say "tough" and may even insist you buy a new ticket with no refund on the unused ticket (they may take pity and charge a change fee or if you're really lucky not charge you at all but don't count on it). Allowing a stop where one ticket ends and the next begins allows you to build padding into the schedule. It's rare for flights to be severely delayed these days (but about once a week I notice at least one 24 hour delay at Heathow) so an overnight then meets the rest idea as well as padding between tickets. This is probably a silly suggestion - the further east you live the more it might be appropriate. Look at Round the World air fares. They can be pretty good value and might compare with the reular fare from home to Australia. Lastly, if you fly Qantas you may find that add on legs in Australia come cheaper than flying in one one airline and buying separate tickets to get around (might also apply to V Australia added to Virgin Blue flights in Oz). |
#6
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International airline tickets?
"Graham Harrison" wrote in message ... "C.Nelson" wrote in message ... On Oct 31, 9:23 pm, " A Mate" wrote: Australia is a long haul from the USA. When we fly this route we always overnight somewhere. Alternatives you may want to consider are flying Korean Air (which could, depending on the timeing) score you a free overnight in the Hilton Incheon at KAL's expense; or fling either Eva Air or China Airlines and scoring a free bunk at Taipei. Which is better? I have heard of Korean Air of being good, but have not anything good or bad about the rest. All three of those Asian airlines fly from various East and West Coast ports in the US - to Australia. The main carriers on routes to Australia a QANTAS, Air NZ, V Australia, United and Delta - all of which fly to one or more of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Continental flies in via Guam to Cairns. Air Pacific and Hawaian Air also fly the route to the Australian East Coast. Fares on the route are low right now - because of intense competition; both Delta and V Australia having entered the route recently. Delta is not a good option, as their return schedule gives me only 1 hour or so to connect in LAX. I have not flown internationally too much, but that sounds too tight to me. Correct me if I am wrong. Still looking for sites on the internet that offer good priced tickets for this trip. Cleda Over the summer we flew from Honolulu to Sydney and back on the new Qantas discount operation, JetStar. Wasn't bad at all. A group of extra charges at booking is a bit off-putting though. BTW, that's a 10-hour hop between HNL and SYD. |
#7
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International airline tickets?
"C.Nelson" wrote in message ... Hi all I am looking to go to Australia next year. Of course I am need of an international airline ticket. Any recommendations on site to purchase these. Also someone suggested flying to San Fran. or LAX and then spending the night before flying out. What do you think? Thanks Cleda N. Depends on where you're starting out if it makes sense to layover at SFO or LAX. I live in Dallas and I've flown to LAX in the morning, taken a day room at a hotel near the airport, and flown out in the evening, and I've also done it with a direct connection. My preference is the direct connection. The LAX/SFO-SYD segment is so long you will sleep even in economy class. As for fare sites, I like www.kayak.com as it compares all options, including the nonstop carriers (Delta, Qantas, United, V-Australia) and the one-stop carriers (Air Pacific thru Nadi, Fiji; Air Tahiti Nui thru Papaeete; Hawaiian thru Honolulu). At any rate, there are some pretty decent fares out there now on this route because Delta and V-Australia are new entries on the route and are trying to get established. |
#8
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International airline tickets?
Where are you flying from?
-- http://www.moviesitearchive.com On Oct 31, 3:37*pm, "C.Nelson" wrote: Hi all I am looking to go to Australia next year. Of course I am need of an international airline ticket. Any recommendations on site to purchase these. Also someone suggested flying to San Fran. or LAX and then spending the night before flying out. What do you think? Thanks Cleda N. |
#9
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International airline tickets?
On Nov 1, 6:28*pm, jessica_smith_nyc wrote:
Where are you flying from? I most likely fly from CPR (Casper, WY), but may also consider DEN. Cleda |
#10
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International airline tickets?
I have flown both Korean Air and Eva Air.
Eva Air operate new aircraft from Taipei to Australia - and have a decent Premium Economy from Taipei to mainland USA. (This year's experience). Korean Air operated OK aged but comfortable 747 between Atlanta and Seoul when I flew them - but aged Airbus aircraft from Seoul to Brisbane. (Two years ago). They may well have upgraded seating etc on the Airbus by now. Service, punctuality etc on both was good. I've not flown China Airlines - it's another Taiwanese airline, with a slightly dubious safety record. Eva Air has never had a fatal incident. Asiana Air also flies the route - but had some unfortunate incidents a few years back. Air NZ has good premium economy seating out of the USA (but not on the shortish hop of 3 hours from NZ to Austr). They partner with United (both are Star Alliance) so you may get ticketing from wherever in the States you leave. Service on Air NZ is excellent (if you like the Austr/NZ laid back friendly service style). V Australia has an application before the Civil Air regulator in Austr to link with Delta which should be decided by the end of the year. If approval is given that would be a useful option for you. Their application will fail - if it is regarded as anti-competitive (which it probably is). "C.Nelson" wrote in message ... On Oct 31, 9:23 pm, " A Mate" wrote: Australia is a long haul from the USA. When we fly this route we always overnight somewhere. Alternatives you may want to consider are flying Korean Air (which could, depending on the timeing) score you a free overnight in the Hilton Incheon at KAL's expense; or fling either Eva Air or China Airlines and scoring a free bunk at Taipei. Which is better? I have heard of Korean Air of being good, but have not anything good or bad about the rest. All three of those Asian airlines fly from various East and West Coast ports in the US - to Australia. The main carriers on routes to Australia a QANTAS, Air NZ, V Australia, United and Delta - all of which fly to one or more of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Continental flies in via Guam to Cairns. Air Pacific and Hawaian Air also fly the route to the Australian East Coast. Fares on the route are low right now - because of intense competition; both Delta and V Australia having entered the route recently. Delta is not a good option, as their return schedule gives me only 1 hour or so to connect in LAX. I have not flown internationally too much, but that sounds too tight to me. Correct me if I am wrong. Still looking for sites on the internet that offer good priced tickets for this trip. Cleda |
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