Originally posted by Juliet
Sorry Nick,
I was referring to the general overall view on this topic.....
My apologies.. I thought you were just replying to me. It's my ego you know..[:I][:I]
Nick
Originally posted by Juliet
Sorry Nick,
I was referring to the general overall view on this topic.....
Originally posted by Nottingham NickOriginally posted by Juliet
Sorry Nick,
I was referring to the general overall view on this topic.....
My apologies.. I thought you were just replying to me. It's my ego you know..[:I][:I]
Nick
Originally posted by p17blo
Nick, re your comment about FC holder physical abilities. You could never account for changes such as broken legs etc which would make the system a little unreliable.
Originally posted by Nottingham Nick
My view is that exit rows should be available in advance for FC members to buy. It would be quite easy for VS to make a note in your FC profile as to whether you are physically able to operate the doors
Originally posted by RichardMannion
flight where I am told that all the PE exit rows have gone, and then pointed out my ticket SEQ is #1, and suddenly the exit row has appeared. For those that don't know, the SEQ number is the order in which you checked in for the flight. Next time you get your boarding card, tae a look and you will see what sequence you checked in. Handy to know for other airlines, when you are told that there are no aisle seats left and you are a very low SEQ number (simple maths on number of rows, and fcring in how much of the plane is available for pre-booking).
Originally posted by Lipstick[i]
Lol i don't really see what the sequence number has to do with anything.
Early sequence numbers are always OLCI or thru-checked pax from another destination. Sequence numbers do no correlate to seat availability.
More often than not by the time the early sequence numbers turn up for bag drop/boarding cards there are only a few seats left because they do what OLCI is intended for which is you not having to be at the airport really early, and all other seats have been allocated.
The same goes for thru check pax - most pax only leave a couple of hours transfer time and by the time they get to FCC all the better seats have gone.
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