British Midland
#2
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 7,142
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Love the search function. Here you are:
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34426247
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34621977
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34475143
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34426247
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34621977
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34475143
#6
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 173
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Flew with BMI a couple of times from London to Edinburg. Ok service and seats, no complaints. Beware that if you are flying into LHR via a different airline, BMI no longer will allow to check through the luggage (as of August 2005, I've been told). For instance, flying from Boston to Heathrow on Virgin or American, we had to get our luggage in London and then BMI will check it through to Edinburgh. They used to work with Virgin to allow the luggage to be checked in all the way from Boston to Edinburgh.
Not a huge deal, and an unfortunate side effect of having to put both sides of the itinerary together as separate tickets, but something to be aware of if you are connecting through London and getting on your BMI flight there - allow enough time to grab luggage and head out to a different terminal.
Not a huge deal, and an unfortunate side effect of having to put both sides of the itinerary together as separate tickets, but something to be aware of if you are connecting through London and getting on your BMI flight there - allow enough time to grab luggage and head out to a different terminal.
#7
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 98
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I've taken BMI several times from London to Amsterdam. BMI is a discount carrier, but you get the feel of taking regular (non-discount) carrier. Aircraft is new, and flight attendants are very professional. I also like BMI because their hub is Heathrow. They are part of the Star Alliance.
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#10
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 314
Likes: 0
I used them a bunch when I lived in Cardiff. The earlier you book, the better the prices are. The only problem we had with them was coming back from Paris on a SUnday night. Flight was at 6:30 or so, and we didn't leave CDG until nearly 2:30 a.m. Their partner airline was Air Wales (Scare Wales) and they kept telling us the plane was coming from Cardiff, and still coming, just boarding, etc. We have a friend who's house is at the end of the runway, and she could see that the plane wasn't leaving. Finally, an Air Ireland plane arrived at CDG and that was what we flew home on.
Otherwise, good stuff.
Otherwise, good stuff.
#11
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 6,282
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Slight corrections. 1) Flights branded bmi baby are the low cost version; flights branded bmi (e.g. LHR-EDI) are full service & attract FF miles. 2) bmi & United are both members of the Star Alliance & you can check luggage through when using a combo of both.
#12
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 173
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Hi Caroline,
Thank you for the update - we fly to Edinburgh every other yeat and usually end up flying BMI out of Heathrow, so it's good to know the exact check through policies.
I was looking at BMI website to book tickets for our September 2006 travel and saw the following with regards to check through policies:
"Passengers with connecting journeys using separate tickets will no longer be offered the facility of through check-in or through tagging of baggage. This means that only customers on connecting flights with itineraries issued on a single ticket with one booking reference will qualify for the through check service subject to minimum connection times. This policy applies to all connecting flights (bmi to bmi, bmi to other carriers and code-share flights)."
Does the above mean that flying to London on a separate ticket on a Star Alliance carrier will qualify for a checked through luggage? I interpreted the above as a no, and decided to try a different carrier than BMI for our 2006 plans for that reason. Hopefully I misunderstood the policy...
Thank you for the update - we fly to Edinburgh every other yeat and usually end up flying BMI out of Heathrow, so it's good to know the exact check through policies.
I was looking at BMI website to book tickets for our September 2006 travel and saw the following with regards to check through policies:
"Passengers with connecting journeys using separate tickets will no longer be offered the facility of through check-in or through tagging of baggage. This means that only customers on connecting flights with itineraries issued on a single ticket with one booking reference will qualify for the through check service subject to minimum connection times. This policy applies to all connecting flights (bmi to bmi, bmi to other carriers and code-share flights)."
Does the above mean that flying to London on a separate ticket on a Star Alliance carrier will qualify for a checked through luggage? I interpreted the above as a no, and decided to try a different carrier than BMI for our 2006 plans for that reason. Hopefully I misunderstood the policy...
#13
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 6,282
Likes: 0
Hi kasperdoggie. Ah, sorry, you've evidently looked into it in more detail than I have. I'd interpret this as meaning that if you book US-UK with United plus UK domestic with bmi *at the same time*, as one booking, you can check luggage through; but if you book them separately you can't. (It seems extraordinary that this would be the cae even with 2 bmi flights, though, doesn't it ?) Is that how you interpret it ?
I've booked EDI-LHR-NAP & back for May/June, all as one booking, so I'm assuming this means we'll be able to check our bags through.
I've booked EDI-LHR-NAP & back for May/June, all as one booking, so I'm assuming this means we'll be able to check our bags through.
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BirmanCrazy
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Nov 5th, 2005 11:13 AM







