How do I read this Qantas itinerary change info?

Multi tool use
Multi tool use

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
5
down vote

favorite












I think this looks okay....but is it?



3 QF 012 S 22DEC 6 JFKSYD TK2 8 1800 0835+2 *1A/E* (time was at 18:00 08:30)
4 QF 922 S 28DEC 5 SYDCNS TK2 3 0920 1120 *1A/E* (time was at 09:35 11:35)
5 QF 703 L 01JAN 2 CNSMEL TK2 2 1305 1735 *1A/E* (time was at 11:20 15:45)
6 QF 093 L 04JAN 5 MELLAX HK2 2 1040 0610 *1A/E*
7 QF 011 L 04JAN 5 LAXJFK HK2 B 0820 1630 *1A/E*











share|improve this question























  • Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
    – mdewey
    Sep 7 at 16:45










  • Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:51






  • 2




    "I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
    – phoog
    Sep 7 at 17:14











  • You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
    – Aganju
    Sep 7 at 21:46










  • @Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
    – Henning Makholm
    Sep 7 at 22:49

















up vote
5
down vote

favorite












I think this looks okay....but is it?



3 QF 012 S 22DEC 6 JFKSYD TK2 8 1800 0835+2 *1A/E* (time was at 18:00 08:30)
4 QF 922 S 28DEC 5 SYDCNS TK2 3 0920 1120 *1A/E* (time was at 09:35 11:35)
5 QF 703 L 01JAN 2 CNSMEL TK2 2 1305 1735 *1A/E* (time was at 11:20 15:45)
6 QF 093 L 04JAN 5 MELLAX HK2 2 1040 0610 *1A/E*
7 QF 011 L 04JAN 5 LAXJFK HK2 B 0820 1630 *1A/E*











share|improve this question























  • Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
    – mdewey
    Sep 7 at 16:45










  • Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:51






  • 2




    "I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
    – phoog
    Sep 7 at 17:14











  • You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
    – Aganju
    Sep 7 at 21:46










  • @Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
    – Henning Makholm
    Sep 7 at 22:49













up vote
5
down vote

favorite









up vote
5
down vote

favorite











I think this looks okay....but is it?



3 QF 012 S 22DEC 6 JFKSYD TK2 8 1800 0835+2 *1A/E* (time was at 18:00 08:30)
4 QF 922 S 28DEC 5 SYDCNS TK2 3 0920 1120 *1A/E* (time was at 09:35 11:35)
5 QF 703 L 01JAN 2 CNSMEL TK2 2 1305 1735 *1A/E* (time was at 11:20 15:45)
6 QF 093 L 04JAN 5 MELLAX HK2 2 1040 0610 *1A/E*
7 QF 011 L 04JAN 5 LAXJFK HK2 B 0820 1630 *1A/E*











share|improve this question















I think this looks okay....but is it?



3 QF 012 S 22DEC 6 JFKSYD TK2 8 1800 0835+2 *1A/E* (time was at 18:00 08:30)
4 QF 922 S 28DEC 5 SYDCNS TK2 3 0920 1120 *1A/E* (time was at 09:35 11:35)
5 QF 703 L 01JAN 2 CNSMEL TK2 2 1305 1735 *1A/E* (time was at 11:20 15:45)
6 QF 093 L 04JAN 5 MELLAX HK2 2 1040 0610 *1A/E*
7 QF 011 L 04JAN 5 LAXJFK HK2 B 0820 1630 *1A/E*








itineraries qantas






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 7 at 16:48









Nean Der Thal

65.8k21242348




65.8k21242348










asked Sep 7 at 16:23









Ellen Scordato

261




261











  • Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
    – mdewey
    Sep 7 at 16:45










  • Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:51






  • 2




    "I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
    – phoog
    Sep 7 at 17:14











  • You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
    – Aganju
    Sep 7 at 21:46










  • @Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
    – Henning Makholm
    Sep 7 at 22:49

















  • Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
    – mdewey
    Sep 7 at 16:45










  • Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:51






  • 2




    "I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
    – phoog
    Sep 7 at 17:14











  • You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
    – Aganju
    Sep 7 at 21:46










  • @Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
    – Henning Makholm
    Sep 7 at 22:49
















Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
– mdewey
Sep 7 at 16:45




Perhaps edit to say what you think and what you are stuck with?
– mdewey
Sep 7 at 16:45












Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
– Ellen Scordato
Sep 7 at 16:51




Thank you! So, the first three lines show arr/departure timing changes on those three flights. I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?
– Ellen Scordato
Sep 7 at 16:51




2




2




"I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
– phoog
Sep 7 at 17:14





"I see no problem with the new times. Am I correct?": You haven't given us any information about your schedule, so it's hard to know whether the new times will be a problem or not. Or, perhaps I should say, what kinds of problems were you thinking about in asking the question?
– phoog
Sep 7 at 17:14













You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
– Aganju
Sep 7 at 21:46




You should remove the booking codes from the posting. Anyone in the world can log in with them and cancel or rebook your flights.
– Aganju
Sep 7 at 21:46












@Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
– Henning Makholm
Sep 7 at 22:49





@Aganju: There don't seem to be any "booking codes" here. If you're referring to JFKSYD, etc, those are the routes: JFK (John F. Kennedy International, New York, USA) to SYD (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia).
– Henning Makholm
Sep 7 at 22:49











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
2
down vote













Yes, it seems OK. There's a slight change in timings in the first three sectors, hence the 'TK' code which indicates that a confirmed sector has changed times, instead of the 'HK' which is the default code for confirmed sector.



Nothing to worry about.






share|improve this answer




















  • Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:52










  • @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
    – Nean Der Thal
    Sep 7 at 16:53

















up vote
2
down vote













As you've guessed, this is your flight itinary. It is in PNR notation, a format that airlines and travel agents use for data exchange. There is an online tool that decodes it.



There is already another answer on how to decode the fields - your case "TK2" means "timing change on this flight". Form the original times you have given, the first two segments only changed slightly, the third (number 5) will be almost 2 hours later than originally planned.



If that's okay is up to you. If you're not happy, you could reach out to Qantas if they'd re-book you onto another flight.






share|improve this answer




















    Your Answer







    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "273"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: false,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













     

    draft saved


    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f121968%2fhow-do-i-read-this-qantas-itinerary-change-info%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest






























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Yes, it seems OK. There's a slight change in timings in the first three sectors, hence the 'TK' code which indicates that a confirmed sector has changed times, instead of the 'HK' which is the default code for confirmed sector.



    Nothing to worry about.






    share|improve this answer




















    • Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
      – Ellen Scordato
      Sep 7 at 16:52










    • @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
      – Nean Der Thal
      Sep 7 at 16:53














    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Yes, it seems OK. There's a slight change in timings in the first three sectors, hence the 'TK' code which indicates that a confirmed sector has changed times, instead of the 'HK' which is the default code for confirmed sector.



    Nothing to worry about.






    share|improve this answer




















    • Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
      – Ellen Scordato
      Sep 7 at 16:52










    • @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
      – Nean Der Thal
      Sep 7 at 16:53












    up vote
    2
    down vote










    up vote
    2
    down vote









    Yes, it seems OK. There's a slight change in timings in the first three sectors, hence the 'TK' code which indicates that a confirmed sector has changed times, instead of the 'HK' which is the default code for confirmed sector.



    Nothing to worry about.






    share|improve this answer












    Yes, it seems OK. There's a slight change in timings in the first three sectors, hence the 'TK' code which indicates that a confirmed sector has changed times, instead of the 'HK' which is the default code for confirmed sector.



    Nothing to worry about.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Sep 7 at 16:51









    Nean Der Thal

    65.8k21242348




    65.8k21242348











    • Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
      – Ellen Scordato
      Sep 7 at 16:52










    • @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
      – Nean Der Thal
      Sep 7 at 16:53
















    • Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
      – Ellen Scordato
      Sep 7 at 16:52










    • @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
      – Nean Der Thal
      Sep 7 at 16:53















    Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:52




    Fantastic, thank you! This is my first time here and I am quite happy to join. Hope to contribute and help answer questions soon myself.
    – Ellen Scordato
    Sep 7 at 16:52












    @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
    – Nean Der Thal
    Sep 7 at 16:53




    @EllenScordato You can upvote the answer if you like it (click the up arrow next to the answer) and accept the answer the as well (click the tick mark).
    – Nean Der Thal
    Sep 7 at 16:53












    up vote
    2
    down vote













    As you've guessed, this is your flight itinary. It is in PNR notation, a format that airlines and travel agents use for data exchange. There is an online tool that decodes it.



    There is already another answer on how to decode the fields - your case "TK2" means "timing change on this flight". Form the original times you have given, the first two segments only changed slightly, the third (number 5) will be almost 2 hours later than originally planned.



    If that's okay is up to you. If you're not happy, you could reach out to Qantas if they'd re-book you onto another flight.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      As you've guessed, this is your flight itinary. It is in PNR notation, a format that airlines and travel agents use for data exchange. There is an online tool that decodes it.



      There is already another answer on how to decode the fields - your case "TK2" means "timing change on this flight". Form the original times you have given, the first two segments only changed slightly, the third (number 5) will be almost 2 hours later than originally planned.



      If that's okay is up to you. If you're not happy, you could reach out to Qantas if they'd re-book you onto another flight.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        As you've guessed, this is your flight itinary. It is in PNR notation, a format that airlines and travel agents use for data exchange. There is an online tool that decodes it.



        There is already another answer on how to decode the fields - your case "TK2" means "timing change on this flight". Form the original times you have given, the first two segments only changed slightly, the third (number 5) will be almost 2 hours later than originally planned.



        If that's okay is up to you. If you're not happy, you could reach out to Qantas if they'd re-book you onto another flight.






        share|improve this answer












        As you've guessed, this is your flight itinary. It is in PNR notation, a format that airlines and travel agents use for data exchange. There is an online tool that decodes it.



        There is already another answer on how to decode the fields - your case "TK2" means "timing change on this flight". Form the original times you have given, the first two segments only changed slightly, the third (number 5) will be almost 2 hours later than originally planned.



        If that's okay is up to you. If you're not happy, you could reach out to Qantas if they'd re-book you onto another flight.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Sep 7 at 17:07









        averell

        1615




        1615



























             

            draft saved


            draft discarded















































             


            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f121968%2fhow-do-i-read-this-qantas-itinerary-change-info%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest













































































            bWTZVy QCa1ivF XpfKd,u b3,oxAcW6b7LS1,KAGkiK4h3QDYSMoi
            aTN Yf MthXY uQ5i iV,HJeidOhGoJCN,3P,yzxCflHzSr0d7v8bqM WPkeAB,W RTEHQs,sRSmfOs6,72B eKNl

            Popular posts from this blog

            How to check contact read email or not when send email to Individual?

            How many registers does an x86_64 CPU actually have?

            Displaying single band from multi-band raster using QGIS