International Hitman wrote:griffinm7 wrote:It's a real shame that you now have to take the first leg. A year ago I booked AMS-LGW-LAS-LGW-AMS and just showed up for my Virgin flight from Gatwick. Didn't have any problems at all. This time around I booked DUB-LGW-MCO-LGW-DUB and discovered the DUB portions of my flight showing in 'my bookings'. It never used to be this way, but it looks like they closed that loophole.
griffinm7 -- As Honey Lamb has said to your post in another thread http://v-flyer.com/forum/index.php?f=4& ... =viewtopic you were extremely lucky that your previous flight was not cancelled when you failed to fly the first leg --- this was never a loophole, I can only imagine your supposed arrival and check-in at LGW were so close that your non attendance on the BA AMS-LGW had not been updated on VS systems --- any non attendance of first part of a flight would automatically cancel the entire ticket -- in certain circumstances this can be waived but would require lengthy negotiations/discusions
I certainly would not want to risk testing this theory - especially on an airline that VS codeshare with (so there is a good chance VS's system would update very fast when you failed to show for the flight from AMS / BRU).
Some years ago, I flew AA from BHX to ORD. Me & my Dad were both on reward tickets in Y, but his plans changed before travel & he now needed to fly the outbound leg on business, so work booked him to travel in J on the outbound flight. At checkin at BHX, I was "moved" to J by the station manager & boarding passes issued for the onward flight from ORD. In the time we took to fly to ORD, AA's system had noticed that neither of us had used the outbound reward tickets & the remainder of the itinerary was cancelled. Red lights and non-magic beeps at the gate when we tried to board the onward flight.