I am interested in the feelings of others as to whether a Boeing 737 is an appropriate plane for cross Tasman travel.
It appears that both Qantas and Air New Zealand are coming to regard the Trans Tasman flights as more like domestic flights.
However I do not find the 737, or A320 comfortable for such flights.
Coming back from Auckland to Melbourne the flight is some 4 hours.
For this time J seats might be comfortable, but there are not many of them.
I find the 3x3 configuration very cramped for the length of the flight.
In addition the 737 can't fly as fast as larger planes, so the trip takes longer. And queues for the toilets become horrendous.
Just my thoughts.
I like wide body for TT as well, which is why I would prefer to take a 763 service if I can.
On one side of the argument, AKL-MEL
is about 4 hours-ish. The longest domestic flights in Australia are around 5 hours or so, which are the xx_-PER, xx_-BME and xx_-KTA flights, where xx_ is an airport on the Eastern seaboard (even the converse flights with favourable winds are still over 4 hours). Whilst most of the flights xx_-PER are widebody aircraft, certainly those to/from BME and KTA are mostly 738 aircraft. (I flew QF651 recently which was BNE-PER on a 738).
So it seems the logic of 737s on TT are justified in that sense.
Of course, just because "it's been done like that before" doesn't mean that it's the right/best way to do it! And of course QF aren't the only ones to do something like this!
Flying MH some time ago I had to endure MNL-KUL and KUL-TPE (return) on an MH 734. I was too young to care then (this about 7 years before I found FT or AFF), but there you go.
Queues for toilets? Only really a problem (a) after the meal, (b) during flu season, or (c) when the main is curry or contains eggs. And even then, in all three cases, this is only sometimes. You could also try and score a front row seat in Y, where in many cases you could try and use the J bathroom. (Just make sure many people don't follow suit, otherwise the CSM might just get p***ed off and ban Y pax from using the said bathroom.)
I find that if I sleep on a flight, I don't really care too much for the seat. The challenge is can you sleep on a flight.
Failing that LA offers AKL-SYD on an A340-300 - the seating looks a bit cramped-ish in Y but absolutely gorgeous room in J; the disadvantage is that the flight leaves at a
most ungodly time of the morning.
Another AKL-SYD option would be EK, of which I believe some of the services have now converted to A380 (for, if I hear correctly, AKL-SYD-DXB).
Of course, if you just want AKL-MEL direct, then those options don't help your cause.