bambbbam2 said:I still think people are better off just buying two seats through QF phone sales. You get twice the FF points (according to the Qantas FAQ's) and if you can put the armrest up TWICE the seat width.
if you're getting Y meals anyway.. why is Y+ better than this idea?
bambbbam2 said:I still think people are better off just buying two seats through QF phone sales. You get twice the FF points (according to the Qantas FAQ's) and if you can put the armrest up TWICE the seat width.
if you're getting Y meals anyway.. why is Y+ better than this idea?
And that makes Y+ a much superior product to WHY?simongr said:For clarity - on BA it is Y food and on QF it is Y+ food.
That's something I had not noticed before ...What will the Premium Economy baggage allowance be?
Hand baggage: 2 pieces as per First and Business
Checked baggage: There is no additional checked baggage
allowance.
JohnK said:And that makes Y+ a much superior product to WHY?
JohnK said:We do not know what the catering is going to be like for Y+ and I can imagine that it is only going to be marginally better than
milehighclub said:The catering is identical to the business class offerings domestically and across the ditch. The meals served in the casserole dish.
So not a lot of value added to the Y+ product over the WHY product when considering the quality of the catering offered.milehighclub said:The catering is identical to the business class offerings domestically and across the ditch. The meals served in the casserole dish.
With the amount of flying you do at the moment it would not be difficult to maintain QF Platinum and with this status comes the benefit of an almost guaranteed exit row seat. No great difference between exit row in WHY and normal Y+ seat.simongr said:Pesonally when I flew SYD-BKK with mrssimongr I paid for WT+ and it was almost twice as expensive as WT - at 6' 2" with arthritis in my hips and shot knees I would rather choose not to fly than fly long haul in whY.
Business Spectator - Air travel business not slowing: QantasQantas today launched its first aircraft fitted with its premium economy cabin, a B747-400, which offers a larger seat and increased service.
Mr Borghetti said premium economy is aimed at the older generation of traveller who wants to pay a bit more but won't pay for business class, as well as business travellers.
The first plane with premium economy will fly from Sydney to Hong Kong on Friday.
Qantas will introduce the class on all of its 747s April next year and all of the Airbus A380 super jumbos will have premium economy.
Sixty seats have been taken out of the economy class to fit the 32 premium economy seats.
The premium economy seat has a pitch of up to 42 inches, a 19.5 inch seat width and a nine inch recline, compared to economy which has a 31 inch pitch, an 18.1 inch width and a six inch recline.
"It's about twice the yield of economy," Mr Borghetti said.
Asked why Qantas is charging more for the seats than it needs to break even, Mr Borghetti said "we wouldn't be doing it if it wasn't profitable".
He said despite another interest rate rise this week, he believed certain Australians were prepared to pay more for travel.
"Do we think people will still buy it? Yes we do.
"Certainly the indications on our forward bookings is proving that - and interestingly in the last week or so with all the things that have happened with the increase rates we haven't seen a slowdown."
JohnK said:With the amount of flying you do at the moment it would not be difficult to maintain QF Platinum and with this status comes the benefit of an almost guaranteed exit row seat. No great difference between exit row in WHY and normal Y+ seat.
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It did not nothing of the sort... VH-OED operated QF127 yesterday (5MAR). VH-OJK simply operated a repositioning service.Standby[FONT=Arial said:]it actually flew QF127 yesterday and is doing QF1 today (I must clear my emails faster)
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