winglets747
Junior Member
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2011
- Posts
- 28
There is a new way to fly around regional Australia, and like with most new things lately, it is with Virgin Australia.
Well, in this case, Virgin Australia and Perth-based Skywest. The two announced their partnership in January and in February announced an order for ATR72-500s and -600s. The -500 and -600 are relatively the same in terms of configuration and range, but the -600 features an all glass coughpit and newer design interior. Undoubtedly Virgin would have preferred to only have -600s, but Virgin's planned launch date was May, before the first -600 was due to be certified and delivered to launch customer Royal Air Maroc (plus early -600 delivery slots were hard to get).
The Virgin/Skywest deal was four -500s (three delivered so far), four -600s (to be delivered starting next year), and options on five -600s. Leasing company "Aviation" owns the aircraft, which are operated by Skywest for Virgin -- an arrangement conducted as Virgin did not have the time and resources, particularly pilot training, to launch its own operation. This deal has since caused some friction between Virgin and Skywest as their CEOs disagree over how/where the ATRs should be deployed. Virgin envisions one day operating its ATRs by itself without Skywest, with some potentially interesting tie-ins and synergies with Air New Zealand, who last week ordered 12 ATR72-600s to complement its -500 fleet and is keen to work with Virgin. (Disclosure: I wrote the articles linked to.)
The May EIS quietly and with no public explanation slipped five months to last week. (Imagine if this was Qantas and/or the 787.)
Booking
I booked my ticket I booked my ticket the day ATR flights were announced in August. I briefly contemplated going on the first revenue service (Brisbane-Gladstone) but a 6am departure entailed flying up the night before, logistics and costs I did not like. (Judging from this trip report, however, the first flight was pushed back to mid-morning.)I then considered one of the inaugurals on Wednesday to Port Macquarie, but I thought I ought to spend some time wherever I end up going and may as well wait until the weekend. Besides, this was only a dainty ATR, not an A330 (for which I was on the inaugural flight for, both the first SYD-PER and PER-SYD).
From there my quest became figuring out which ATR flights with what positioning flights (I live in MEL) were the best combination and I settled on SYD-PQQ-SYD. A SYD-CBR sector was tempting, but with such a short flight time I thought I wouldn't get a full ATR experience, and Gladstone did not pique my interest. I ended up deciding to use 18,200 Velocity points as the fares, relative to distance flown, were high and I seldom have the chance to use my Velocity points as the routes I typically fly have cheaper fares on Tiger and Jetstar (sorry elite-card-wielding folks, but if there's one thing I've learned from writing about airlines, it's that they and their services are all marketing of commoditised products, and I'm not giving in).
Check-in
I checked in online but when I went to the airport to print my boarding pass (I like real boarding passes, not sheets of A4 paper, thanks) the kiosk gave me an unspecified error. There were only a few people ahead of me in the human check-in queue, not bad for nearly 4pm on a Friday afternoon. I politely explained my situation and gave my ID to the check-in woman, who without uttering a word, explanation, or apology gave me my boarding pass and sent me on my way. (Perhaps she needed one of the sugar-infused cupcakes from the inaugural.) Curiously, on my way to security I noticed the premium check-in queue was significantly longer than the non-premium queue.
I was perplexed to discover my boarding pass made no mention the flight was operated by Skywest. For reference, Qantas boarding passes do offer this disclosure. This would be a big no-no in the US, where there has been greater regulatory oversight of transparency of flights operated by another carrier since the Colgan Air crash. Virgin does, however, denote with an orange square Skywest-operated flights for sale on its website. Qantas for Jetconnect and QantasLink uses the same red triangle as for the mainline service. It is only when you click on the flight number the pop-up box says the flight is operated by another airline. I have no problem at all with airlines using subsidiaries, be they Skywest or Jeet Kainect, but transparency is needed.
Boarding
Boarding was at gate 31, in the corner of Virgin's pier. Boarding commenced with the special folks and then rows 1-10, which seemed to cause minor confusion to people used to boarding from the rear. The ATR72-500 boards only from the rear as the luggage hold is at the front of the aircraft. The -600 has a similar arrangement although with an optional front door as well. (I don't know if Virgin has elected for the front passenger door on its -600s.)
On the tarmac was a small trolley for bags that were too big for the cabin to go in the hold. I was in the middle of the boarding queue and no bags had been placed in the trolley yet. On one side was a transparent folder with Virgin-branded luggage tags specifying "ATR" in the centre of the tag (will have to ask for one on my way back), and on the other side a scale, presumably to weigh the bags going in the (aft?) hold for weight and balance purposes.
Here are some pics of VH-FVI ("Mission Beach") taken before ground staff told me I couldn't take pics on the tarmac. (Oh, sorry, I didn't know.
)
Continued under next post
Well, in this case, Virgin Australia and Perth-based Skywest. The two announced their partnership in January and in February announced an order for ATR72-500s and -600s. The -500 and -600 are relatively the same in terms of configuration and range, but the -600 features an all glass coughpit and newer design interior. Undoubtedly Virgin would have preferred to only have -600s, but Virgin's planned launch date was May, before the first -600 was due to be certified and delivered to launch customer Royal Air Maroc (plus early -600 delivery slots were hard to get).
The Virgin/Skywest deal was four -500s (three delivered so far), four -600s (to be delivered starting next year), and options on five -600s. Leasing company "Aviation" owns the aircraft, which are operated by Skywest for Virgin -- an arrangement conducted as Virgin did not have the time and resources, particularly pilot training, to launch its own operation. This deal has since caused some friction between Virgin and Skywest as their CEOs disagree over how/where the ATRs should be deployed. Virgin envisions one day operating its ATRs by itself without Skywest, with some potentially interesting tie-ins and synergies with Air New Zealand, who last week ordered 12 ATR72-600s to complement its -500 fleet and is keen to work with Virgin. (Disclosure: I wrote the articles linked to.)
The May EIS quietly and with no public explanation slipped five months to last week. (Imagine if this was Qantas and/or the 787.)
Booking
I booked my ticket I booked my ticket the day ATR flights were announced in August. I briefly contemplated going on the first revenue service (Brisbane-Gladstone) but a 6am departure entailed flying up the night before, logistics and costs I did not like. (Judging from this trip report, however, the first flight was pushed back to mid-morning.)I then considered one of the inaugurals on Wednesday to Port Macquarie, but I thought I ought to spend some time wherever I end up going and may as well wait until the weekend. Besides, this was only a dainty ATR, not an A330 (for which I was on the inaugural flight for, both the first SYD-PER and PER-SYD).
From there my quest became figuring out which ATR flights with what positioning flights (I live in MEL) were the best combination and I settled on SYD-PQQ-SYD. A SYD-CBR sector was tempting, but with such a short flight time I thought I wouldn't get a full ATR experience, and Gladstone did not pique my interest. I ended up deciding to use 18,200 Velocity points as the fares, relative to distance flown, were high and I seldom have the chance to use my Velocity points as the routes I typically fly have cheaper fares on Tiger and Jetstar (sorry elite-card-wielding folks, but if there's one thing I've learned from writing about airlines, it's that they and their services are all marketing of commoditised products, and I'm not giving in).
Check-in
I checked in online but when I went to the airport to print my boarding pass (I like real boarding passes, not sheets of A4 paper, thanks) the kiosk gave me an unspecified error. There were only a few people ahead of me in the human check-in queue, not bad for nearly 4pm on a Friday afternoon. I politely explained my situation and gave my ID to the check-in woman, who without uttering a word, explanation, or apology gave me my boarding pass and sent me on my way. (Perhaps she needed one of the sugar-infused cupcakes from the inaugural.) Curiously, on my way to security I noticed the premium check-in queue was significantly longer than the non-premium queue.

I was perplexed to discover my boarding pass made no mention the flight was operated by Skywest. For reference, Qantas boarding passes do offer this disclosure. This would be a big no-no in the US, where there has been greater regulatory oversight of transparency of flights operated by another carrier since the Colgan Air crash. Virgin does, however, denote with an orange square Skywest-operated flights for sale on its website. Qantas for Jetconnect and QantasLink uses the same red triangle as for the mainline service. It is only when you click on the flight number the pop-up box says the flight is operated by another airline. I have no problem at all with airlines using subsidiaries, be they Skywest or Jeet Kainect, but transparency is needed.
Boarding
Boarding was at gate 31, in the corner of Virgin's pier. Boarding commenced with the special folks and then rows 1-10, which seemed to cause minor confusion to people used to boarding from the rear. The ATR72-500 boards only from the rear as the luggage hold is at the front of the aircraft. The -600 has a similar arrangement although with an optional front door as well. (I don't know if Virgin has elected for the front passenger door on its -600s.)
On the tarmac was a small trolley for bags that were too big for the cabin to go in the hold. I was in the middle of the boarding queue and no bags had been placed in the trolley yet. On one side was a transparent folder with Virgin-branded luggage tags specifying "ATR" in the centre of the tag (will have to ask for one on my way back), and on the other side a scale, presumably to weigh the bags going in the (aft?) hold for weight and balance purposes.

Here are some pics of VH-FVI ("Mission Beach") taken before ground staff told me I couldn't take pics on the tarmac. (Oh, sorry, I didn't know.




Continued under next post