Frontier Airlines Planes Lined Up at DEN |
Monday, March 19, 2012
Pick the Next Frontier Airlines Tail
Frontier Airlines is letting customers pick the next tail image. Voting is open here and you can
win $100 gift card for participating. I like
Frontier’s animal tails; they help make looking out the window at DEN fun. It’s also a very unique marketing ploy.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
United Airlines First Class - 757 Review
Update: Flat bed 757 seat review and 757 Business First to Europe review.
Domestic First class isn’t what it used to be, even just a few years ago, but it still is far better than sitting in economy. I decided it would be fun to compare first class on United 757 against first class on United’s website. A few years ago, Northwest Airlines said that only 14% of people in the domestic first class pays first class fares. United may have a slightly higher percentage (fewer seats than NW), but I would be shocked if the number is over 20%. Since about 80% of first class passengers didn’t pay to sit there, airlines are degrading the first class experience to save money. It’s noticeable and I won’t pay to fly first domestically, but upgrades still create some excitement.
Complimentary DIRECTV® on equipped aircraft (most 90%+ of the 737 fleet). Free live tv is standard on JetBlue, while United charges $4 or $6 in coach. First Class gets it for free and has the same ear buds as in coach.
Domestic First class isn’t what it used to be, even just a few years ago, but it still is far better than sitting in economy. I decided it would be fun to compare first class on United 757 against first class on United’s website. A few years ago, Northwest Airlines said that only 14% of people in the domestic first class pays first class fares. United may have a slightly higher percentage (fewer seats than NW), but I would be shocked if the number is over 20%. Since about 80% of first class passengers didn’t pay to sit there, airlines are degrading the first class experience to save money. It’s noticeable and I won’t pay to fly first domestically, but upgrades still create some excitement.
United Airlines First Class Seat 757 |
Onboard Amenities
Extra-wide leather seats with expanded legroom. The seat is the star of the show. More width, more padding, more recline, and
more leg room. The seat is very
comfortable and something you can count on every flight. There is a wide area between the seats for
drinks and to create a bit of privacy.
Complimentary blankets available onboard for use during your
flight. Not always. Blankets are only found on overnight
flights. The blanket quality took a drop
with the Continental merger too; they are now see through and scratchy. Don’t look for a pillow day or night, those
are gone.
United Airlines First Class Seat 757 Reclined |
Meals and Beverages - (Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Post)
Pre-departure beverage service. It’s available only if the flight attendants
want to serve drinks. Continental crews
will 95% of the time, but United ones are closer to 75% of the time. Some crews offer water or OJ, other take
drink orders. You can always ask for
what you want, wine aside (flight crews don’t like opening bottles on the
ground), you should be able to get it.
Complimentary beer, wine, spirits, soft drinks and freshly
brewed coffee. All true. Same drinks as in coach, but the wine comes
in full size bottles. The new United
coffee isn’t very good though and Bailey’s isn’t always onboard to fix the
flavor issues. Drinking contests with
seatmates make the flight go much faster.
Hot towel service.
Towels are provided after takeoff.
I like to wipe down my seating area before the meal service. Towels used to become very dirty after this
process, but now they don’t find as much dirt.
This is my unscientific way to see that United is keeping their planes
much cleaner than in years past.
United Airlines First Class Seat 757 Legroom |
Meal service on flights longer than two hours. I’ve always liked airline food, even the slop
served in coach when I was a kid, so digest this review with that in mind. United flights offer two items, omelet or fruit
plate for breakfast and usually pasta/salad or a sandwich/wrap for lunch and
dinner. Some meals also come with soup,
usually excellent (bad lunch review, good lunch review). A roll or salad is
also sometimes offered. The menu changes
about every month. Desert is a baked on
board cookie. They usually serve a great
chocolate chip cookie, but every once and a while mix it up with oatmeal raisin
or white chocolate cranberry. On flights
less than 2 hours, a snack basket is passed around with nuts, chips, Clif Bars,
and bananas. Not very inspiring,
Lufthansa does a meal service on short flights, United can just as easily.
Entertainment
Audio entertainment with complimentary headsets provided on
aircraft equipped with in-flight entertainment.
Better headsets than in coach, but your own might still be better.
Complimentary DIRECTV® on equipped aircraft (most 90%+ of the 737 fleet). Free live tv is standard on JetBlue, while United charges $4 or $6 in coach. First Class gets it for free and has the same ear buds as in coach.
United Airlines 757 at EWR Sunrise |
Complimentary movies on all flights three hours or longer. This is a standard offering in all
cabins. They did show The Artist on a
recent flight, so not every inflight movie is garbage.
A complimentary copy of Hemispheres magazine. Every seat has a copy, not very special. Hemispheres is a better read than most
inflight magazines though.
Airport arrival and departure
Premier AccessSM check-in, baggage handling, boarding and
security lines (where available). 2 free
checked bags, short line for check in, security, and boarding. All nice perks for flying first.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Today's My Lucky Day
I didn't believe it myself. I'm flying out of EWR today and right after my ID was checked, an X-ray lane opened up in front of me. I was first through the line and through in less than a minute.
It's a great day to fly.
It's a great day to fly.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
United Going Retro
United Airlines launched a retro livery A320 two years ago. It looked pretty cool, but now they have one upped themselves with faxing boarding passes. I guess the assumption here is that people own stand alone fax machines that do not double as a printer. So very retro.
United Fax Ad |
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
United Airlines 777 Business Class Seat
I had to fly to White Plains, NY, for work last week. And had
a full day to travel, so I picked the most interesting flight I could
find. I was able to book an
international configuration 777 with the new lie flat beds in business. My upgrade cleared (I wish I could book
business directly) and I was flying 6A to Chicago.
United Airlines 777 Business Class Flat Seat |
The United 777 business class seats are set up with five
rows of 2x4x2 seating. The middle seats
don’t have a lot of privacy and the cabin felt a little crowded.
United Airlines 777 Business Class Flat Seat |
United Airlines’ business class seat is one of the best in the
air. It is about six feet long is truly
flat (parallel to the floor). There is a
good AVOD system with a great selection of movies, new and old. I watched Wall-E on my trip and a bit of Toy
Story 3. There is no under seat storage
with these seats, so I grabbed my Bose headphones and Economist and tossed my
bag in the overhead bin. The seat
controls are easy to understand and there is a myriad of comfortable positions
for the seat. The window seat has a good
feeling of privacy, but it is not impossible to have a conversation with your
seatmate either.
United Airlines 777 Business Class Flat Seat |
United does not have the best food in the air, usually their
good meals can be described as edible.
Breakfast was an egg McMuffin and yogurt. Not bad, but not filling or exciting
either. Continental has a much better
breakfast spread and I hope the new United keeps what Continental serves. The Bailey’s and coffee was ok, United
switched coffees and I am not a fan of the new blend (United Club coffee is
unpalatable). Increasing the ratio of
Bailey’s to coffee fixed the taste problem.
United Airlines Business Class Breakfast |
The flight went quickly and the service ended early due to
turbulence over Illinois and Wisconsin.
It was a pleasant flight staffed with a senior crew that was very
professional and enhanced the experience.
Rainy day at ORD |
It was raining in Chicago and my E170 flight to HPN was
canceled. I lost my first class seat,
had an extra three hours at ORD (I wasn’t the only one with an extended stay,
there was not a single open seat in the F gates United Club), and was stuck on
a CRJ. Still, could be worse, I could
have been in the office.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Thoughts on Around the World Travel
I was discussing around the world travel with my friend Mary at Pies Etc. the other night and an interesting contrast came up. Mary sees round the world travel as a month
long journey to explore several continents, make 8-12 stops, and fulfill
romantic travel dreams. I see it as a
way to follow in the footsteps of aviation pioneers.
Mary views RTW travel as one Atlantic crossing, one Pacific
crossing, and many stops along the way.
Something like New York to Africa to Europe to India to Southern Asia to
New Zealand to Polynesia, then back home.
Airline alliances sell tickets for these travels (Star Alliance,
oneworld, Sky Team) that give you a certain number of segments and miles flown for
a fixed price. They can be a very good
value, especially if you are going on some expensive flights. The websites are also a fun way to play at
work. Airlines also offer RTW tickets
with miles, but they offer far less.
United for example allows 5 stops (but unlimited segments) and 24,000
miles flown on their RTW ticket. The pricing
is also steep, 200,000 miles in coach, 300,000 in business, and 400,000 in
first. There are award seat limitations like a normal round trip. Depending
on your trip, it may be cheaper to assemble a collection of one way award
tickets. The ease, flight availability,
and value provided from the Star Alliance RTW ticket makes paying cash look
very tempting.
My view of RTW travel is based on the International Air Sports Federation, FAI, the final authority on setting aviation records. They define Round the World as a course
beginning and ending in the same location, the course must be a minimum
distance of 27,000 kilometers (16,778 miles), and the course must cross all
meridians. I can accomplish that in a few days using a
few airline miles, 90,000 US Airways Dividend Miles for business class actually. Mary decided she would not want to travel in
my style and lost interest in my idea, but not before laughing after thinking
of me as an aviation pioneer, wearing goggles flying over a corn field.
US Airways charges 90,000 miles to fly business class from
North America to North Asia (Japan, China, Korea, and some -stan countries). They will let you fly via the Atlantic on one
leg and Pacific on the other. You also
get a free stopover at a Star Alliance hub.
This award will meet the FAI requirements, be a fun way to see two
cities, and a chance to experience different business class products.
I’m thinking of Tokyo and Warsaw can be my stops. I was booked to go to Tokyo last year, but
my trip was to start the morning after the earthquake, so I took United’s
refund offer (the ticket was only $700 round trip from Denver through ORD,
unmatched since). My second stop has to be
a Star Alliance hub and I’d like it to be in Europe (Star’s Europe hubs are Ljubljana,
Athens, Thessaloniki, Heraklion, Rhodes, Larnaca, Vienna, Helsinki, London
Heathrow, Brussels, Zagreb, Warsaw, Frankfurt, Munich, Duesseldorf, Copenhagen,
Oslo, Stockholm, Zurich, Geneva, Basel, Lisbon, Porto, Istanbul, Ankara). I’ve already seen a few of the cities listed
and want to go somewhere new. Warsaw works
well because LOT has quite a few flights into North America with outstanding business
class availability. Austrian Airlines
has good availability from Japan and to North America, but I’ve already been to
Vienna (It’s amazing and I recommend it to all). Istanbul is tempting too with almost 100%
business class availability from NRT to IST, but almost nothing onward to North
America (United announced a new EWR-IST flight, but no business awards yet).
I’m using Continental’s website to find availability and
piece this trip together. Once I find
the flights, I’ll need to call up US Airways to book it. I’ve heard that I should allot an hour for that
call. I’ll let you know how it goes.
Labels:
Advice,
dividend miles,
Travel Tips,
United,
US Airways
Monday, February 20, 2012
Travel Tip - How to Turn Off Your TV on the Plane
Personal TV's are becoming more and more common on airplanes, great news for most, but an annoyance for some. Let me explain. United / Continental has personal TVs in most of their 737 fleet and charge coach passengers $4 (flights less than 2 hours) or $6 (flights greater than 2 hours) for the service. Some people who don't buy want to turn them off and sleep. Most people do this by pushing and holding the OFF button, lower left in the picture (it also adjusts the brightness). Some people on my last flight didn't know about that button and tried to cover the screen up with airsick bags, notebook paper, or safety cards. Others were staring at a Lincoln car commercial run in a loop for three hours. There is an easier way.
In Flight DirecTV control on Continental 737 |
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