The A380 and the Business Traveler
The opening of the
London Business Travel Show this week should have been
dominated by the introduction of the Airbus A380 in
airline service. Singapore Airlines would have been
the focus of attention. Singapore will be at the show,
in the VIP lounge, as part of Star Alliance (Air
Canada, Air New Zealand, ANA All Nippon Airways,
Asiana Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Austrian Arrows,
bmi British Midland, Lauda Air, LOT Polish Airlines,
Lufthansa, SAS Scandinavian Airlines, Singapore
Airlines, South African Airways, Spanair, Swiss
International, TAP Portugal, Thai Airways, United
Airlines, US Airways). The airline has
introduced its 30" wide business class
seats, to be used on the A380s, on its most
recently introduced Boeing 777s.
In fact the
Toulouse-built Airbus, British-companies supplied (60%
of the aircraft plus the captain on its first official
passenger flight), A380 will still be a major subject
of conversation for two reasons. Firstly the 12-month
delay (from the last delay) with its introduction, and
secondly, some proper first hand comment following the
super jumbo's maiden flight last week with actual
airline customers, albeit the press.
This followed the
aircraft's certification by European (EASA) and US
(FAA) air safety authorities. We were privileged to
take part in the demo flight, click here to read the
review..
What everyone really
wants to hear at Business Travel Show is what the
aircraft is like to fly in and how it will fit into
the business travel scene.
With regard to
passenger comfort it is extremely quiet on take-off,
both inside and outside, a full load and maximum fuel
not expected to make much difference. In terms of
accommodation it will be much the status quo with
regard to premium classes, although the extreme width
compared with the rather cramped front end of a Boeing
747, will give opportunities for imaginative airlines
to be perhaps a trifle flamboyant with their
offerings.
The big winners are
those travelling in what is traditionally called "the
back-end" which in this case could be on the main
deck, or upstairs according to the cabin layout
decided upon by the airline. No carrier has yet
unveiled its plans, but it is thought that some of the
13 airlines who have ordered the aircraft will put
first and business class passengers only on the upper
deck, whilst others will split the different cabin
grades over both floors. The aircraft will be offered
with two sets of stairs, a wide 'grand staircase' at
the front, and a neat curved effort at the back, a
quantum leap from the spiral stair on the first 747s.
On the main deck 'Y' class customers will be seated
3+4+3 with 18.5" wide so called space saver seats for
a typical 500-seat three-class layout, with generous
32" (81cm) legroom. Compare that with 17.5" (44.5cm)
and 29" (73.7cm) layout on most current Jumbos.
However it is those upstairs that benefit with the
steep curvature of the cabin wall not really allowing
for the seats to the extremities.
The net result is the
introduction of floor level window storage boxes, also
offering extra table top space. The outcome is a very
comfortable 2+4+2 layout, easily the most relaxing
cabin fit yet devised for economy long haul air
travel.
For the business
traveller, given a choice, do you take the A380,
without doubt the most relaxing aircraft yet devised
once in the air.? The alternatives are taking a
smaller aircraft, definitely more noisy, but probably
with less hassle on the ground, fewer others trying to
get through security, customs and
immigration; a single class service,
possibly from another airport; or the ultimate,
an executive jet.
We believe that the
battle will be won not in the air but on the ground.
Virgin Atlantic (an A380 customer who has not shown
its hand yet) has set the standard with its Heathrow
Clubhouse and Revivals lounges. But that airline has
its problems due to T3 access, "Slowtrack" security
and the inevitable long walk to the gate. Qatar has
built its own premium class dedicated terminal at
Doha. In fact it is Luton Airport, of all places,
which now has the easiest and best departure facility
for normal fare paying business travel passengers -
the Silverjet lounge.
Is the future going to
be a battle between David and Goliath? That the
Airbus A380 is a technical success there is no doubt.
It's going to be around for at least 50 years and will
clearly work well in terms of high density air travel.
The question at the Business Travel Show is will it
succeed in the world of the business
traveller?.
Feb. 12