First class sad
#46
Join Date: Feb 2009
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From a hard product perspective, the new UA F may be a generation behind the asian and middle eastern airlines, but I don't find it too terribly different (or at least adequate) compared to european long-haul F.
So is it cheaper to offer competitive food and wine as well as pajamas vs. ripping out the new F seats to add more BF product? Seems like PJs and dom would be cheaper...
So is it cheaper to offer competitive food and wine as well as pajamas vs. ripping out the new F seats to add more BF product? Seems like PJs and dom would be cheaper...
#47
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(this is all hard product of course - soft is a different story)
#48
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So I'm guessing things were awesome on UA before SMI/J because there was a ton of films offered and fantastic food? (I don't remember either of those in Y).
AFAIK, long-haul flights on CO and UA have a mid-flight or pre-arrival snack and Y on the 777s and 752s have AVOD that features up to date movies. The 767s have 8 channels on a loop. Oh, and all of the TATL planes have power in Y (EmPower on the 767s and 110v on the 757s and 777s).
Smisek has already talked about bringing the UA longhaul fleet up to snuff.
AFAIK, long-haul flights on CO and UA have a mid-flight or pre-arrival snack and Y on the 777s and 752s have AVOD that features up to date movies. The 767s have 8 channels on a loop. Oh, and all of the TATL planes have power in Y (EmPower on the 767s and 110v on the 757s and 777s).
Smisek has already talked about bringing the UA longhaul fleet up to snuff.
#49
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: SJC
Programs: UA 1K
Posts: 1,628
I've flown BF twice from Europe. The first time was old BF and excellent food and service, so the hard product sucked but the soft product was wonderful. The second time was new BF and I still didn't like the seat as much as UA's (though it had some advantages UA doesn't) and while the food was pretty good, the FA was horrible.
I'm not saying UA's overall package is better (or worse) but to state that it's universally true that CO's is better in all possible respects, and everyone knows it, is way off base.
#50
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: buffalo, ny, usa
Programs: DL DM
Posts: 120
Agree. Anyone who's flown CO's C international service knows it knocks the socks off UA's, both soft and hard products! The only reason UA sells international F and C is because many American corps and the federal government "buy/fly American". Even LH's old F seats are enhanced by the soft product which all European and Asian carriers offer, but no American one does.
i would take UA new C over LH C any time. and i do.
Last edited by nycr; Jul 15, 2011 at 9:34 pm
#51
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: SEA
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Posts: 2,596
ok i am getting a bit tired of all the absurd LH comparisons. have any of you guys actually FLOWN LH in C? with the exception of the food which is generally (but not always) better, on LH you will likely get a lie-flat (not flat bed) seat, a smaller and generally inferior ife screen, and a perfunctory and indifferent "soft product". not to mention some truly outrageous CS irrops experiences in FRA.
i would take UA new C over LH C any time. and i do.
i would take UA new C over LH C any time. and i do.
#52
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ok i am getting a bit tired of all the absurd LH comparisons. have any of you guys actually FLOWN LH in C? with the exception of the food which is generally (but not always) better, on LH you will likely get a lie-flat (not flat bed) seat, a smaller and generally inferior ife screen, and a perfunctory and indifferent "soft product". not to mention some truly outrageous CS irrops experiences in FRA.
i would take UA new C over LH C any time. and i do.
i would take UA new C over LH C any time. and i do.
#54


Join Date: Mar 2010
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Are you kidding me? First we had the boarding snafu(since fixed except for all Premiers on the carpet) the taking of meal orders by row rather than status, the disappearance of the mid flight snack in long haul J, stripped down meal trays with lots of CO soup and fewer mid-con hot entrees (a domestic issue) not to mention a big reduction in GS/1K compensation for irregular ops.
#55
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,686
Are you kidding me? First we had the boarding snafu(since fixed except for all Premiers on the carpet) the taking of meal orders by row rather than status, the disappearance of the mid flight snack in long haul J, stripped down meal trays with lots of CO soup and fewer mid-con hot entrees (a domestic issue) not to mention a big reduction in GS/1K compensation for irregular ops.
#57

Join Date: Jun 2007
Programs: UA, AA, AF, IB
Posts: 388
I do not think so, at least not until last month. CO 752s have a very reduced movie/tv program options available compared to a 777. The AVOD options on the 752 are pretty poor.
#58

Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 2,324
well as usual you have the "I walked through it on my way off the plane", "saw it on Google images", " heard about it from flyertalk" - crowd deriding united first and calling for it to be dismantled, questioning its viability, and even trying to make it comparable to CO business class. Read:People who have never flown it, and seem to know everything there is to know about it. How exactly you can make sweeping generalized comments using overblown descriptors when you've never even sat in the seat is beyond me.
3-cabin intl. service worked for UA. Their demand base could support it. They made money off of it - and unfortunately smb123's stale argument falls flat the second we realize again that UA invested hundereds of millions not even 4 years ago to retrofit the entire intl. widebody fleet into 3-cabin service - even the 763s. What, did they just do this for show? give me a break. and leave the "conclusions" about the hard product to people who have actually flown the product.
The OP may not like it, but for every negative there is a positive one out there. If you want my opinion, it is apologist COmmand who are usually the ones pushing for the ididea of their "glorious, no fault" CO BF product (which is no first class suite by any stretch of the imagination) to be implemented systemeide, to hell with any of the factual ground that UA actually sells those F suits amd makes money off of them. Also, funny how we forgot, in this discussion about how awful and indefensible United First is and how mug CO can "teach" UA in premium cabins, that ee fforget ten years ago, UA was the airline with flat beds.on the front of the aircraft, even sporting (non)advanced video on demand - CO had recliners and nothing more. Now they have flat beds in C and we believe the product is.comparable to a firlrst class suite? Sorry to say, but I strongly disagree.
Its also conviniently "forgotten" that what worked for legacy CO, a carrier with two and half hubs flying into many more smaller intl. destinations that could and would never support F inventory, is not the same airline now that UA's more premium-intensive intl. saturation in large markets has been stiched on. Like it or not, F is being kept around because it makes.money, make no mistake. The people who have never sat in an F suite, who rely on others opinions from the "interwebz" are some of the last in any sort of position to describe the product with sweping negative hyperbole, much less call for it to be dismantled.
3-cabin intl. service worked for UA. Their demand base could support it. They made money off of it - and unfortunately smb123's stale argument falls flat the second we realize again that UA invested hundereds of millions not even 4 years ago to retrofit the entire intl. widebody fleet into 3-cabin service - even the 763s. What, did they just do this for show? give me a break. and leave the "conclusions" about the hard product to people who have actually flown the product.
The OP may not like it, but for every negative there is a positive one out there. If you want my opinion, it is apologist COmmand who are usually the ones pushing for the ididea of their "glorious, no fault" CO BF product (which is no first class suite by any stretch of the imagination) to be implemented systemeide, to hell with any of the factual ground that UA actually sells those F suits amd makes money off of them. Also, funny how we forgot, in this discussion about how awful and indefensible United First is and how mug CO can "teach" UA in premium cabins, that ee fforget ten years ago, UA was the airline with flat beds.on the front of the aircraft, even sporting (non)advanced video on demand - CO had recliners and nothing more. Now they have flat beds in C and we believe the product is.comparable to a firlrst class suite? Sorry to say, but I strongly disagree.
Its also conviniently "forgotten" that what worked for legacy CO, a carrier with two and half hubs flying into many more smaller intl. destinations that could and would never support F inventory, is not the same airline now that UA's more premium-intensive intl. saturation in large markets has been stiched on. Like it or not, F is being kept around because it makes.money, make no mistake. The people who have never sat in an F suite, who rely on others opinions from the "interwebz" are some of the last in any sort of position to describe the product with sweping negative hyperbole, much less call for it to be dismantled.
Last edited by tuolumne; Jul 16, 2011 at 9:47 am
#59
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: NYC: UA 1K, DL Platinum, AAirpass, Avis PC
Posts: 4,599
Three class first will stay in places for a while -- management has said so -- but as a % of available premium seats, there is no argument that it will increase over time - and that's not just with United.
Having flown both, F exists to offer
1) seating to maximize rest
2) privacy/priority
3) better soft product
5 years ago people who valued point 1) most, but didn't value 2) and 3) as much had only one viable option -- buy into first. Today, the quality of business class seating has improved significantly, so the gap between the two in ability to sleep well has reduced.
So while there is still a market of folks who will always pay for the extra privacy, soft product, and space afforded by first, those who sought it to be able to sleep well have less reason than in the past. Yes, first will always be a better nights rest, but the gap isn't what it was before.
Add in corporate / govt contracts getting progressively more strict over the last 20 years and you get a recipe for a slow erosion of share in favor of business class. On the high end fractional jet ownership erodes the shorter-mid haul base as well.
Having flown both, F exists to offer
1) seating to maximize rest
2) privacy/priority
3) better soft product
5 years ago people who valued point 1) most, but didn't value 2) and 3) as much had only one viable option -- buy into first. Today, the quality of business class seating has improved significantly, so the gap between the two in ability to sleep well has reduced.
So while there is still a market of folks who will always pay for the extra privacy, soft product, and space afforded by first, those who sought it to be able to sleep well have less reason than in the past. Yes, first will always be a better nights rest, but the gap isn't what it was before.
Add in corporate / govt contracts getting progressively more strict over the last 20 years and you get a recipe for a slow erosion of share in favor of business class. On the high end fractional jet ownership erodes the shorter-mid haul base as well.
well as usual you have the "I walked through it on my way off the plane", "saw it on Google images", " heard about it from flyertalk" - crowd deriding united first and calling for it to be dismantled, questioning its viability, and even trying to make it comparable to CO business class. Read:People who have never flown it, and seem to know everything there is to know about it. How exactly you can make sweeping generalized comments using overblown descriptors when you've never even sat in the seat is beyond me.
3-cabin intl. service worked for UA. Their demand base could support it. They made money off of it - and unfortunately smb123's stale argument falls flat the second we realize again that UA invested hundereds of millions not even 4 years ago to retrofit the entire intl. widebody fleet into 3-cabin service - even the 763s. What, did they just do this for show? give me a break. and leave the "conclusions" about the hard product to people who have actually flown the product.
The OP may not like it, but for every negative there is a positive one out there. If you want my opinion, it is apologist COmmand who are usually the ones pushing for the ididea of their "glorious, no fault" CO BF product (which is no first class suite by any stretch of the imagination) to be implemented systemeide, to hell with any of the factual ground that UA actually sells those F suits amd makes money off of them. Also, funny how we forgot, in this discussion about how awful and indefensible United First is and how mug CO can "teach" UA in premium cabins, that ee fforget ten years ago, UA was the airline with flat beds.on the front of the aircraft, even sporting (non)advanced video on demand - CO had recliners and nothing more. Now they have flat beds in C and we believe the product is.comparable to a firlrst class suite? Sorry to say, but I strongly disagree.
Its also conviniently "forgotten" that what worked for legacy CO, a carrier with two and half hubs flying into many more smaller intl. destinations that could and would never support F inventory, is not the same airline now that UA's more premium-intensive intl. saturation in large markets has been stiched on. Like it or not, F is being kept around because it makes.money, make no mistake. The people who have never sat in an F suite, who rely on others opinions from the "interwebz" are some of the last in any sort of position to describe the product with sweping negative hyperbole, much less call for it to be dismantled.
3-cabin intl. service worked for UA. Their demand base could support it. They made money off of it - and unfortunately smb123's stale argument falls flat the second we realize again that UA invested hundereds of millions not even 4 years ago to retrofit the entire intl. widebody fleet into 3-cabin service - even the 763s. What, did they just do this for show? give me a break. and leave the "conclusions" about the hard product to people who have actually flown the product.
The OP may not like it, but for every negative there is a positive one out there. If you want my opinion, it is apologist COmmand who are usually the ones pushing for the ididea of their "glorious, no fault" CO BF product (which is no first class suite by any stretch of the imagination) to be implemented systemeide, to hell with any of the factual ground that UA actually sells those F suits amd makes money off of them. Also, funny how we forgot, in this discussion about how awful and indefensible United First is and how mug CO can "teach" UA in premium cabins, that ee fforget ten years ago, UA was the airline with flat beds.on the front of the aircraft, even sporting (non)advanced video on demand - CO had recliners and nothing more. Now they have flat beds in C and we believe the product is.comparable to a firlrst class suite? Sorry to say, but I strongly disagree.
Its also conviniently "forgotten" that what worked for legacy CO, a carrier with two and half hubs flying into many more smaller intl. destinations that could and would never support F inventory, is not the same airline now that UA's more premium-intensive intl. saturation in large markets has been stiched on. Like it or not, F is being kept around because it makes.money, make no mistake. The people who have never sat in an F suite, who rely on others opinions from the "interwebz" are some of the last in any sort of position to describe the product with sweping negative hyperbole, much less call for it to be dismantled.
#60




Join Date: May 2006
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