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My review of Qatar Airways impressive A380 business class

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This is my review of Business Class on a Qatar Airways A380, from London to Doha.

As I explained yesterday, I travelled down to the Emirate of Ras al-Khaimah last week as the guest of Qatar Airways.

At the start of February, Qatar Airways started direct flights between Doha and Ras al-Khaimah.  Ras al-Khaimah is a popular weekend destination for people living in the Emirates, both for its beaches and for its mountains.  It is also developing as a holiday destination in its own right with resorts which are quieter and cheaper than those in Dubai.

The Doha to Ras al-Khaimah service is currently restricted to four flights per week.  These are well timed to connect with Qatar services from Europe, however, and my connection time in Doha to / from London was under 2 hours on both the outbound and return.

At other times, it is a sub-1 hour drive to Dubai International or Al Maktoum airports in Dubai.

Introduction

Today I am reviewing the Business Class service on the Qatar Airways A380.  The 9am A380 flight from London connected directly with the evening flight to Ras al-Khaimah.

I have covered other Qatar aircraft and flight classes in earlier reviews:

The Qatar Airways schedule out of London seems to have ‘settled down’ in the last 12 months.  This means that you have a pretty good chance of actually flying on the aircraft type booked!

Boarding the Qatar Airways A380

I discussed the Qatar Airways Premium Lounge at Heathrow Terminal 4 in my review yesterday.  It is a short 30-second walk from the lounge down to the Qatar gate.

Qatar A380 business class review

Business Class seating on the Qatar Airways A380

The new Boeing 787-8 and A380 aircraft contain the very latest version of the Qatar Airways business class seating.  It is very, very good if you are a solo traveller, as the layout is 1-2-1.

This is how the Boeing 787-8 cabin looks using a professional photographer and studio lighting:

Qatar 787 business class seat

and this is what the A380 version looks like in ‘real life’:

Qatar A380 business class review

and

Qatar A380 business class review

I had a solo window seat.  As you can see, the seat is far closer to British Airways First Class than British Airways Club World.  You certainly have less personal space than BA First but it is light years ahead of the offering in Club World if you are travelling on your own.

The flat area by the window is big enough to hold your newspapers, books, magazines and, erm, pre-flight Drappier rose champagne:

Qatar Airways A380 business class review

The 1-2-1 layout is similar to that used by Virgin Atlantic, Cathay Pacific, Air New Zealand and various others.

The trade-off for the additional privacy and space is that your feet disappear under the seat in front and that the seats do not face forward – you are angled in a herringbone pattern.  Neither of these were, in any way, inconvenient – especially if you are in a window seat as you will be facing the window.

The only thing I did not like is that the TV is fixed in position.  It does not fold away.  Even if you don’t plan to watch it (and I rarely do) you are forced to look directly at it for the whole flight:

Qatar Airways a380 business class review

The screen in the picture above shows the clever new safety video featuring FC Barcelona which you can see on YouTube here.

Toiletries

The toiletry bag was Armani-branded.  It contains a very small (10ml?) Armani EDT as well as a large 75ml aftershave balm as the usual mix of non-Armani socks etc.

Toothbrushes, razors etc are available in the toilets.

Armani amenity kit Qatar Airways A380 business class review

Food and drink

Qatar’s food and drink is generally of very high quality – I generally rank it above Emirates and Etihad in Business Class, although the Etihad onboard chef gives it the edge in First.

Despite the 9am departure time, Qatar decided to serve an early lunch instead of a late breakfast which was, in my view, the right thing to do.

The menu was:

Pea and mint soup

Classic arabic mezze

or

Smoked mackerel with green bean salad (see below)

Qatar A380 business class food review

Braised lamb shank with dried fruit couscous

or

Marinated chicken breast with puy lentils (see below)

or

Paneer with mussalam sauce

Qatar A380 business class food review

Cheese plate

Cherry and almond frangipan tart (see below)

or

Gourmet ice cream

or Seasonal fresh fruits

Qatar A380 business class food review

Lighter options (savoury pastries, steak sandwich) were also on offer.

The best was actually the dessert, as usual, but the rest of the meal was equally well cooked.  The chicken dish is a little ‘brown’ but that how lentil dishes usually end up!

I stuck to the Drappier rose throughout the flight.  The other champagne is Billecart-Salmon Brut.  Wine options included a Rully Premier Cru Gresigny chardonnay and a Babich Sauvignon Blanc amongst others.  Dessert options were an Arthur Metz Gewurzraminer and a Dow’s 10 year old port.

There is also the A380 bar towards the back of the aircraft.  This is a ‘proper’ bar unlike the small ‘table’ found on the Boeing 787 fleet.

Having now flown the A380 twice, I have to say that I prefer the bar to the Emirates and the Etihad versions, although the EK one has a classier feel.  What makes the Qatar bar preferable – to me – is the curving seat layout:

Qatar A380 business class review bar

…. which gives you more privacy.  Emirates and Etihad make you sit in a semi-circle or full circle respectively.

This is a photo I took on my previous Qatar Airways flight:

Qatar A380 business class review bar

I was surprised how quiet the bar was during a day flight when you would have expected people to be keen to use it.

In a major blow, there was no Krug available on my flight!  It was in the bar when I flew A380 First Class before Christmas.  This may have been a one-off, however, because you had the odd situation where there was Krug in the bar but First Class passengers couldn’t get it at their seats.

I try to avoid commenting on the crew in my reviews because you can never tell if what you had is average, better or worse than the norm.  However, the Qatar crew were excellent and I never felt, as I do with Emirates at times, that I may get the wrong thing due to the lack of English skills.  The only thing I found odd is that multiple crew members insisted on putting my knife and fork the wrong way round, eg fork to the right!

In Flight Entertainment

I covered the Oryx IFE system in my Qatar 777 business class review last year.  Due to the relatively short flight time to the Middle East I rarely use the IFE systems.  I didn’t try the wi-fi either this time – I was glad of a break from my email!

The IFE did have the new Star Wars film available which impressed me.

Arrival

I had heard some bad stories about transfer times at Hamad Airport because of the security screening, albeit that there is a ‘cut in’ line for premium passengers.

On my outbound flight we avoided screening.  We were let out directly into the main terminal which meant that I was in the Qatar business class lounge within 5 minutes.

I am guessing that ex-UK flights are deemed secure enough not to require additional arrival screening.  By contrast, when I flew back into Doha from Ras al-Khaimah (where they don’t bother asking for liquids or laptops to be taken out) I exited into secondary screening – but was through in a couple of minutes.

I’d missed the bear and it was good to see it again!

Qatar Airport Hamad teddy bear

Conclusion

I have done five long-haul flights with Qatar Airways over the last 18 months.  All have been very impressive, even the Boeing 777 ones with the older seating.  

The airline was an excellent addition to the oneworld alliance when it joined.  If you get the opportunity to try them for a cash flight or an Avios redemption (and availability is generally pretty good) then you should.  The lounges, seating, food, drink and IFE in Business Class are well ahead of anything that British Airways has to offer.

The downside, of course, is that a flight on Qatar Airways will involve a change of plane in Doha which breaks up your journey.  If you live in London that may be a concern.  If you live in the regions (Qatar Airways flies from Manchester, Edinburgh and – from the end of March – Birmingham) flying from your local airport to the Middle East and changing is probably less painful than changing planes at Heathrow.

If you want to find out more about the Qatar A380 service, there is a special page on the Qatar Airways website here.

In the next article I will talk about my onward trip to Ras al-Khaimah.

Comments (69)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Aviation Consultant says:

    What was the reference to the sub one hour drive to Dubai? Do you mean this is the alternative when there are no Qatar flights out of RAK?

    • Rob says:

      Yes, obviously four flights per week out of Ras isn’t going to be ideal for everyone.

  • Paul says:

    Qatar business product is fairly nice, but has two faults. 1. Restrictive foot bay which makes it hard to turn over and 2. They keep the planes way too hot on overnight flights.

    I wonder if many people on this blog think about flying as a normal passenger, versus flying as a photo exhibitionist as I rarely see these issues raised.

    • Rob says:

      I do fly as a normal passenger! That’s why I don’t turn on the IFE (see other criticism). I do absolutely nothing differently to what I would do if I was taking this flight for my own benefit, apart from taking the pictures.

      This is not ‘Michelin Guide’ reviewing – I don’t purposely ask for my food to be cooked differently to see if the crew can do it, or ask to be served at odd times, or purposely make drink requests which I know would require a trip to the bar to fulfil, or demand extra bedding for no other reason than to see how they react etc.

      I just do my normal stuff.

      • Brian says:

        That’s a fair point. But surely the point of the review is to allow your readers to know what the Qatar experience is like? And since a lot of readers do use IFE, they might find it useful to know what you think of it.

        • Rob says:

          It’s got 3,000 channels. How do you review that?!

          • Nick Burch says:

            With a lot of free flights…. 😉

            More helpfully though – I’d suggest taking 10 minutes to call up the moving map, then try finding a specific film, then try watching 1 minute of it, pause and fast forward a bit, then go to the audio. Even if you don’t want to watch, they’ve probably got some good music you can listen to while you work/read

    • Alan says:

      Hmm – too hot on overnight flights I’m really not a fan of, I find it very difficult to sleep. Had that issue previously on SQ JFK-FRA and most recently QF MEL-DXB (yet weirdly the second half DXB-LHR was fine). Given the ready availability of blankets, etc. I’d prefer they kept the temperature at the lower end, for those that find it too hot there’s not much you can do apart from not use the blanket!

  • helper says:

    I don’t mean to sound negative, but in quite a few of your reviews, you tend not to use the IFE. If you know you’re going to be writing a review on the product later, is it really that hard to turn it on and have a quick play around?

    • Brian says:

      +1 Good point – I’ve often wondered the same!

      • Rob says:

        Obviously I could. But I don’t.

        That is the downside of Qatar not paying me for the review and you guys not paying to read the site 🙂

        It is also the upside of farming out more of the review work to Anika – I’m paying her so she’ll do it properly!

        • Brian says:

          Hmmm…that sounds like dodgy reasoning. But it’s your site, so you can obviously do exactly what you want (or not!). I would have thought that the fact that nobody is paying for your reviews has nothing to do with whether you would want your review to be as thorough as possible. Surely you don’t miss out bits of the analysis of sale fares or Avios changes simply for that reason?? Surely you want your site to be as good as possible in order to attract and retain as large a readership as possible and thus drive more income via advertising, click-throughs etc??

          • Sussex Bantam says:

            The new Star Wars movie was on the IFE on my BA flight to Boston last week. Jolly good it is too !

          • Rob says:

            Here you go:

            “Innovative airline delights passengers with full set of seven Star Wars movies on its award-winning inflight entertainment platform, Oryx One

            07 Mar 2016

            Qatar Airways is offering a staggering choice of up to 3,000 inflight entertainment options on board its flights, providing its passengers with one of the world’s largest and best inflight entertainment libraries.

            The Doha-based airline, which previously offered up to 2,000 entertainment options, has increased its on board entertainment options from March to up to 3,000 entertainment options, offering a wide selection of up to 550 movies, 1,400 episodes of TV shows, 1,000 audio selections, and 50 games.

            Passengers travelling with Qatar Airways in March will also be delighted to discover the full collection of seven Star Wars movies on board, including the latest instalment, Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

            Other premieres on board for the month of March include: the final part of the Hunger Games series, Mockingjay Part Two; Creed; The 33; Trumbo; and Macbeth. The latest family movies on board include: Alvin the Chipmunks Road Chip; The Good Dinosaur; The Peanuts Movie; and Pan.

            Qatar Airways has one of the most extensive selections of entertainment available in the skies on its award-winning Oryx One inflight entertainment platform. As well as the full Star Wars collection, passengers can enjoy the full box set of Marvel movies, all the Harry Potter movies and 10 of the best James Bond movies, including the most recent instalment in the franchise – Spectre.”

            The issue with reviewing IFE, apart from factual statements such as the size of the TV, is that it is a personal thing. I watched a series of Veep on my 777 flight last year but I doubt it would inspire anyone on its own to travel on Qatar.

            A friend of mine was recently raving about BA’s IFE (which, in terms of quantity, is pitiful compared to Qatar) because it has a large selection of upmarket European foreign language films. It doesn’t do it for me – lets see if my wife is keener come Good Friday – but it is horses for courses.

          • Yuff says:

            I will look forward to watching some bond movies at Easter 🙂
            Hopefully my son will do the same and sit still for 6 hrs 🙂 spectre was the first one headaches properly and enjoyed 😉

          • Nick says:

            Is IFE really that important that Rob has to wrote about it. Everyone is different so what does it matter what is on the IFE in J or F as it’ll have something for everyone wether is music or films.

          • Brian says:

            I wouldn’t want a list of what’s on in the IFE – that changes, after all. A review of the IFE would contain a brief appraisal of the sort of choice available, how user-friendly the system is, what the screen quality is like, how good the headphones are, etc. You could find this out in 5 minutes before getting back to your paper or whatever else you want to do on your 6 hour flight. But it’s obviously the writer’s prerogative to leave out what he chooses – doesn’t bother me, since I wouldn’t choose an airline based on IFE.

          • Rob says:

            All fair points, I agree.

          • zsalya says:

            That’s what I thought until I tried to find some classical music on AirBerlin.
            There was none at all!

    • harry says:

      IFE is irrelevant these days unless you don’t have tablet

      • harry says:

        Can’t say I’ve used it for 10 years so IFE is for losers maybe

      • helper says:

        Obviously that’s your own opinion, but I still can’t be bothered to load stuff onto my tablet and have to hold it in front of me. Like Brian said, I’m not really that worried about the content of the IFE as most modern systems have enough stuff to fill a flight. I’m more interested in the quality of the screen (not the size) and how the interface works.

  • Darrel says:

    Worth pointing out that the food service can be whenever you want (like BA first), and whatever you want at any time. Great if you have an agenda for adapting to time zone changes.

    I find QR biz food excellent. Closer if not equal to BA F and undoubtedly better than BA J.

    Totally weird amenity kit. 75ml !! of apres shaving balm and not much else. Pointless until you consider the healthy beards the natives can grow. Probably only one application for them. No mouth wash. Bring your own.

    The footwells are actually comparatively spacious. Better I think than CX/AA. RJ is much worse, and you should try the AA transcontinental A320 if you want a footwarmer experience in J. Amazing they can do 2 2 in such a narrow cabin.

    The QR 787 biz cabin is smaller and better than 350.

    Can’t wait for new QR biz product with sliding doors… When I fly CX I get a spare duvet to make a little cabin for myself. I like my privacy. Haven’t figured out how to do it with QR.

  • John says:

    Have my doubts about how much luxury travel will be available from that part of the world in future.

    As for Qatar, how will it compete with Ryanair’s new venture?

    http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/ryanair-launches-new-private-jet-servicewith-lots-of-frills-34524854.html

  • RIccati says:

    On the point of airline loyalty and rewards for it these days, from Alaska Airlines website,

    “Million Mile Flyer Status
    Alaska Airlines Mileage Plan™ members who achieve 1,000,000 actual flown miles on Alaska Airlines are granted lifetime MVP® Gold Status, and receive a complimentary meal or picnic pack when flying in the main cabin.”

    • RIccati says:

      It’s like, if you slavishly pay our consistently more expensive prices (then competition) for 10 years, we will give you a t-shirt!

  • Dev says:

    Krug was back on the menu at the Al Mourjan (has it ever actually been taken away?) although a week ago, the bar tenders point blank denied all knowledge of it…..bizarre?

    • Rob says:

      I never saw a menu but the bartender denied all knowledge ….

  • Adrian says:

    Never been on QR but from everything I’ve seen and read it has to be better than BA. My prediction is the next QR sale will start on the 14th March! (please).

    • Brian says:

      It is much better than BA as an in-flight experience. If you are flying to the Far East, however, I would still choose the direct flights that BA offers, rather than having to stop off in the Middle East. Yes, the lounge in Doha is big and has good facilities, but you very often land there at about midnight, when you really just want to be sleeping, but can’t because your next flight leaves in a couple of hours.

      If you can get daytime flights, that’s a different matter, I guess.

      • Rodger McSalty says:

        I have taken a few different timings for my journeys via DOH now (UK to Far East). I agree that the flights connecting in the middle of the night are the ones to avoid as you do get knackered, even if you do manage to sleep on subsequent legs.

        The morning flight from Heathrow is my preferred one – wake up very early, travel to LHR, and snooze on the first leg. Wake up in DOH, 55 minute connection (potentially skipping the lounge) and stay awake on the second leg. Arrive tired at your destination but in the evening – works fairly well I find.

        Only downside is never needing to use the lounge or the onboard bar until it’s no longer available. The lounge is much quieter at this time of day though.

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