Bundy Bear
Established Member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2004
- Posts
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29 JAN 2011
Qantas had a nice Platinum(Oneworld Emerald) perk which meant you could visit the Qantas lounges in Australia without having to fly Qantas that day. You could even use the perk to fly with another airline and use the Qantas lounge before your Virgin Blue flight. That situation was usually rare and you would normal only use the lounge when you were seeing friends off at the airport who would be flying Qantas but didn’t have the status for lounge access. You wouldn’t just go to the airport to drink the free alcohol and eat some of the food as the airport parking chargers usually made this uneconomical.
In October 3 months after I reached Qantas Platinum(Oneworld Emerald) Qantas removed the anytime access so that you had to be flying Qantas that day to access the lounge. It was decided we should all go to our respective lounges and have a few drinks to say good bye to Qantas any time lounge access.
I don’t usually want to go to the airport by myself to have a few drinks and someone suggested we should cover more than 1 airport. I set up a schedule which was BNE-SYD on Virgin Blue, followed by SYD-MEL on Jetstar(International) followed with an overnight, and then a trip on Virgin Blue to Canberra connecting to Virgin Blue flight back to Brisbane.
In the end about 20 people joined us on the Sydney to Melbourne Jetstar flight, this was always going to remain a flight where you could access the lounge but most people flew on Virgin Blue as the return sector.
BNE-SYD DJ932 DEP 9:00AM 737-700 VH-VBA SEAT 7A
I got a lift to the airport at 6:30am, my flight was at 9:00am but I got in early and got the later flight, but the one giving me the lift was catching the 8:00am Virgin Blue departure. As we had both checked in the night before we could head through security and go to the Qantas lounge for breakfast where we met up with 3 other travelers. There would be 5 traveling to Sydney on Virgin Blue but all of us using the Qantas lounge before our Virgin Blue flight. At about 7:30 we went from the Qantas terminal into the Virgin Blue terminal to go and check out the Virgin Blue lounge. We had enough people who had taken up the Virgin Blue status match so there was enough of us to be guested into the Virgin Blue lounge. I didn’t take up the Virgin Blue status match offer and I have enough trouble and expense trying to keep one status going without trying to retain status in 2 airlines.
The Virgin Blue lounge was the old Ansett Golden Wing Lounge but it hasn’t changed much in the 8 or so years that Virgin has been using the lounge. Thankfully Virgin Blue is remodeling some of their lounges so I might have to go back and take another look. Virgin Blue do offer a day pass for their lounges.
The other travelers left to catch the 8:00am flight to Sydney, which left me in peace to read one of their magazines. The magazine selection was pretty hopeless compared to what Qantas have available. I did try to get on an earlier flight but Virgin said everything was running on time and since I didn’t have any status Virgin staff wasn’t able to move me to an earlier flight. The lounge staff called the flight and I went to the gate to get a picture and line up for boarding.
Most of the Virgin Blue 737s are fitted with TVs and you are able to watch the Live 2 Area system during boarding and during take-off before you are asked to swipe your credit card to pay for continued use of the IFE.
The cabin crew performed a better safety demonstration compared to the last time I flew Virgin almost 2 year ago now. The cabin was probably about 70% full. The crew offered buy on board but as I had already visited 2 lounges before the flight so I didn’t purchase anything.
The approach to Sydney was unusual for me as we headed out over the sea before landing towards to the north on the 2nd runway. The flight landed at 11:30am which would give me a good 30 minutes to transfer to the Qantas domestic terminal to then catch a shuttle bus to the international terminal. You can walk between the domestic terminals but the distance is a bit far to walk between the domestic and international terminals the other option would have been via train.
Most passengers are connecting from Qantas domestic flights to international services but you can transfer with Qantas as long as you have an onward depart on another Qantas group airline, including Jetstar. I have previous transferred from a Qantas domestic flight to a Singapore Airlines flight.
Qantas had a nice Platinum(Oneworld Emerald) perk which meant you could visit the Qantas lounges in Australia without having to fly Qantas that day. You could even use the perk to fly with another airline and use the Qantas lounge before your Virgin Blue flight. That situation was usually rare and you would normal only use the lounge when you were seeing friends off at the airport who would be flying Qantas but didn’t have the status for lounge access. You wouldn’t just go to the airport to drink the free alcohol and eat some of the food as the airport parking chargers usually made this uneconomical.
In October 3 months after I reached Qantas Platinum(Oneworld Emerald) Qantas removed the anytime access so that you had to be flying Qantas that day to access the lounge. It was decided we should all go to our respective lounges and have a few drinks to say good bye to Qantas any time lounge access.
I don’t usually want to go to the airport by myself to have a few drinks and someone suggested we should cover more than 1 airport. I set up a schedule which was BNE-SYD on Virgin Blue, followed by SYD-MEL on Jetstar(International) followed with an overnight, and then a trip on Virgin Blue to Canberra connecting to Virgin Blue flight back to Brisbane.
In the end about 20 people joined us on the Sydney to Melbourne Jetstar flight, this was always going to remain a flight where you could access the lounge but most people flew on Virgin Blue as the return sector.
BNE-SYD DJ932 DEP 9:00AM 737-700 VH-VBA SEAT 7A
I got a lift to the airport at 6:30am, my flight was at 9:00am but I got in early and got the later flight, but the one giving me the lift was catching the 8:00am Virgin Blue departure. As we had both checked in the night before we could head through security and go to the Qantas lounge for breakfast where we met up with 3 other travelers. There would be 5 traveling to Sydney on Virgin Blue but all of us using the Qantas lounge before our Virgin Blue flight. At about 7:30 we went from the Qantas terminal into the Virgin Blue terminal to go and check out the Virgin Blue lounge. We had enough people who had taken up the Virgin Blue status match so there was enough of us to be guested into the Virgin Blue lounge. I didn’t take up the Virgin Blue status match offer and I have enough trouble and expense trying to keep one status going without trying to retain status in 2 airlines.
The Virgin Blue lounge was the old Ansett Golden Wing Lounge but it hasn’t changed much in the 8 or so years that Virgin has been using the lounge. Thankfully Virgin Blue is remodeling some of their lounges so I might have to go back and take another look. Virgin Blue do offer a day pass for their lounges.
The other travelers left to catch the 8:00am flight to Sydney, which left me in peace to read one of their magazines. The magazine selection was pretty hopeless compared to what Qantas have available. I did try to get on an earlier flight but Virgin said everything was running on time and since I didn’t have any status Virgin staff wasn’t able to move me to an earlier flight. The lounge staff called the flight and I went to the gate to get a picture and line up for boarding.
Most of the Virgin Blue 737s are fitted with TVs and you are able to watch the Live 2 Area system during boarding and during take-off before you are asked to swipe your credit card to pay for continued use of the IFE.
The cabin crew performed a better safety demonstration compared to the last time I flew Virgin almost 2 year ago now. The cabin was probably about 70% full. The crew offered buy on board but as I had already visited 2 lounges before the flight so I didn’t purchase anything.
The approach to Sydney was unusual for me as we headed out over the sea before landing towards to the north on the 2nd runway. The flight landed at 11:30am which would give me a good 30 minutes to transfer to the Qantas domestic terminal to then catch a shuttle bus to the international terminal. You can walk between the domestic terminals but the distance is a bit far to walk between the domestic and international terminals the other option would have been via train.
Most passengers are connecting from Qantas domestic flights to international services but you can transfer with Qantas as long as you have an onward depart on another Qantas group airline, including Jetstar. I have previous transferred from a Qantas domestic flight to a Singapore Airlines flight.
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