Qantas' Los Angeles-New York flight bumped up to a Boeing 747

By John Walton, May 7 2012
Qantas' Los Angeles-New York flight bumped up to a Boeing 747

If you're heading between Los Angeles and New York on Qantas, don't be surprised to see a Boeing 747 at your gate instead of the smaller Airbus A330 the airline previously used.

It's the first day that Qantas is flying its jumbos on the LAX to JFK "tag" flight for connecting passengers arriving into Los Angeles from Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.

The tag flight is numbered QF107 on the way to New York, and QF108 on the way back -- the same numbers as the flights between Sydney and Los Angeles that the plane also flies on its way.

A plane upgrade to the Boeing 747 is good news for business travellers, who will see more business class seats -- and more opportunities to upgrade into them using Qantas Frequent Flyer points.

But careful Qantas-watchers and the business class seat-savvy should note that the plane used (at least on the first and second LAX-JFK flights) is an older Boeing 747-400, which won't see the fully flat second-generation Skybeds added to the refurbished Boeing 747-400ER aircraft.

You'll find the older, angled lie-flat Skybeds on board the 747 used on the New York flights.
You'll find the older, angled lie-flat Skybeds on board the 747 used on the New York flights.

With the older 747s, the seats themselves are the same as the first-generation, angled lie-flat Skybed one the A330 -- not the upgraded, fully flat second-generation Skybed you'd find on the Airbus A380 superjumbo or on the upgraded, longer range Boeing 747-400ER planes.

Why are fully flat beds better than angled lie-flat seats? We show you in our illustrated guide putting the truth to the lie-flat lie.

Update: AusBT readers are writing in to let us know whether their New York flight is showing a 747-400 or a 747-400ER. Over the next few months, the trend seems to be more fully flat beds on refurbished planes. 

If you have a flight booked and can tell whether you've got the new business seats, drop us a comment below, tweet us (@AusBT) or email our reporter John at [email protected].

Australian Business Traveller will keep you posted on whether the Skybeds you'll find on the route turn out to be the fully flat ones as the route beds in.

For the very latest news and reviews, follow us on Twitter: we're @AusBT.

John Walton

Aviation journalist and travel columnist John took his first long-haul flight when he was eight weeks old and hasn't looked back since. Well, except when facing rearwards in business class.

Are they fitted with First?

Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

07 May 2012

Total posts 371

I am booked to fly from LAX to JFK on 3rd August and return on 5th September in Business and the seat selection indicates the refitted B747 cabin.

03 Jan 2011

Total posts 665

Good to know, thanks -- various readers are writing in to let us know what their seat selections reflect, and it's good to see a trend towards new Skybeds!

30 Jan 2011

Total posts 2

QF is planning to use the 744 that arrives from BNE for the JFK shuttle. This aircraft is the new config with Skybed MkII and panasonic IFE. So, the above information is misleading.

30 Jan 2011

Total posts 2

Also it will alow premium econnomy seating all the way to JFK

03 Jan 2011

Total posts 665

There are obviously some dates when Qantas isn't using the refit. 

The first QF107-108 return was the older 747-400 model (rego -OJH), and the current rotation is too (-OEB), according to flight24 and flightradar24.

The pattern we're seeing from the readers who have written in with their seat selection info is that the refurbed 747-400ER aircraft are increasingly planned for the route over the coming months.

Even if it is this is the old 747 with old generation business class seats, its still 100X better than what you will find on domestic US airlines servicing that route.


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