Advertisement

United is adding perks to planes for international fliers

Share

UAL Corp.’s United Airlines is giving a long-overdue makeover to the Boeing 777 aircraft used on some of its longest overseas flights, adding perks such as video on demand for passengers flying in the cheap seats.

It’s part of a broader customer-service push at United, which for much of the last decade neglected investing in its infrastructure as it restructured under Chapter 11 bankruptcy and dealt with other financial crises.

The Chicago-based carrier, which derives much of its profit from international flights, is aiming to improve passengers’ on-board experience and bring its service closer to that of overseas carriers including Emirates and Singapore Airlines.

Advertisement

United mechanics, overhauling the first of 46 Boeing 777s in San Francisco, are shrinking the plane’s premium cabins, which are being outfitted with lie-flat beds in business and suites in first class. The six United Boeing 777s that are used only for domestic travel are not being upgraded, United spokesman Rahsaan Johnson said.

At the same time, United is adding as many as 21 seats to its Economy Plus cabin and two extra seats in coach. The shift reflects travel policies adopted by many companies that require employees to fly in coach rather than in business class.

“It’s no secret that, even as we see improvement in premium international travel year-over-year, many companies still require their employees to book seats in economy,” Johnson said.

However, United is not reducing the “pitch,” a measure of the space between the back of one passenger seat and the one in front of it, in order to squeeze in more economy seats, Johnson said. Economy Plus seats will still have a pitch of 34 inches, while Economy seats will have a 31-inch pitch.

United is also phasing out the old configuration of seats in its economy cabins of two seats per row on both sides of the plane and five in the middle. Instead, each row will be divided into three sections that each accommodate three passengers.

United is dropping the 2-5-2 configuration in order to outfit the cabin with larger seat-back screens and a new on-demand audio-visual system that lets passengers stop and start movies and television shows, Johnson said. The new monitors will be 7 inches wide compared with the current 5 inches, with touch screens.

Advertisement

United also plans to install two power ports for every three seats, which will make it easier for passengers with laptops to entertain themselves during 14-hour flights to Asia or Australia.

Brett Snyder, who blogs as the Cranky Flier and who first reported the United 777 upgrades, said some United regulars will miss the old configuration’s window seats, “but there’s nothing worse than being in the ‘double excuse me’ seat in the middle of five [seats].”

“For the UA faithful, it may be a minor annoyance, but considering everyone will have full audio/video on demand and 110 volt power, it’s still a better product than what was there before,” Snyder added.

United is studying outfitting its planes with a host of electronic tools for passengers and will eventually give economy-class passengers access to the same library of movies as those who fly in first and business classes, Johnson said.

Emirates and Singapore currently provide all passengers with hundreds of entertainment channels.

jjohnsson@tribune.com

Advertisement
Advertisement