Review: Ohana By Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu To Lanai

Review: Ohana By Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu To Lanai

7


After spending a bit of the time at the Four Seasons lounge we headed towards gate 49, which was just a five minute walk away.


Honolulu Airport inter-island terminal

As we approached the gate we saw an ATR42 parked outside, which I initially assumed was our plane.


Ohana by Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu Airport

It’s clear that the boarding pass stating that boarding starts 40 minutes before departure is completely ridiculous, given that these planes board in about five minutes.

I didn’t realize until people started exiting the jet bridge that our plane wasn’t the one outside the window. Instead our inbound aircraft arrived at 11:40AM, and our flight began boarding at 11:50AM. I found the announcements they make for these flights interesting, as they’re announced as “Empire Airlines flights by Ohana for Hawaiian.” While I’m used to airlines using subsidiaries, I’m pretty sure that’s the first time I’ve heard a triple name like that.


Ohana by Hawaiian departure gate

For a plane this small where you have to gate check bags, my goal is to be the last person on the plane. So we let everyone else board, and then within a few seconds we were paged by name with a “final boarding call.” As we boarded, the gate agent suggested that we could take seats in the last row if we wanted, so we wouldn’t have to walk to the front of the plane.

Hawaiian 676
Honolulu (HNL) – Lanai (LNY)
Thursday, October 12

Depart: 11:56AM
Arrive: 12:29PM
Duration: 33min
Aircraft: ATR42
Seat: 13B (Economy Class)

As you can see, they actually park the ATR42s one behind the other on the tarmac, and our plane was the one further back.


Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu Airport

I had stupidly forgotten that they board these planes through the rear as the luggage is in the front, or else I wouldn’t have selected seats in the second row.


Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu Airport

We left our carry-ons on a baggage cart, and then boarded through the rear.


Hawaiian ATR42 Honolulu Airport

We took seats in the last row, though unfortunately found that the window was filthy. That’s especially unfortunate, given how incredible the views were on this flight.


Dirty window on the ATR42

The ATR42 has 48 seats, and this flight had a handful of empty seats. There were maybe a dozen people headed to the resort who were on the plane, while the rest seemed to be locals.


Hawaiian ATR42 cabin

The seats were surprisingly well padded, and the legroom was good enough, especially given that our flight time was only 20 minutes. Once boarding finished up, a lady switched from another row to take the seats in the last row across from us, presumably so she’d have an empty seat next to her.

She put her feet on the seat next to her, and as the flight attendant walked by he said “take your feet off the seat.” Hah.


Hawaiian ATR42 legroom

By 12:20PM we took off, and climbed to our cruising altitude of 7,000 feet. Despite the flight time of just 20 minutes, there was a drink service, with the choice between plastic containers of water and guava juice. I had water.


Hawaiian ATR42 drink service

We landed in Lanai at 12:40PM, and from there had a very short taxi to our arrival stand.


Arrival in Lanai

Lanai has one of the smallest and cutest commercial airports I’ve ever seen. Even the TSA checkpoint looked cute, which is saying a lot. 😉


Lanai Airport 

Baggage claim didn’t have a belt, but rather was just an area at the far side of the terminal where they brought the luggage out directly.


Lanai Airport baggage claim

We headed outside, where there were maybe a couple of dozen cars parked. We called to request a shuttle to Dollar Rent A Car, which is located in Lanai City. While the Four Seasons offers a complimentary airport transfer, we wanted to rent a car for our stay so we could explore the island independently.


Lanai Airport parking

Ohana by Hawaiian ATR42 bottom line

Hawaii has breathtaking scenery, so flying between islands is quite fun. I just wish our window had been a bit cleaner so I could have gotten better pictures. I’m also impressed that they offer a drink on such a short flight. While a little plastic container isn’t much, getting even that on a 20 minute flight is impressive by US standards.

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  1. 747always Guest

    The filthy windows are probably a function of the fact that these planes are operating in salt laden air. Not sure how those could be kept clean constantly, especially on a turn around.

  2. Jim Guest

    Check out the airport at Kona - throwback with outside waiting and baggage delivery. Also, jet service.

  3. CaveDweller Guest

    Welcome to Hawaii !!!

  4. CaveDweller Guest

    Tough it out Big Boy I landed in Gale Force(60 mph) winds in a JET there u never fly Junk u live longer . My shuttle driver was laughing all the way to T2 with the high winds .I rented a Full size JEEP then I headed south trees down all over little rain .With the Jeep I drove around them and my GPS didn't work . I was thinking about sleeping in the Dirty...

    Tough it out Big Boy I landed in Gale Force(60 mph) winds in a JET there u never fly Junk u live longer . My shuttle driver was laughing all the way to T2 with the high winds .I rented a Full size JEEP then I headed south trees down all over little rain .With the Jeep I drove around them and my GPS didn't work . I was thinking about sleeping in the Dirty Roof leaking JEEP and over priced piece of Junk BUT pushed on to my $500 nite hotel .
    Did u look around @ the airport they Tie Down the props there !!
    Thank God for SPG points ..

  5. James S Guest

    Hawaiian's 717s ALWAYS have filthy windows as well. Constant operations in ocean air mean the windows are always covered by a layer of salt crust, and they aren't nearly as vigilant about cleaning them as they ought to be.

    Scratched, flaky windows were a personal pet peeve of AA's Gerard Arpey back when he ran the company, and he demanded regular cleaning and maintenance of them. Twenty years later AA still has pristine windows...

    Hawaiian's 717s ALWAYS have filthy windows as well. Constant operations in ocean air mean the windows are always covered by a layer of salt crust, and they aren't nearly as vigilant about cleaning them as they ought to be.

    Scratched, flaky windows were a personal pet peeve of AA's Gerard Arpey back when he ran the company, and he demanded regular cleaning and maintenance of them. Twenty years later AA still has pristine windows on almost all its planes. Shame Hawaiian's leaders don't ask for something similar.

  6. Steven M Guest

    Best way to Lāna'i is by Cessna ... those ATR-42's are not memorable. Plus you can offload your baggage faster and then quickly exit through the nice nearby gate and drive away, thus bypassing the tiny terminal.

  7. Greg Guest

    Those ATRs are OLD with just a new skin on the outside.... I wished Island Air still flew to Lanai... But alas they might be out of business by next week....

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

747always Guest

The filthy windows are probably a function of the fact that these planes are operating in salt laden air. Not sure how those could be kept clean constantly, especially on a turn around.

0
Jim Guest

Check out the airport at Kona - throwback with outside waiting and baggage delivery. Also, jet service.

0
CaveDweller Guest

Welcome to Hawaii !!!

0
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