Five Star Virgin: Qatar Airways First Class from Doha (DOH) to London (LHR)

Five Star Virgin: Qatar Airways First Class from Doha (DOH) to London (LHR)

7


Qatar Airways 1

Doha (DOH) – London (LHR)
Friday, March 11
Depart: 12:50PM
Arrive: 5:30PM
Duration: 7hr40min
Aircraft: A340-600
Seat: 1A (First Class)

We boarded through door 2L, and were escorted to first class. You’ve gotta love how seriously non-US airlines take their curtains separating cabins, even on the ground.


First class cabin


Row one

Waiting for me at seat 1A were a pair of noise canceling headphones, an amenity kit, and the menu.


My seat


Headphones and amenity kit


Menu

The two tall, blonde Eastern European flight attendants introduced themselves and offered me a beverage. I went with Krug, which was served with a hot towel.

 

I was also offered newspapers and magazines, and went with the Daily Mail.


Plane next to us


Krug, Daily Mail and hot towel

Within a few minutes the captain made his welcome aboard announcement, informing us of our flight time of 6hr40min, with an expected on-time arrival in London. The door closed with the first class cabin half full.

We pushed back right on time, and during our taxi out I quite enjoyed looking at the other traffic, much of which we don’t see a lot of in the States.


Remote stand we pushed back from


Another A340-600


The terminal


Boeing 777-300ER

As we taxied out the safety video began playing, during which the flight attendants decided to take meal orders and offer Arabic coffee and dates.

The views on the climb out were great, and I believe right after takeoff were views of the new airport Doha is building, which looked much nicer than the bus terminal they use now.


Shortly after takeoff


The new Doha airport

As soon as we were airborne the flight attendants drew the curtains and the seatbelt sign was turned off. While the flight attendants were going to begin the meal service right away, I requested to wait about an hour before having lunch, since I was still full from the meal I had in the lounge.

I decided to watch a movie, and went with “Something’s Gotta Give.”

About halfway through the movie I asked to start with the meal. My table was setup nicely as last time, and I ordered a Diet Coke with lunch, along with still water.

The menu read as follows:


Menu

The service started with the palate pleaser.


Palate pleaser

Next the caviar was served, much in the same way as on the outbound flight.


Caviar


Caviar

Once I was finished with that course the flight attendant brought out the Mediterranean buffet cart, off of which I hand picked a few things, including salmon and sushi.


Mediterranean buffet

The main course was lobster risotto, which was also quite tasty.


Risotto

At that point I was too full to have dessert, so just asked for turndown service so I could take a nap. Yeah, as you can see, my time schedule was a bit off throughout the trip. With turndown service I was also offered a bottle of water and box of Godiva chocolates.

I slept for a solid three hours, at which point I got a bit of work done on my laptop.


Evian and Godiva


Bedding

About 90 minutes before arrival the flight attendants offered the pre-arrival snack, which is similar to what it was on the way out. What annoyed me slightly is that the flight attendants already collected the menu while I was asleep. I really like to see what I’m eating, so it’s quite frustrating when the flight attendants decide that them getting their work done early is more important than the customer being able to see what they’re going to eat – after all, isn’t that the purpose of the menu?

Once again, the pre-arrival snack was delicious and a work of art.


Pre-arrival snack


Scones, jam, and clotted cream

As we began our descent I asked for a cup of coffee, which was served with Walkers Shortbread.


Coffee and shortbread

While it was looking good that we would be arriving early, about halfway through our descent the captain announced we would be entering a holding pattern. Darn! We circled for about 30 minutes, but then again, that’s not the end of the world when you’re in first class.

During this time flight attendants distributed Fast Track landing cards and hot towels.


Hot towel and Fast Track card

Eventually we were cleared for approach, though London was pretty cloudy, so the views weren’t exactly great.


On the descent


Cloudy afternoon

We had a fairly long taxi and eventually pulled into a gate next to a Korean Air 747.


Upon landing

They were having issues opening door 1L, so everyone had to deplane through 2L. There goes the first class deplaning advantage! Fortunately it allowed me to snap a couple more pictures of the first and business class cabins.


Row one


1A


Business class


Business class cabin

Immigration lines were quite hellish, and the Fast Track line was the longest of all, because there was only one agent working the Fast Track line and he decided to question one person for over ten minutes. Unfortunately I didn’t realize it till I was in line, as it appeared to be shorter at first.

Once outside of immigration I followed the signs towards the Hotel Hoppa bus for my transfer to the Crowne Plaza London Heathrow.

Conversations (7)
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.
Type your response here.

If you'd like to participate in the discussion, please adhere to our commenting guidelines. Anyone can comment, and your email address will not be published. Register to save your unique username and earn special OMAAT reputation perks!

  1. Jayden Guest

    The Qatar Business Class looks like American Airlines old business class seats

  2. Alex Guest

    I see Qatar have the same seats in Business as BA do on their LCY-JFK service.
    Great reports man!

  3. David Guest

    The IRIS registration takes about 10 minutes - there's an "interview", they take a picture of your retina, done.

    What you might also want to keep an eye out for (and it might actually work with a US biometric passport as well, I can't try ;)) are the "ePassport" gates - I've seen them at Gatwick, but never paid attention at Heathrow. They're also usually not too crowded, and you just scan in your passport,...

    The IRIS registration takes about 10 minutes - there's an "interview", they take a picture of your retina, done.

    What you might also want to keep an eye out for (and it might actually work with a US biometric passport as well, I can't try ;)) are the "ePassport" gates - I've seen them at Gatwick, but never paid attention at Heathrow. They're also usually not too crowded, and you just scan in your passport, stand on a spot so that the camera gets a good look at you, thank you, you're in.

    No registration needed...

  4. lucky Guest

    @ Rich -- Sadly I didn't make it back to coach, though that does sound like excellent seat pitch. As far as the TV screen, it was far from the seat, though it was plenty big, so seeing it wasn't an issue. There was a bit of glare, though, which would be my major complaint.

    @ Andy -- Four of the eight seats were taken in first class. I'd say the two segment were roughly...

    @ Rich -- Sadly I didn't make it back to coach, though that does sound like excellent seat pitch. As far as the TV screen, it was far from the seat, though it was plenty big, so seeing it wasn't an issue. There was a bit of glare, though, which would be my major complaint.

    @ Andy -- Four of the eight seats were taken in first class. I'd say the two segment were roughly comparable. Both crews were quite good and the food was pretty good on both segments.

    @ David -- I really should, just have to find the time to do it.

  5. David Guest

    Lucky,

    if you're a frequent traveler through London, you really want to take a look at registering for IRIS - I find it saves me tons of time... If memory serves, you have a German passport as well, so you shouldn't have any issues...

    And, hey, it's free! :)

    http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/travellingtotheuk/Enteringtheuk/usingiris/registeriris/caniregisteriris/

  6. Andy Bluebear Guest

    How full was this flight, besides the gentleman across the row from you? And which segment did you prefer, to or from London?

  7. Rich Gold

    Lucky,

    A couple of questions.

    1. From looking at Seat Guru it shows economy class on Qatar's A340-600 having a seat pitch of 32-34" and a width of 18.9" which seems pretty roomy compared to most economy classes. Did you get a good view of the seats that were in economy?

    2. From your photos it seems like the tv screens in first class were quite a distance from your seat (via the photo...

    Lucky,

    A couple of questions.

    1. From looking at Seat Guru it shows economy class on Qatar's A340-600 having a seat pitch of 32-34" and a width of 18.9" which seems pretty roomy compared to most economy classes. Did you get a good view of the seats that were in economy?

    2. From your photos it seems like the tv screens in first class were quite a distance from your seat (via the photo labeled 1A). Did you have any issues with glare or seeing them? (Maybe it was just an angle thing.)

    For a second I misread the phrase "offer Arabic coffee and dates". I think it was due to my imagination after you mentioned "The two tall, blonde Eastern European flight attendants introduced themselves." :)

    Thanks.

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.

Jayden Guest

The Qatar Business Class looks like American Airlines old business class seats

0
Alex Guest

I see Qatar have the same seats in Business as BA do on their LCY-JFK service. Great reports man!

0
David Guest

The IRIS registration takes about 10 minutes - there's an "interview", they take a picture of your retina, done. What you might also want to keep an eye out for (and it might actually work with a US biometric passport as well, I can't try ;)) are the "ePassport" gates - I've seen them at Gatwick, but never paid attention at Heathrow. They're also usually not too crowded, and you just scan in your passport, stand on a spot so that the camera gets a good look at you, thank you, you're in. No registration needed...

0
Meet Ben Schlappig, OMAAT Founder
5,163,247 Miles Traveled

32,614,600 Words Written

35,045 Posts Published

Keep Exploring OMAAT