The New Zealand Herald

Glenn Hart flies aboard flight NZ288 from Shanghai to Auckland

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The plane: A Boeing 787-9.

Class: Business.

Price: As a guest of Huawei NZ, I have absolutely no idea — lots?

My seat: 2J

Fellow passengers: I was travelling with the Huawei orientatio­n team.

How full? Full.

Entertainm­ent: The touch screen’s stowed position is up against your shoulder. As it has to be stowed during taxiing, take-off and landing, by the end of the safety video I already had a stiff back from twisting around to watch. The selfindulg­ent Air NZ safety videos are about 15 minutes too long, so that didn’t help. A good range of movies, TV and music, with the ability to add items to your Favourites List so you can come back to them later. No on-board Wi-Fi — panic! No social media for 12 hours! (Actually, it was a relief.)

The service: I was worried when they got my first drink order wrong. I also got someone else’s coffee, but an attendant was right there when I needed him to help me figure out how to put my crazy bed away. More on this later.

Food and drink: Water, juice or bubbles before the flight, along with hot towels. Again, because the table starts out stowed, you’re restricted to a small “cocktail table” which pops out of the dividing partition even further behind you than the entertainm­ent screen. Nuts. Oh, actual nuts before the main meal — I went with the burger, which arrived deconstruc­ted for those who don’t like all the fillings. Not sure what happened to the dessert and cheese listed in the menu. I was never offered it. Breakfast was fruit, then a choice between scrambled eggs, french toast or congee. All boring but filling.

The toilets: Surprising­ly cramped with very dim lighting. Nice and clean though.

Luggage: I travel pretty light.

The airport experience: As massive as Pudong Internatio­nal is, I didn’t find it crowded, although getting to check-in proved comically challengin­g when a travelator decided to change direction halfway between floors. The queues at Business Class check-in and security were short and the China Air executive lounge was fairly quiet.

The bottom line: This is only my second Business Class flight, but I have to say I’m quite disappoint­ed with the seat configurat­ion. Due to the low dividers and the fact the seats face into the row there’s very little privacy and every time I looked up I seemed to be staring straight at one of my fellow passengers. Of all the illogical seat-design features (and there are many), surely the most odd is that the seat doesn’t recline to lie flat, the back folds forward. In what upside-down world was that ever going to be a good idea? You then have to unroll a separate mattress. I’m not licensed to drive such an insane device, as comfortabl­e as the final result turned out to be. I drifted off wondering what drugaddled mad genius would devise a seat you have to get off, to sleep on.

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