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EVA Air Premium Laurel Report


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***First off, let me apologize for the delay in posting this trip report. I have been so busy of late with work; I just haven’t gotten around to transferring the photos from my camera to my desktop, and then further to photobucket.com.

 

Also, I mainly write my trip reports for aviation enthuthiasts....or people who are nuts for aircraft. I share them here so people can make up their own minds about who they may want to use to fly to BKK. Hence all the extra aviation photos.

 

The first two legs of this trip report can be found at the following links:

 

http://www.pattayatalk.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=17695

 

http://www.pattayatalk.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=17701

 

27 August 2005

Bangkok International (BKK) - Taipei International (TPE)

EVA Air Flight 212 (BR 212)

Boeing 773ER

B-16701

Scheduled Departure – 1215, Actual – 1235, Airborne – 1247

Scheduled Arrival – 1655, Actual – 1702, Gate – 1707

Premium Laurel, Seat 7A (Window)

BKK – Gate 53, TPE – Gate C9

 

I must say, of all my trips to Thailand with EVA Air, this was the first time they had ever begun check-in prior to 2-hours prior. I’m not sure why, but maybe it was because immigration was really backed up. I’m not kidding when I say every line seemed to be 10 people deep. It took me a good half-hour to clear immigration and I was still one of the first into EVA’s BKK lounge.

 

Minor Complaint Alert: In most of my travels with any airline, I bring my golf clubs. This time, and only on the BKK leg, did I have a problem. As I was checking-in, I was told my clubs could not go on the plane. I didn’t get mad, I simply asked how that was. I pointed to the EVA priority tags still on the bag and said they arrived with EVA, I need them to depart with EVA. I had a hard time following the conversation, but they were checked-in but placed to the side. I was told a supervisor would be there to further explain. So the supervisor shows up and tells me there have been problems with BKK and golf clubs. I was told it’s not a theft problem, but a breakage one. I told her I’ve flown with my clubs close to one hundred times, never with a problem. She then told me I needed to sign a waiver or the clubs would have to stay. Of course, I signed. I’ve had to do the same with Delta on all my flights with them. However, the thing that was most frustrating was learning this “policy†was only implemented the day prior. The supervisor mentioned there was a larger mess yesterday with the golf club issue.

 

lounge2.jpg

 

This lounge is decent, but far from superior. The sitting area is quite large, seating all comers. There are no separate F, C, and FF lounges. Also, there are no restroom facilities inside the lounge. If you need to go, you need to hike to the public restrooms.

 

Walking through the smoked-glass doors, you are greeted by an attendant at the welcome desk. The person working there kindly takes your pass and points you to the seating area. To the right hand side are the newspaper racks. There were roughly 12-15 papers there to read in English (BKK Post, Nation, IHT, USA Today, WSJ Asia), Thai, and Chinese. There were also a few magazines, including Time’s Asia edition.

 

loungepapers.jpg

 

To the left is the large seating area. I tried to take one photo of the room, but it was so large the lighting doesn’t look too well. The seats were leather and tables were interspersed throughout.

 

lounge.jpg

 

Further to the left was the snack and beverage area. There is nothing here to fill you up, just a few snacks before the flight.

 

loungesnacks.jpg

 

Leaving the lounge for Gate 53 was not an ordinary walk. I’ve been on hikes in the Army that lasted less than this trek! I’m no expert in the layout of BKK, but I could swear this hike would rank in the top few as far as distance from lounge to gate.

 

Boarding at BKK always seems to be a free-for-all. For this reason, I decided to take my time this trip and concentrate on taking a few pics of the aircraft. I lucked out as there happened to be no other aircraft on our side of the ramp, so I took these photos before passing through the final security stage and finally at the gate.

 

773side.jpg

 

773profile.jpg

 

773tail.jpg

 

Boarding had just begun when I reached the gate. There was a long line to the right and next to no one in the line to the left. Premium and Gold or higher FFs boarded to the left, Elite and Economy classes boarded to the right. There was no wait as the boarding agent took my boarding pass. Walking down the ramp, I managed to take these shots of EVA’s first B773ER. It was also at this time that the heavens opened up and a short downpour began. The ceiling was overcast so I wouldn’t get many good departure pics.

 

773front.jpg

 

773upper.jpg

 

773long.jpg

 

773engine.jpg

 

773nose.jpg

 

At the jetway, Premium Laurel passengers went through the left door and Elite and Economy passengers took the right door. I managed the same seat from BKK as I had arriving to BKK. Once again, there was no one sitting in the seat next to me. I would put the Premium Laurel cabin at roughly 40% and Elite and Economy classes at 90%+ for this flight. I stowed my carry-on and was soon greeted by a flight attendant with a cold towel. While there, she took my pre-departure beverage order. I opted for a couple bottles of water as I explained I was dehydrated from a final night of drinking too many tasty adult beverages! LOL

 

The doors were soon closed and jetways pushed back. We were pushing back from the gate 20 minutes late. IMHO, that’s not too bad for a BKK departure. As we were taxiing out, I noticed by the time we reached the end, we’d be number 1 for departure.

 

depnum1.jpg

 

I also managed to take a few pics of aircraft at their gates or on the ramp.

 

bkksign.jpg

 

Kenya Airlines B763ER

 

763.jpg

 

China Airlines A343

 

cia343.jpg

 

Aeroflot B763ER

 

aeroflot.jpg

 

Singapore Airlines B772ER

 

sq772er2.jpg

 

sq772er.jpg

 

Ethiopian Airlines B763ER

 

ethiopianb763er.jpg

 

One-Two-Go by Orient Thai B752

 

orientthaib752.jpg

 

Royal Bhutan Airlines (Drukair) A319

 

drukaira319.jpg

 

Thai Airlines B744

 

tg744.jpg

 

Thai Airlines A333

 

tga333.jpg

 

Thai Airlines A306

 

tga306.jpg

 

Turning right onto Runway 21R, we paused ever so briefly before full power was applied and we were on departure roll. For a heavily loaded aircraft, we used less than 7k feet of the runway before we were airborne. After passing the departure end of the runway, we began our left-hand turn for NE Thailand and eventually the Vietnam coast. We didn’t overfly Danang, but wherever we were, it sure looked like there were beautiful beaches below.

 

vietnamcoast.jpg

 

vietnambeach2.jpg

 

vietnambeach.jpg

 

Not long after reaching our initial cruise altitude, the flight attendants began lunch service. It started with a hot towel, followed by snack mix with a nice glass of red wine. As with my previous legs, I selected my lunch via EVA’s meal order service at their homepage for the extra 500 FF miles per leg.

 

snack.jpg

 

Today’s lunch menu was:

 

BR212 BKK-TPE

 

Lunch

 

Hors D’oeurve

 

Roasted Sesame Salmon and Marinated Prawn with Olive Balsamic Vinaigrette Sauce

 

starter.jpg

 

Main Courses

 

Grilled Beef Tenderloin with Green Peppercorn Sauce

- Shallot Confit

- Carrots and Broccoli

- Gratin Potatoes

 

maincourse.jpg

 

Prawn with Red Curry Sauce Thai Style

- Vegetable Melange

- Chonburi Noodles

 

Stewed Chicken with Pineapple

- Mixed Vegetables

- Fried Rice

 

Cheese and Seasonal Fruit

 

cheese.jpg

 

Dessert

 

Pumpkin Cake with Orchid Cream

Or

Mocha, Vanilla, and Strawberry Ice Cream

 

Freshly Brewed Coffee or Tea

 

I chose the ice cream but lost my mind and forgot to take pics!

 

 

There wasn’t an opportunity to go back to the other cabins for more pics so I snapped a few of the Premium Laurel restroom and “barâ€. The “bar†is an interesting concept for long haul flights. In it are drinks and snacks. Those in Premium Laurel can get up at any time and have at it. I didn’t sneak a peak, but read in an IFE magazine it’ll be stocked with premium water, sodas, and juices. I imagine there might be alcoholic beverages, as well. After the self-tour, I went back to my seat and plugged in my trusty mp3 player and played video games on the AVOD until reaching TPE.

 

773toilet.jpg

 

773sink.jpg

 

773bar.jpg

 

The flight was very smooth and we were soon descending west of the island. The weather in TPE was similar to that experienced in SoCal – nice and smoggy! TPE Approach vectored us beautifully for the ILS and we coasted down the final 10-12 miles through the haze to Runway 24.

 

tpe2.jpg

 

tpe.jpg

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Nice TR echster

Only problem was the sizing, your report and images took nearly 2 screens, not sure why?

Keep up the good work, glad you didn't show me a 'log' down the toilet from last nights drinking + food :D

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  • 2 weeks later...

Thanks for the report as I am on the same itinerary in two weeks. I have made this trip maybe 5 times on EVA but I have never seen Taipei from the air. Anyway, maybe next time. Thanks again for the report.

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Nice report. It would go perfect on flyertalk.com also.

 

I just did my visarun last week BKK-TPE-BKK on KLM same day. Outbound was in business, and return in economy class. Business was just ok. seats not actually that comfortable and certainly not sleeper style. Return in economy class was better than business, since I had a 3 seater all to myself.

 

Anyway, I've been in the EVA lounge in BKK and it is nice. But now I finally got to go to the EVA lounge in TPE. It is fantastic! They had fried vegetables, fried rice, fried noodles, noodles with some cheesy sauce. 2 soups. dim sum buns, hot dogs, cookies, fruit, ice coffee shake machine, a machine with hot and cold towels -- even a PS2 room. Tons of food, and drinks. I loved it!

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Good report, thanks. Being an aviation enthuthiast myself I certainly appreciate the pics and the review of EVA. These are great reports and useful information given the travel time to Bangkok from many departure points can be upwards of 18 hours and the flights can play a significant role in one's total holiday experience.

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