Qantas A321-XLR wing and winglet on the tarmac at Sydney Airport

Qantas A321-XLR: First Impressions from Seat 16F

Flying on a brand new Airbus A321-XLR with Qantas today, flight QFA544, Sydney to Brisbane. It is a very comfortable plane, especially in seat 16F, which is the exit row. As a 6 foot 2 inch traveller, the leg room is much appreciated, and with no one beside me it feels like a genuinely privileged setup.

That being said, if there was someone beside me I hazard that it would be more spacious than the Boeing 737-800 that I flew down on.

Individual air vents, a comfy seat cushion and an nicely adjustable head rest round out what is a pleasant little personal space.

Qantas A321-XLR wing and winglet on the tarmac at Sydney Airport
The Qantas A321-XLR on the tarmac at Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport

The only downside so far: the hideous banshee scream that emanates from the craft leading up to takeoff. Whether that is an A321-XLR quirk or just the acoustics of sitting near the exits, it is not exactly the calm pre-flight experience you might hope for.

Food, Drink and In-Flight Comfort

The food and drink service came around quickly, no doubt helped along by a less than full flight. On the menu: a Handmade Food Co Roast Chicken and Avocado sandwich, fairly tasty if on the compact side, paired with an Andrew Peace 2024 Murphy’s Block Shiraz Cabernet. Not a bad combination at altitude.

Andrew Peace Shiraz Cabernet and Handmade Food Co Roast Chicken Avocado sandwich on Qantas
In-flight refreshments: Andrew Peace 2024 Murphy’s Block Shiraz Cabernet and a Handmade Food Co Roast Chicken and Avocado sandwich
Handmade Food Co roast chicken and avocado sandwich on Qantas A321-XLR
The Handmade Food Co Roast Chicken and Avocado: tasty, if on the compact side

For entertainment, I brought my own laptop, but the seat back had a handy phone holder built in. Both USB-A and 60W USB-C PD charging ports are available to keep your devices topped up throughout the journey. As expected there is also in-flight Wi-Fi available which worked quite well throughout the flight although I didn’t really use it that much.

The tray table was solidly adjustable, with plenty of reach given the generous row spacing, and handled the weight of a laptop without any drama.

Qantas A321-XLR seat back showing USB-A and USB-C charging ports, tray table and safety card
The seat back setup: USB-A and 60W USB-C PD charging ports, tray table handle, and the A321-XLR safety card tucked into the literature slot

The View Up Top

Sunset view from Qantas A321-XLR window at altitude
Sunset over the clouds on QFA544 Sydney to Brisbane

Sydney to Brisbane: and a Go-Around

As with every SYD-BNE run, you barely have time to finish your drink before the cabin is being prepared for landing. That was handled efficiently enough. Then things got a little more interesting.

We had a go-around. A recalcitrant tailwind picked up on approach, making our first attempt untenable, so the crew powered up and took us around for another lap over Moreton Bay. As surprises go, it was a welcome one: more time in what is genuinely a very nice new aircraft.

Flight tracker showing QFA544 go-around loop over Moreton Bay approaching Brisbane
The go-around is clearly visible on the Aerial flight tracker (https://track.aerial.io): QFA544 looping over Moreton Bay before a second approach into Brisbane

The actual landing was one of the firmer ones in recent memory, though nothing to write home about. I have certainly had worse.

Final Thoughts

The A321-XLR is a strong step up in comfort for what is, at its core, a fairly mundane domestic hop. The exit row legroom, the 60W charging, the adjustable tray, the quick and friendly service: it all stacks up into something noticeably better than the average short-haul experience in Australia.

Yes, the pre-takeoff noise will raise an eyebrow. Yes, the go-around added some unplanned minutes to the journey, and the landing was on the firm side. But none of that changed the overall picture. This is a well-kitted aircraft doing a short route, and for a tall traveller who spends too much of his life folded into economy seats, seat 16F on a brand new A321-XLR felt like something close to luxury.

If Qantas keeps deploying this aircraft on the Sydney-Brisbane route, the bar for domestic short-haul just got a little harder to clear.

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