Night-time lunch part of tests on historic Qantas New York-Sydney flight

Steve Creedy

By Steve Creedy Sun Oct 20, 2019

It was a case of the late lunch on a long flight as the human guinea pigs on the experimental Qantas non-stop New York-Sydney flight stuck into their midday meal shortly after their night-time departure. The switch was part of a series of experiments conducted on board Flight QF7879 to try and assess the impact of ultra-long-haul flights on passengers and ways of reducing jetlag. Tests on the 49 passengers and crew ranged from monitoring pilot brain waves, melatonin levels and alertness to exercise classes for passengers. The experimental flights come as Qantas is poised to make a decision on whether to proceed with Project Sunrise, which would see it fly non-stop from eastern Australia to New York and London. READ: Is project sunrise fading into the sunset? “Night flights usually start with dinner and then lights off,'' Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said. "For this flight, we started with lunch and kept the lights on for the first six hours, to match the time of day at our destination. It means you start reducing the jetlag straight away." The historic flight landed safely in Sydney 19 hours and 16 minutes after leaving New York. That was a few minutes ahead of the airline's regular New-York-Sydney one-stop service which had taken off three hours ahead of QF7879. https://twitter.com/i/status/1186049587775033345 Qantas Captain Sean Golding, who led the four pilots operating the service, said the flight went smoothly. "Headwinds picked up overnight, which slowed us down to start with, but that was part of our scenario planning,'' he said. "Given how long we were airborne, we were able to keep optimizing the flight path to make the best of the conditions. “We had a lot of interest from air traffic controllers as we crossed through different airspace because of the uniqueness of this flight. We also had a special sign off and welcome home from the control towers in New York and Sydney, which you don’t get every day. “Overall, we’re really happy with how the flight went and it’s great to have some of the data we need to help assess turning this into a regular service." Qantas plans two more flights as part of the Project Sunrise evaluations: London to Sydney in November and a second New York-Sydney flight in December.  

Have questions or want to share your thoughts?

Comments

No comments yet, be the first to write one.

Latest news and reviews

View more
The world's best economy class is getting even better
Airline News

The world's best economy class is getting even better

Apr 16, 2026

Sharon Petersen
flyadeal unveils its A330neo cabin configuration
Airline News

flyadeal unveils its A330neo cabin configuration

Apr 15, 2026

Josh Wood
Virgin Atlantic accelerates fleet-wide Starlink rollout
Airline News

Virgin Atlantic accelerates fleet-wide Starlink rollout

Apr 15, 2026

Josh Wood
Qantas’ Project Sunrise a step closer as engines fitted to first A350-1000ULR
Airline News

Qantas’ Project Sunrise a step closer as engines fitted to first A350-1000ULR

Apr 14, 2026

Josh Wood

Featured articles

View more
Air India 787 crash: new evidence seemingly clears pilots
Airline News

Air India 787 crash: new evidence seemingly clears pilots

Apr 13, 2026

Josh Wood
Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten
Airline Ratings review

Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten

Mar 25, 2026

Josh Wood
World's Best Airline Cabin Awards 2026
Airline News

World's Best Airline Cabin Awards 2026

Mar 18, 2026

Airline Ratings
These airlines have the world’s most cramped economy cabins
Airline News

These airlines have the world’s most cramped economy cabins

Apr 9, 2026

Josh Wood