Air travel in the 1980s: What flying was really like back then

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This was published 6 years ago

Air travel in the 1980s: What flying was really like back then

Updated

In 2017, air travel is commonplace - a means for getting from A to B not much more remarkable than catching a train.

Just 30 years ago though, flying was a very different experience. It was expensive, glamorous and could involve meat carving sets and fancy crockery.

We spoke to two of the UK's largest airlines, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic, to find out what flying was like back in the 1980s.

Flying rules were a little more relaxed in the 1980s, when comedy classic Flying High was released.

Flying rules were a little more relaxed in the 1980s, when comedy classic Flying High was released.

COSTS WERE SKY-HIGH AT THE START OF THE EIGHTIES

Although fares varied according to destination, air travel anywhere used to be much more expensive.

In 1983, a return flight to Barbados was £385 ($A652) with BA, which sounds OK - until you realise that's £1250 ($A2117) in today's money. For just one person.

Miss Australia Tracey Pearson relaxes in Qantas business class in 1985.

Miss Australia Tracey Pearson relaxes in Qantas business class in 1985.Credit: Peter John Moxham

"People sometimes saved up for years to go on a flight. It really was a luxury," says Josephine Hart, who joined BA in 1988 as a cabin crew member. "I think I'd only ever been on an aeroplane once before I became an air hostess."

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See also: Why international flights are cheaper than ever

ORDINARY PEOPLE WERE JUST DISCOVERING PLANE TRAVEL

Drunken pilots were perfectly acceptable in the 80s. Not really, that's Richard Branson launching Virgin Atlantic in 1984. He's not flying the plane.

Drunken pilots were perfectly acceptable in the 80s. Not really, that's Richard Branson launching Virgin Atlantic in 1984. He's not flying the plane.Credit: Getty Images

The 1980s saw falling prices, the birth of package holidays and increased competition - both Virgin Atlantic and Ryanair first took to the skies in 1984 (easyJet came later in 1995). Suddenly, flying was not just for the rich.

"In the 1970s, fares were heavily regulated and the airlines largely charged the same prices," explains Paul Jarvis of the BA Heritage Centre. "In the 1980s, things changed and we moved away from the man in the street going to Benidorm. He was now seriously considering Barbados."

Flying still wasn't cheap, however, and holidays tended to happen just once a year. "If you went on holiday twice a year in the 1980s, you were very middle class," says Jarvis.

In Australia, it took a bit longer for budget airlines to take off. Virgin Australia launched as Virgin Blue in 1999, a couple of years before the collapse of Ansett turned it into Australia's second-largest carrier, behind Qantas. Jetstar didn't launch until 2004. Tigerair took off in 2007.

THERE WERE FAR FEWER DESTINATIONS ON OFFER

Virgin Atlantic now flies to more than 30 long-haul destinations from the UK. But when it launched, it offered just one route - London to New York - hence the name.

BA offered 140 routes out of London in 1985, compared with 200 now, but it took much longer to reach far-flung places back then.

"We used to go away for up to 21 days, and stop here, there and everywhere, because aircraft couldn't fly as far as today," says Hart. "We used to get four or five days off afterwards I think, but it was more of a lifestyle."

SECURITY CHECKS WERE SOMETIMES DONE BY HAND

Although X-ray machines were in use, security was generally more rudimentary and checks would sometimes be done by hand.

"There were always regulations on what you could bring on - we would have posters behind the check-in desk saying you can't take dynamite on, for example," says Jarvis. "Nowadays, you can't take on nail clippers or even too much liquid."

See also: Stop confiscating duty free alcohol - 10 travel issues that need to be fixed

METAL CUTLERY WAS ALLOWED AND YOU COULD GO AND MEET THE PILOTS

"One downside following 9/11 is the fact that people can no longer visit the flight deck in flight," says Dave Gunner, Virgin Atlantic's Digital Media Specialist. "Although our pilots will always try and accommodate a quick peek while on the ground, providing it doesn't disrupt their normal duties."

PLANES HAD HAT RACKS AND WHEELIE BAGS WERE UNHEARD OF

Although baggage did have a maximum weight attached, it wasn't standardised as it is today, with the amount you could bring varying with the route. It would all go in the hold too.

"The overhead lockers used to be called hat racks," says Josephine. "People used to put their hats, coats and much smaller bags in there, rather than bringing on large luggage."

Wheelie bags, rife in airports now, had not yet been popularised.

"I remember when wheels you strapped onto the bag came in and it was such an exciting thing," says Hart.

See also: How to fit two weeks' worth of clothes in your carry-on bag

IN-FLIGHT DINING WAS QUITE EXTRAORDINARY

If you were lucky enough to be in First Class, the dining experience was remarkably different.

Back then, staff would carry a meat carving set, using large knives to cut joints of beef or lamb beside your seat, before serving you. Hot gravy would be poured from a jug.

In Economy, things were not quite so highly civilised, though meals were usually served on crockery plates.

See also: Inside the secret world of first-class airline meals

IN-FLIGHT ENTERTAINMENT WAS MUCH SIMPLER

Today, there are often screens in the back of seats and passengers usually have their smartphones and laptops to keep them busy. But in the 1980s, in-flight entertainment mostly meant reading your newspaper or book.

"The movie went on after the meal service on one large screen and everyone would watch the same movie at the same time," says Hart.

Virgin Atlantic say they were the first to put Sony Video Walkmans in an aircraft, but even these were not introduced until 1989.

See also: Why the seatback entertainment screen is dead

SMOKING ON PLANES WAS ABSOLUTELY FINE

In the 1980s, aircraft were split into smoking and non-smoking areas, with smokers sat at the back of the aircraft - and tobacco was even sold on-board.

"You could see a thick cloud of smoke on the aircraft," says Hart. "When people finished their meals, they always lit up their cigarettes and, as staff having to serve them, we actually used to find burn holes in our uniform."

In the UK, cigarettes were not banned from aeroplanes until the 1990s.

CHECK-IN INVOLVED HANDWRITTEN TICKETS AND LOTS OF PATIENCE

Checking in was simple in the Eighties. You brought your ticket, queued at the checking desk and they checked your name using a primitive computer before ripping off your boarding coupon.

"With handwritten tickets and big sheets of seat number stickers, the check-in of 1984 was a very different experience," said Jarvis. "Things are much quicker and slicker now."

These days, e-tickets on your smartphone or smartwatch, and even self-service bag-drops, make for less queuing.

PEOPLE DRESSED FOR THE OCCASION AND MINGLED

Even for businessmen and women, flying used to be a more formal experience.

"In the 1980s, you wouldn't think of getting on board without wearing a suit jacket, trousers and a shirt," adds Jarvis. "Nowadays, businessmen are often scruffy on aircraft."

As for holiday-goers, flying was not just the journey but a luxury at the heart of their experience.

"It was so rare for people to travel by air back then compared with today, so they were very excited and wanted to talk to everyone there with them," says Hart. "With smaller prices, it's run of the mill now - like catching a bus."

See also: Australian tourists overseas - we're a nation of badly dressed slobs

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See also: 21 things you'll only understand if you travelled before 2005

See also: 16 shocking things you used to be allowed to do on planes

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