sat74
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2001
- Posts
- 365
By 2042 100% of all Americans will be obese at current rates!I thought it was because us Americans get fatter by the day.![]()
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By 2042 100% of all Americans will be obese at current rates!I thought it was because us Americans get fatter by the day.![]()
Delta's coach seats rank up there with the worst I have ever sat in!
By 2042 100% of all Americans will be obese at current rates!![]()
I find it hard to believe that you would prefer to fly on an US airline vs. the likes of Lufthansa, AF, Iberia, Emirates, Etihad, Cathay, Singapore, etc! There is simply no comparison! Many of the ME and Asian carries employ US flight crews while the training in other parts of the world is among the best in the world and often times much more rigorous than the FAA standards!More to the topic here, I have flown many non-US / non-UK carriers as both a passenger and as a manufactuer's representative. Due to my experiences, I no longer travel on non-US/non-EU carriers ... certainly not ME carriers no matter how new their equipment or their entertainment.
Simply stated, I will take a US carrier with US trained and qualified crews before I will ever consider the age of the aircraft of the "quality" of the entertainment system ... unless you consider crew inexperience a part of the in-flight entertainment.
Bob
I rode on a DAL 737-700 out of ORD this week, plane looked brand spankin new inside and out, really comfy ride....great trip
Now the MD88 ride back, little different...Had to literally flush my own urine down the lav with bottled water, no potable, etc......crew mentioned they were not going to be serviced at the destination either....yikes!
Exactly, Why do you think the FAA changed the passenger weights recently? Hint: it wasn't because the airlines crammed more seats into the planes.
WikipediaAlthough the pilots had totaled up the take-off weight of the aircraft before the flight and determined it to be within limits, the plane was actually overloaded and out of balance, due to the use of incorrect (but FAA approved) passenger weight estimates. When checked, the NTSB found that the estimates were over 20 pounds (9kg) lighter than the actual weight of an average passenger. After checking the actual weight of baggage retrieved from the crash site, and passengers (based on information from next-of-kin and the medical examiner), it was found that the aircraft was actually 600 pounds (272Kg) above its maximum allowable take-off weight, with its center of gravity 5% rear of allowable limits.
It was determined that neither problem alone would have caused the loss of control, which explains why it departed Huntington, West Virginia safely.
Aftermath
As a result of the weight issues discovered, the FAA planned to investigate and potentially revise estimated weight values, something that was not done since 1936. Air Midwest now use an average weight of 200 pounds(90.7Kg) per passenger, but the NTSB suggests that airlines use actual weights instead of average. 70% of small air carriers still use average.[4] Air Midwest publicly apologized for the incident after the family of crash victim Christiana Grace Shepherd pressured the airline to do so.
This woman has obviously never ridden the jumpseat in a CRJ![]()
I find it hard to believe that you would prefer to fly on an US airline vs. the likes of Lufthansa, AF, Iberia, Emirates, Etihad, Cathay, Singapore, etc! There is simply no comparison! Many of the ME and Asian carries employ US flight crews while the training in other parts of the world is among the best in the world and often times much more rigorous than the FAA standards!
I find it hard to believe that you would prefer to fly on an US airline vs. the likes of Lufthansa, AF, Iberia, Emirates, Etihad, Cathay, Singapore, etc! There is simply no comparison! Many of the ME and Asian carries employ US flight crews while the training in other parts of the world is among the best in the world and often times much more rigorous than the FAA standards!