When airlines attempt to board pax by row, usually starting at the rear, I really don't think it makes boarding any faster overall at all.
It tends be done on single aisle jets 737 and A320 more so than twin aisle, but I've seen it on both types. And some airlines do it more than others.
IMO the slow bit of boarding, tends to be some pax struggling to put up their bags in the OHL and requiring help or are just very slow getting OHL stuff organised. And then pax having to stand up to let other pax in to the window seats compounds the issue. By boarding rows 35-42 (or whatever they are) firstly, it concentrates this issue into a small section of the plane at a time, slowing down pax from taking their seats in that area, and lining them up all the way to the front of the plane and on to the airbridge anyway. Multiply this by 4 or 5 sections at a time and it's still highly inefficient way to board. I am yet to see a 737 or A320 boarded quickly (when fully booked) by doing it by row. To me it still takes the same 20 minutes.
I understand the theory behind boarding the rear first and then working your way forward, but in reality I don't think it works at all, and is in fact slower.
When pax are free to board whenever they like, you tend to get a spread of overhead luggage issues all through the aisle front to back , and standing up to let window seated pax in so 10 or so people can get seated at once. It's spread out front to back, and generally seems to me to be as efficient or a better way of getting people seated overall, rather than concentrating seating pax in one tiny area at a time.
Based on my own limited observations in Y, I can't work out why airlines persist with the row by row seating. It seems quite illogical to me in reality when carry on, congestion in one tiny area and window vs. aisle seats are factored in.
IMO a much smarter order if they want one is to ask all pax with a window seat to board first, e.g. "All those seated in A or J please board first". Too obvious? Sure families and couples want to board together, so this is probably not gonna happen, but in reality lots of people ignore the row by row seating calls anyway.
Have I got it wrong? is row by row boarding really better??
It tends be done on single aisle jets 737 and A320 more so than twin aisle, but I've seen it on both types. And some airlines do it more than others.
IMO the slow bit of boarding, tends to be some pax struggling to put up their bags in the OHL and requiring help or are just very slow getting OHL stuff organised. And then pax having to stand up to let other pax in to the window seats compounds the issue. By boarding rows 35-42 (or whatever they are) firstly, it concentrates this issue into a small section of the plane at a time, slowing down pax from taking their seats in that area, and lining them up all the way to the front of the plane and on to the airbridge anyway. Multiply this by 4 or 5 sections at a time and it's still highly inefficient way to board. I am yet to see a 737 or A320 boarded quickly (when fully booked) by doing it by row. To me it still takes the same 20 minutes.
I understand the theory behind boarding the rear first and then working your way forward, but in reality I don't think it works at all, and is in fact slower.
When pax are free to board whenever they like, you tend to get a spread of overhead luggage issues all through the aisle front to back , and standing up to let window seated pax in so 10 or so people can get seated at once. It's spread out front to back, and generally seems to me to be as efficient or a better way of getting people seated overall, rather than concentrating seating pax in one tiny area at a time.
Based on my own limited observations in Y, I can't work out why airlines persist with the row by row seating. It seems quite illogical to me in reality when carry on, congestion in one tiny area and window vs. aisle seats are factored in.
IMO a much smarter order if they want one is to ask all pax with a window seat to board first, e.g. "All those seated in A or J please board first". Too obvious? Sure families and couples want to board together, so this is probably not gonna happen, but in reality lots of people ignore the row by row seating calls anyway.
Have I got it wrong? is row by row boarding really better??