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- Aug 20, 2003
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I put on the seatbelt when i sleep
As one ought to and is required by all safety-focused airlines. I put my on all the time when seated. I have been on enough flights to understand life can change quickly.
I put on the seatbelt when i sleep
How would $50 or for that matter $500 prevent an incident like this from happeningWell I happily pay the $50 safety tax to fly Qantas on the golden triangle
That looked like a controlled/requested descent to a lower altitude. The incident happened a little earlier and the altitude deviation doesn't seem like a lot (at least according to one of the flight tracking websites). As noted in a later comment, QF2 took a route sightly southerly to SQ 321 but BA15's route isn't much different to SQ321. Great reminder to keep the seatbelts fastened at all times.For the pilots why would it have dropped that much during turbulence? @AviatorInsight @jb747
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The more you fly, the more likely you..(rhymes with fly).I always imagine these kinds of scenarios when going to the in flight bathrooms and the safety belt sign switches on (and i am still in the middle of doing my business from all the lounge food /in flight food). Probably next time don't consume so much..
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You know what they always say: Better to be "safe" than "sorry". No regrets that way (hopefully). And justifiable too.
What I mean is I would happily pay $50 for a "safer" airline given with a good safety track record. I mean it is the most rational choice as opposed to a more budget-conscious choice which is also rational considering which variable you value more: safety versus money? I would trust a company that is too big to fail to take all precautions from these types of situations happening. As for other companies that could dissolve any minute probably less so.How would $50 or for that matter $500 prevent an incident like this from happening
That looked like a controlled/requested descent to a lower altitude.
Same question - how would $50 or $500 prevent this incident?What I mean is I would happily pay $50 for a "safer" airline given with a good safety track record.
Looks to me that the panels were dislodged and the masks fell through rather than drployed?.Pics (if accurate) depict oxygen masks deployed.
Not uncommon to see this in similar incidents of severe turbulence. Just a structural issue, releasing overhead units and panels.Pics (if accurate) depict oxygen masks deployed. I am confident the pilots on this forum will correctly interpret why this may have been the case.
You'd have imagined the higher airfare trickles down to the higher investment in the companies that would lead to higher salaries and more staff benefits/better wellbeing=safer flights. Don't tell me you won't pay the $50 safety tax given the alternative is Malaysian or Air Asia given all other variables are exactly the same...Same question - how would $50 or $500 prevent this incident?
What I mean is I would happily pay $50 for a "safer" airline given with a good safety track record
No but I have flown Lion Air's (one of the most unsafe airlines) subsidiary new start up airline CityLink (so more unsafe than unsafe) that have no safety rating and even though it was a fun experience I would not do that on a daily basis due to probability and statistics. Heck the terminal looks like a bus stop and the baggage check is a joke. But I enjoyed it nevertheless even though I know it is a foolish decision.Have you flown many times to remote African airports and airstrips?
Sound adviceFYI....the "Ignore" function is a very handy tool
This thread is about severe turbulence affecting a 777 and its occupants...I fail to understand how $50 or even $500 tax would prevent something like this.Don't tell me you won't pay the $50 safety tax given the alternative is Malaysian or Air Asia given all other variables are exactly the same...
For the pilots why would it have dropped that much during turbulence? @AviatorInsight @jb747
So how do higher salaries and more staff benefits mitigate against sudden severe turbulence?that would lead to higher salaries and more staff benefits/better wellbeing=safer flights