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- Apr 6, 2018
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SorryCan you correlate with location pls?
CPH-SIN
SorryCan you correlate with location pls?
Sorry . Yes I understood 11hrs in SQ usually means EU-SIN. I meant where along the route did turbulence occur requiring SB onCPH-SIN
I am not as detail focussed as some about exactly where - was enjoying the Olympic coverage!!Sorry . Yes I understood 11hrs in SQ usually means EU-SIN. I meant where along the route did turbulence occur requiring SB on
There is only one answer. No cabin crew should get injured because they have to do a meal service or other cabin crew duties and passengers don't get to decide how the SB sign is operated -there is nothing for them to know.
Any pilot interpretation of radar signals has to be in favour of safety not meal service
Of course, it is impossible to completely eliminate injuries from turbulence. However decisions to turn seat belt signs on should be in favour of safety and not meal service. And again the pilots can determine what the upcoming situation is going to be using their radar. SQ has implemented additional training for all their crew which should improve the risk.you can never guarantee 100% that nobody gets injured
From where I am sitting, cabin crew should never have to do a cabin service if there is a risk of upcoming turbulence - the pilots determine that - not the pasenger.nobody is asking whether anyone should or should not get injured,
There is no tradeoff. If services are suspended then so be it. Service quality for me means everyone arrives uninjured.what is the tradeoff
Of course, it is impossible to completely eliminate injuries from turbulence. However decisions to turn seat belt signs on should be in favour of safety and not meal service. And again the pilots can determine what the upcoming situation is going to be using their radar. SQ has implemented additional training for all their crew which should improve the risk.
From where I am sitting, cabin crew should never have to do a cabin service if there is a risk of upcoming turbulence - the pilots determine that - not the pasenger.
There is no tradeoff. If services are suspended then so be it. Service quality for me means everyone arrives uninjured.
They, like many other airlines, allowed cabin crew to continue service whilst the signs were on, and from experience, they did so when the turbulence was well beyond mild. That is most definitely a service over safety mindset. It directly places the cabin crew at risk, and even worse, engenders a mind set amongst some passengers that they know better with regard to the signs and turbulence.Are you saying previously they didn't favour safety? Surely not. Surely they would not, not put the seat belt signs on if there is a known risk of turbulance?
And this is followed by some airlines, who in turn then allow passengers to move around when the signs are on. All they’ve really done is abrogate their own responsibility for management of the signs (and cabin activity), and passed the buck to people who have no idea.Well in fact turbulence is not 100% predictable - far from it, so in fact if you want that, then the seat belt sign must always be on.
Too much Westworld?There is in fact a trade off, this is not an opinion - if you fail to accept that, the term here is cognitive dissonance.
They, like many other airlines, allowed cabin crew to continue service whilst the signs were on, and from experience, they did so when the turbulence was well beyond mild. That is most definitely a service over safety mindset. It directly places the cabin crew at risk, and even worse, engenders a mind set amongst some passengers that they know better with regard to the signs and turbulence.
There is no scientific nor technical nor regulatory definition of when and how the seat belt sign should be used - it is entirely arbitrary, and thus the follow on impact to service.You need to accept the fact that if the seat belt sign is to be used correctly, then there are times that service will be severely impacted. Your desire for service has no place in the decision to have the sign on or off.
It is not common sense in any way at all. It simply shows that commercial considerations have been allowed to override safety, and continues to reinforce the idea that seat belts aren’t necessary at all times when seated.Common sense prevails - SQ resumes doing meal service when seat belt sign is on:
100%. While I fly SQ because it goes where I need, the QF approach to the seatbelt sign is by far the best-It is not common sense in any way at all. It simply shows that commercial considerations have been allowed to override safety, and continues to reinforce the idea that seat belts aren’t necessary at all times when seated.
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It is not common sense in any way at all. It simply shows that commercial considerations have been allowed to override safety, and continues to reinforce the idea that seat belts aren’t necessary at all times when seated.
Got any more made up percentages for us? You have no idea whether they were necessary or not. Last time I looked, there’s no radar or INS data available at your seat, nor do you have the knowledge to interpret it anyway.They aren't necessary 99% of the time - they are just born to mitigate risk.
Well, there’s opinions based on knowledge and experience, and then there’s those based on nothing. I suspect mine comes from the former.Again you and your opinions - first you say the captain should determine when they light up and it was correct, so now it's not correct? So are the pilots no longer determining when to use them? Were they before? But not before this incident?
It may not be black and white, but that’s up to the experience of the Captain to decide. What, exactly, is your relevant experience?Seriously, you need to admit that it's not so black and white. What is the definition of safety? What is the risk tolerance? How scientific is any of this? It's all nuance, there is no line in the sand.
I thought the sash belt can remain unfastened when lying flat?I encountered a shoulder + lap seat-belt for the first time on an A350-900 SQ flight recently. I found it very uncomfortable and hard to adjust, especially when lying flat, perhaps because I've shrunk with age to barely 5ft. Are these seat-belts likely to become more common?
I think that's what I ended up with but I had to ask for cabin crew help to get settled.I thought the sash belt can remain unfastened when lying flat?