Denny alert. This picture does not show the door plug, it shows a regular emergency exit. The door plug has a regular rectangular passenger window in the middle of it, not a porthole.I just took two flights this week on a Delta 737-900ER (that has the door plug).
Denny alert. This picture does not show the door plug, it shows a regular emergency exit. The door plug has a regular rectangular passenger window in the middle of it, not a porthole.
Whether a 900ER or a Max have a plug or not depends on the seating arrangement installed. More seats require more emergency exits.
Watch out! You too will be labeled a scaredy cat of the metal tubes of death…We fly if we have to. I prefer driving if possible. More freedom to stop and do whatever we want. Pack our own cooler with food, snacks and drinks. No crowds or delays to deal with. You do have to deal with the a-hole drivers though.
I just took two flights this week on a Delta 737-900ER (that has the door plug).
I didn't die.
6 hours is my limit. Anything over 6 hours I'll typically fly, but STL, Nashville, Detroit, I'll drive.We fly if we have to. I prefer driving if possible. More freedom to stop and do whatever we want. Pack our own cooler with food, snacks and drinks. No crowds or delays to deal with. You do have to deal with the a-hole drivers though.
We fly if we have to. I prefer driving if possible. More freedom to stop and do whatever we want. Pack our own cooler with food, snacks and drinks. No crowds or delays to deal with. You do have to deal with the a-hole drivers though.
Maybe Ingo is purgatory. You can log out anytime you like, but you can never leave.Are you sure? Maybe Purgatory has INGO access...
Did you take the picture after you pulled your chute? Looks like the plane is pretty low as it has gear down.**EDITED - turns out that's not a door plug, but an emergency exit, I didn't make it that far back in the plane to see the ER exit.***
I just took two flights this week on a Delta 737-900ER (that has the door plug).
I didn't die.
I enjoy flying and even jumping out of airplanes. It is amazing to me. A trip to space would be wonderful. That said I like smaller planes and jets not the big jumbo ones.We do both, just depends. I guess I'm odd man out in that I actually enjoy both to some degree. I get that it's just a bus in the sky...but *it's in the sky*. Man spent untold generations wanting to fly and I'm kind of still impressed I can be whisked through the air at some 600mph for a pretty reasonable cash outlay. I completely get the appeal of space tourism. I mean, yeah, you're just getting strapped in some tube and going to somewhere that it's dark and cold and you float around...but you're in effing space. I get for most people there's no magic involved here, it's just an accepted part of modern living, but it's a real privilege that we enjoy. No matter how rich or powerful you were for most of human history, if you could cross the ocean at all you were doing it in a boat. I can deal with airplane food and a tubby chick taking up too much of the arm rest.
I'll dispute no delays to deal with while driving, though. I get through TSA quicker than I get through Atlanta any day. Coming back from Gulf Shores a little while back we got tied up in construction south of Louisville for long enough I got out of the truck and got some snacks and drinks from the cooler. The guy behind me asked if I had any beer. I didn't, and he didn't want a fizzy water for some reason.
Idiots. You NEVER fully remove your seatbelt unless it is to get out of your seat. They even tell you this in the briefing.They forgot to mention that they also ran out of toilet paper shortly after!
ANOTHER AIRLINE DISASTER: Passengers Smash into the Ceiling After Boeing 787 Plane Nosedives Mid-Flight Due to "Technical Problem"- 50 Injured, 12 Hospitalized (VIDEO) | The Gateway Pundit | by Cullen Linebarger
Fifty people were injured onboard a Boeing plane Monday, with some smashing into the ceiling when it “suddenly nosedived” mid-flight.www.thegatewaypundit.com
I have yet to get out of my seat for anything other than exiting the plane.Idiots. You NEVER fully remove your seatbelt unless it is to get out of your seat. They even tell you this in the briefing.
Instead you are supposed to loosen the belt so its comfy but still protects you during unexpected turbulence.
My last flight I was amazed by how many seatbelts I could hear open around me. (I just loosened it several inches)
This right here. The last vestiges of such an organizational culture were burned to the ground in the 2003 - 2008 sequential bankruptcies of the mainline carriers. The only thing left were Wall street MBA driven shells outsourcing to the lowest bidder.I'm afraid the aircraft maintenance culture of forty years ago is long dead and gone. It has been wiped clean by fashonable DEI programs and MBA managers who outsource maintenance to the lowest bidder.