Ask a aircraft maker or a salesman to define cabin class and
you may get two different answers. Ask a charter operator
and you get a third.
That article was just what I came on first, thought I'd cite
a source other than myself.
--
James H. Macklin
ATP,CFI,A&P
"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...
|
| "Jim Macklin" wrote
in message
| news:01b7g.17787$ZW3.13225@dukeread04...
| see
|
http://www.ezinearticles.com/?Enteri...craft&id=33419
|
| Nice, but that article is more of a sales promo than real
data.
|
| "A corporate flight attendant is typically utilized on a
| "cabin class" aircraft. They are larger aircraft with
| usually 19 or less seats, where you can easily get up
and
| walk around the cabin. Compared with a Westwind, Lear,
or
| Cessna, the larger jets have an aisle to walk up and
down
| upon and the headroom usually is adequate to allow easy
| passage of anyone under 6' tall." end of quote from
linked
| article.
|
| Commuter aircraft are quite different than what we're
discussing here.
|
|