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Onardo 09/04/2015 13:31, Mitchell Holman wrote:
Thank you Mitchell, there's some excellent reminders of bygone days there. Riİardo -- Moving Things In Still Pictures |
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Riİardo wrote in
: Onardo 09/04/2015 13:31, Mitchell Holman wrote: Thank you Mitchell, there's some excellent reminders of bygone days there. Riİardo I remember when air travel was a special event, now it is like getting on a bus. |
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On Tue, 14 Apr 2015 07:19:06 -0500, Mitchell Holman
wrote: Riİardo wrote in : Onardo 09/04/2015 13:31, Mitchell Holman wrote: Thank you Mitchell, there's some excellent reminders of bygone days there. Riİardo I remember when air travel was a special event, now it is like getting on a bus. Our city buses have way more leg room. About the same percentage of drunks, though... |
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"Bob (not my real pseudonym)" wrote in message
... Our city buses have way more leg room. These days in domestic travel, Boeing narrow-body jets have seats that are 17 inches inside the armrests, and Airbus offers 18 inches. Some wide-body jets still have 18-inch coach seats, but even in planes as big as the Airbus A380, airlines are shoehorning 17-inch seats in coach. Even several decades ago, 17 inches was considered too small. And that was before people got bigger. A 1950s Harvard University study of New England passenger trains concluded that the minimum acceptable seat width was 18 inches. Taking their cue from the study, Boeing and other aircraft makers designed many planes with 18-inch seats. But some planes ended up with less because of economic and aerodynamic issues. Boeing designed the 707 airframe at 148 inches wide in 1954, needing the narrow body to give the plane the speed and range to fly coast-to-coast. Boeing stuck with that for the 737 and 757 jets, despite complaints coach seats were too narrow, because widening aircraft adds weight and drag and makes the jets more expensive to fly. The 737 in particular was designed originally in the 1960s for short trips, so tight seating was an acceptable tradeoff to make the plane economical for airlines. Later versions of the worldâs most popular commercial aircraft had better wings and engines for longer range -- and still the same 17-inch seats. And thereâs been no accommodation for widening passengers. United Airlines currently offers a 2,700-mile, six-hour and forty-minute flight from Boston to San Francisco in a 737-900. I think I'll pass... |
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