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#21
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Well, IIRC, it was a Lufthansa 747 overhauling an American 777, so
maybe it was a matter of economics. I think it was in the days when American was removing olives from the salads to save money. |
#22
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In article Cg5le.7245$PS3.6886@attbi_s22, Jay Honeck wrote:
little video screens in the seat backs, I was absolutely astounded at the comfort and ride of this plane. BA are now using them on the London - Houston run (they used to use B747-400s on this route). Continental are using them on the same run (they were using the DC10-10). Out of these, the DC10 was by far the worst (but also the oldest). I'm not a fan of the 2+5+2 seating arrangement - always travelling alone means they put me in the middle of that bay of 5, usually between two screaming children. (I can usually get a non-middle-seat on BA though, which helps). The B747 wasn't bad, but the seats still felt like concrete after 4 hours. The 777 is the only one that I can be comfortable in the whole trip. Last time I went to Houston I'd done something aggravating to my lower back. The B777 seat was the *only* seat I'd sat in for at least a month where I could be comfortable in. I was dreading the airline flight but it ended up being the only time I had managed to sit down and not be in pain for hours. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#23
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Peter Duniho wrote:
The only way I can see for a jet to have "a reputation for being very dry" is for the jet to be equipped with a DEhumidifier. Which, of course, they aren't. Both heating and air conditioning systems are dehumidifiers. George Patterson "Naked" means you ain't got no clothes on; "nekkid" means you ain't got no clothes on - and are up to somethin'. |
#24
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Dave S wrote:
Again, to agree, saying a particular plane is drier is peculiar. The only thing I can think that would explain that is IF the amount of air being exchanged is greater than in comparison to other aircraft. (i.e. greater leak out, so greater flow in of dry air, which then escapes sooner, increasing the "dry" effect). Perhaps some aircraft are equipped with humidifiers for the inside air? George Patterson "Naked" means you ain't got no clothes on; "nekkid" means you ain't got no clothes on - and are up to somethin'. |
#25
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"Paul kgyy" wrote in message oups.com... I think it was in the days when American was removing olives from the salads to save money. And cutting their flight attendant's pay while giving their executives free Mercedes cars. Allen |
#26
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Allen wrote:
"Paul kgyy" wrote in message oups.com... I think it was in the days when American was removing olives from the salads to save money. And cutting their flight attendant's pay while giving their executives free Mercedes cars. The attendants are free to find other employment. |
#27
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"Hilton" wrote in message
k.net... Aren't you forgetting the pressurization, heating, and cooling systems? No, I'm not. At what point in those systems would your hypothetical dehumidifier exist? Why would it exist? |
#28
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:tdmle.264$zb.121@trndny04... Perhaps some aircraft are equipped with humidifiers for the inside air? A humidifier would require the carriage of water; beyond that already required for the galley and lavatories, of course. I'm not aware of any jet with a humidifier. Certainly, my friend at Boeing claims that no commonly used commercial airliner has a humidifier. Pete |
#29
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"William W. Plummer" wrote in message ... Allen wrote: "Paul kgyy" wrote in message oups.com... I think it was in the days when American was removing olives from the salads to save money. And cutting their flight attendant's pay while giving their executives free Mercedes cars. The attendants are free to find other employment. A good executive can save a dying company (Nelson at UPS, Louis-Dreyfus at Adidas, Bethune at Continental, Bonsignore at Honeywell, Welch at GE...), attendants can only **** up a company -- doing their job is "normal". MOF, most unions have done much, through work restrictions, to kill entire industries, let alone single companies. And, yes, even being honest, an executive can **** up a company royally (HP, Diebold, Apple, DEC...) |
#30
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"William W. Plummer" wrote in message ... "Paul kgyy" wrote in message oups.com... I think it was in the days when American was removing olives from the salads to save money. Allen wrote: And cutting their flight attendant's pay while giving their executives free Mercedes cars. The attendants are free to find other employment. That's correct! Who would want to work for a company that is crying poverty and warning it's employee's that if they do not give wage concessions the company will go bankrupt, then turn around and in the same month give away a million dollars worth of cars (to suits who each are paid what 30 flight attendants make). Sounds a lot like Enron conduct to me. Allen |
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