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SECRETS, FLIGHT TRAVELERS ARE RARELY TOLD

How safe are you?

By Beverley StrachanPublished about a year ago 16 min read
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Lovely people, Welcome aboard My Amazing Flight. As we take to the skies today, I'll let you in on a few mind-blowing experiences, pretty much everything aeronautical. Everything from the truth about bad airline food to how choosing the safest seat could save your life. Here are the absolute most insane flight mysteries that are never told to travelers.

Flight Boarding

Get ready for boarding, which is one of the most stressful aspects of flying. You've already gone through airport security, and we've all been there. You at long last get to the entryway, just to see a gigantic line of travelers holding on to get onto your flight. What the vast majority don't understand is that there's not much point in rushing to join the queue. Most carriers, pre-assigned specific seats to travelers. And keeping in mind that a few carriers like to call travelers in groups for boarding, you don't need to comply with this standard. Boarding last is the simplest method for limiting the amount of time you spend on board. If your hand luggage isn't excessively huge and difficult to fit in the overhead space, standing in a line and waiting for a seat is essentially pointless. Your name is already on it.

Additionally, fewer people are at the gate area and jet bridge as passengers board toward the end, thereby accelerating the process as a whole. while you pause, why not take a look at your ticket? A Passenger Name Record is the six-digit alphanumerical code that appears on the majority of boarding passes. It is used to identify individual passengers if there are multiple passengers with the same name. This code is recorded in the database of computer reservation systems that contain flight itineraries for each passenger. It can reveal a lot about you, such as your date of birth and contact information. One of the primary reasons why you should never discard your boarding pass in a public trash can is because of this.

This code's database contains, among other things, information about credit cards, passports, and IP addresses if reservations are made online. However, if a code linked to all of your personal information appears frightening. I sincerely hope that the following code will never appear on your boarding pass. If the four S's code is found on a ticket, passengers may have to go through additional security checks. Why? Well short for Auxiliary Security Screening Determination. Passengers whose boarding passes airlines deem suspicious receive this code.

Airports take security seriously. Additionally, airline personnel may be suspicious of things that may appear completely innocent to us. The guys at the airport security desk can be a little suspicious of last-minute flyers, one-way fares, and cash-only tickets. If you don't have anything to hide, try not to panic if you see that code on your boarding pass.

The fact that an average-sized commercial aircraft has a maximum takeoff weight of approximately 175,000 pounds, which includes 90,000 pounds of fuel and 45,000 pounds of passengers, crew, and cargo, is baffling. Despite their size, however, airplanes still encounter some difficulties in the air. Frequently because of the other stuff that will in general abide up there in the sky.

Birds in Flight

Planes and birds don't always get along well, at least not for the bird, but they can still cause some damage to an airplane if they hit it at high speed.

In 2015 a Turkish Airlines plane collided with a bird. Fortunately, the passengers were all okay, but the bird wasn't. Each year, over 13,000 bird strikes on airplanes occur in the United States, some of which are severe enough to destroy aircraft engines. And as you can imagine, fences and walls aren't very good at keeping birds away from runways for airplanes. As a result, airports need to come up with new ideas to avoid accidents caused by birds. One such technique utilized at Virginia's Reagan Public Air terminal is shooting duds out of cannons to drive fluffy companions off from the air terminal, while different air terminals make their current circumstance less bird cordial by filling in lakes and supplanting grass with rock. Salt Lake City's air terminal, in the interim, decreases its winged intruder issue by utilizing pigs to root around and eat gull eggs.

Other airports, like Lourdes-Tarbes-Pyrenees Airport in France, use big googly eyes on LED screens to frighten away birds of prey. This serves as a kind of aviation scarecrow. However, airports have to worry about more than just birds; extreme weather isn't something that can be scared away with a dirty look from a pair of LED eyes.

Flights in Weather

Hailstorms are one of the most perilous weather patterns for a plane and they can cause some insane harm. Hailstones the size of golf balls dealt a serious blow to the nosecone of an aircraft. In the wake of flying through a hailstorm, the windows were broken to such an extent that the pilots needed to set down the plane visually impaired. Miraculously, nobody was harmed. Besides the wallet of the airline, no one else had to pay for repairs.

While hailstorms are one thing, some anxious pilots also worry about the possibility of lightning striking an aircraft, even though this scenario seems extremely remote. It is estimated that lightning strikes every commercial airplane in the United States at least once per year, this may sound terrifying. Before a plane is put into service. It is put through lightning strike simulations to see how well it conducts electricity. This makes it possible for lightning to travel uninterruptedly across the plane's exterior shell and back into the sky through an extremity like the nose or a wing tip, leaving only a few ruined underwear on the inside.

Flight Poop

Dump drop, have you ever used the restroom on an airplane and wondered where exactly you flush your waste? Accidents do occur, but contrary to popular belief, airplane toilets are not permitted to be emptied into the sky. At the point when you flush a plane latrine, a strong suction pulls the waste away, involving just a tiny amount of water as a way to save weight and space on the airplane. Additionally, the contents are transferred to a large holding tank that contains disinfectant.

The mixture is dumped into a tanker at the airport at the end of a flight. However, the delightful mixture of human waste and the blue liquid disinfectant that makes up the frozen chunk of pulverized smurf was discovered at ground level, in 2017 after falling from a plane. There were somewhere around 27 recorded occurrences of blue ice meteors of this sort in the US somewhere between 1979 and 2003, including episodes of blue ice falling through roofs under air terminal landing ways.

While there is no mechanism that would permit pilots or airline flight attendants to play out any sort of blue poopy tricks, deliberate spills now and again happen from the plane’s septic tank. Therefore, if you ever discover a large chunk of blue ice in your backyard, believe me when I say that it is not a blueberry popsicle. Try not to give it a lick, however, while we're on the subject of mile-high bathrooms, I'll wager you didn't have a clue that there's a secretive method for opening a plane latrine from an exterior perspective.

The next time a youngster gets locked in an airplane restroom, or you simply thought of being booted from a plane for being especially frightening to a fellow traveler, you can open it from the outside using only one finger, most cabin restrooms, have locks tucked behind a metal latrine sign, on the outside, for airline stewards to use in case of a crisis. To open it and simply lift the restroom sign, slide the handle into the opened position, and afterward make a run for it, before the airline stewards make you like the prankster, you are.

Airplane’s food

Everyone is aware that airplane food is notoriously bad, but have you ever stopped to consider the reasons why? What's going on with plane food?

Industrial catering facilities, close to the airport, generally prepare in-flight meals on the ground 12 to 72 hours before an anticipated flight. The majority of meals served on airplanes, contrary to popular belief, are not frozen; rather, they are transported to the aircraft at a blast temperature before being heated and served by flight attendants. Some extravagant carriers even have their in-flight culinary experts and kitchens like those found on board some flights. All of this, but food in the air will never fully match the five-star eateries on the ground.

So, what exactly causes airplane food to taste so bad? It turns out that it comes down to a fundamental aspect of human biology. Airplane cabins have humidity levels as low as 10% while in the air, which is amazingly, much drier than the Sahara Desert. At the point when moistness levels are at the absolute bottom like this, our sinuses get so dried out that it influences our capacity to taste and smell.

Your tongue's ability to taste sweet flavors decreases by 15 to 20% after a short time spent in an airplane cabin, while its ability to taste salty flavors decreases by 20 to 30%. While trying to neutralize this, a few carriers increase how much salt and sugar are in their food. So you're most likely consuming much a bigger number of calories from that in-flight dinner than you suspect.

If bland in-flight dinners are getting you down, there is something you can do about it. It turns out that wearing headphones that block out noise is just what you need to make food and drinks taste better in the air. Unusual investigations have discovered that noisy background commotion can inhibit our capacity to taste food. Therefore, if we use headphones with noise to drown out the low-pitched hum of the airplane engine, it can help bring our senses back to earth.

When it comes to the food served in the sky, however, it isn't just passengers who have issues. When it comes to what pilots can and cannot consume while on duty, there are very specific rules. In addition, co-pilots and pilots are advised, with good reason, not to eat the same meals while working together to prevent food poisoning. The other pilot can take over if the meal of one pilot is seriously flawed and makes them sick.

However, pilot food is ranked in a hierarchy. The co-pilot may receive something from Business class, while the pilot may receive a meal from first class on some airlines. I'll wager that makes for a remarkable off-kilter supper date.

Friend or Foe?

With the responsibility for the safety of hundreds of passengers and snakes on a plane, it's no wonder that being an airline pilot is often cited as one of the most stressful jobs in the world. While job-related stress is one thing, Imagine being stuck for hours in a cramped cockpit with a co-pilot you detest. It turns out that with such high stakes, avoiding pilots and collaborating with people they dislike is considered to be a matter of life and death in the industry.

To assist with lessening any airborne pressures each Captain and the first and second officer get a don't-fly-with list on which they can list the names of co-workers with whom they'd prefer not to share a flight.

A monthly schedule is used to submit requests. Additionally, the airline's scheduling system is fed the approved list of flying foes, preventing two adversary pilots from sharing a cockpit. Even though it may seem extreme, getting caught up in a rivalry at work could cause a pretty serious accident, especially during takeoff and landing, when you need to pay the most attention. Imagine if these pleasant coworkers were a given, at every job.

The Safest Seat

Despite what movies and television shows might have you believe, flying is one of the safest modes of transportation, and the odds of dying in a crash with a commercial airline plane are incredible—one in 3.37 billion.

Despite the facts, nearly one in three Americans are afraid of flying, and this fear has caused many to wonder where the best place to be safe in the event of an accident in the air is. Time Magazine's data analysis of 17 plane crashes over the past 35 years turned up a solution. Time found that by and large, those seats in the back third of a plane had a 68% typical possibility of endurance contrasted and 62% in the front segment and 61% in the center third, you could feel that one of the most secure places to be on a plane would be an aisle seat as it gives you quick access to the emergency exits, in any case, as per the information, aisle seats in the center third of an airplane are the most obviously terrible places you can be in case of an accident with a survival rate of 56%. In contrast, middle seats, particularly those in the plane's rear, are the absolute safest and have a 72% chance of survival in a crash landing. I like those odds; let's just hope that none of us will ever need to test them.

Secrets From The Sky

If you've ever sat in a window seat on a flight, you might have noticed a tiny hole right below the window. Although it may appear small, this is one of the most powerful safety features on an airplane. But what makes it so significant? Airplanes are designed to maintain a safe and breathable cabin air pressure even as air pressure decreases as you ascend.

The windows are physically put under a lot of stress as a result of the significant difference in air pressure. As a result, they need to be built particularly well. The exterior window of an airplane is designed to keep the elements out and maintain cabin pressure, whereas a typical single-pane window would easily break at this altitude. Instead, airplane windows are constructed of three sturdy acrylic panels.

The second panel serves as a backup if this first pane is damaged. The one inside the cabin serves as a last line of defense while we keep our hands off the others to avoid harming them. The minuscule opening I referenced, known as the drain opening is situated in the center pane, and its main role is to adjust the pneumatic stress between the center and external sheets. It additionally holds the windows back from hazing up or icing over. All things considered, the majority of our in-flight fun comes from looking out of the window.

The Interior

Have you ever wondered about those little red or black triangles that can be found along cabin insides? These are there to inform the cabin crew of which window provides the best vantage point from which to inspect the aircraft's wings and determine whether an issue exists with the engine or wing. Therefore, if you are sitting by the triangle, try not to become overly concerned if a flight attendant suddenly starts looking over your shoulder.

In addition to clever icons and signs, sounds are also used in the middle of the flight to ensure that everything runs smoothly. The beeping sound will be familiar to the majority of regular flyers. Even though most of us are aware that this typically indicates that you should return to your seat and fasten your seat belt, It can mean quite a lot more, while every carrier utilizes chimes somewhat in a different way. You can keep an ear open for certain patterns that are used frequently on your next flight.

A particular ring can be the pilot cautioning flight attendants of impending disturbance, yet it could also mean he needs some espresso. When there are two consecutive chimes, it usually means that the plane is getting closer to 10,000 feet. When there are three or more chimes, it usually means that there is a bigger problem, like a sick passenger or a warning about extreme turbulence.

So, keep an ear out for the beeps, and if they sound like Darude - Sandstorm, it might be time to dance or panic.

Economy, Business, or First Class

Class wars, infant crying, confined seating, and insufficient legroom. Traveling as an economy passenger can be hellish. Meanwhile, advertised with private seats, free-flowing champagne, chocolate-covered strawberries, and so forth, it's no big surprise that a five-star flying experience makes its way onto many individuals' lists of must-dos.

The sumptuous service presented in first-class could appear to be ideal for getting that genuinely necessary rest while on a long stretch flight, yet is the out-of-this-world cost truly worth the effort? Indeed, contrasted with business class, normally the second-best kind of ticket, it doesn't appear so. There are many features that you'd believe were explicitly held for five-star flyers, but they are accessible in the business class section also.

Many airlines provide luxurious pillows and blankets in addition to high-quality multi-course meals in both first-class and business-class cabins. In some cases, the meals are even served with fine China and glassware. Business class passengers are offered free night robes as well.

Nowadays many carriers are investing in boosting their business-class services to dump first-class completely. Additionally, some are even considering private business-class pods.

The only difference between the two is that First-class offers a slightly larger seat and, on occasion, a private suite, in addition to a few additional items on the menu like champagne and whiskey.

Be that as it may, the huge contrast in cost doesn't mirror the negligible distinction in service. By and large, a business class ticket will cost around two times the standard economy seat. In contrast, the cost of flying in first class is six times that of an economy fare. I think it would be better for me to save money and pay for an upgraded hotel room when I get there. What is your opinion? If you're on vacation, why not treat yourself to both?

Sky-Sleepers

Long-distance flights can be stressful enough for passengers, but have you ever wondered how flight attendants can always appear so upbeat and friendly? Keep an eye out for a mysterious door the next time you board a long-haul flight. While it could seem to be a regular storage cabinet, these entryways lead to a secret room, up a flight of stairs that are very narrow. The rest compartment is specifically designed for the cabin crew to get some well-deserved rest.

A long-haul aircraft typically has two of these rest areas: one in the front for pilots and one in the back for flight attendants. If a crew member wishes to catch some z's, a safety belt, pillow, and duvet are included in each bed.

Controlled rests, as they are referred to by aircraft staff, give flight attendants a set amount of time to rest for each flight. When that time is up, their fellow cabin crew members will use an intercom to wake them up. Some more expensive airlines, like Singapore Airlines, make it a point to give their crew members a taste of the high life by providing them with Lux private cabins where they can get some shut-eye, complete with silk pillowcases.

In contrast, pilots frequently receive their private quarters at the front of the plane. These quarters typically include two large sleeping areas, business-class seats, a closet, and a bathroom. So, the next time you wonder where the lovely flight attendant who is serving your drink went, they might be floating in dreamland right above your head.

The British Airline Pilots' Association conducted a survey and found that 84% of pilots said that their ability to fly a plane had been compromised by being tired. It is of the utmost importance for the crew and pilots to be well rested. In addition, 56% of respondents admitted to falling asleep while in charge of a plane.

One pilot even fell asleep for forty minutes in May 2021. Mid-air on a commercial flight, departure from Cairns to Redcliffe in Australia, and accidentally overflew his destination by 70 miles before awakening. What's more, fortunately, most commercial airplanes have autopilot to keep up with things like altitude. Although pilots are not required to be in total command of the aircraft throughout the flight, it is still extremely risky for them to fall asleep in an emergency, and this will most certainly be on my list of reasons to clench my teeth for my next flight.

Death in The Air

Even though we don't like to think about it, people die almost everywhere. Death-de-flying. That may sometimes include 30,000 feet in the air. The cabin crew must be prepared for the unfortunate circumstance of an in-flight death, even though it is extremely uncommon. When a passenger dies on a flight, the crew usually has to wait until the plane reaches its final destination to remove the body.

A final upgrade to the quieter first-class cabin may be offered by airlines to the deceased passenger on occasion. On the off chance that there's no space to move the departed traveler, the cabin crew will cover their body with a blanket, ensuring they're locked in for the security of other travelers.

In place of the traditional "hide them under a blanket and try not to freak out" strategy, Singapore Airlines introduced "corpse cupboards," which sound like a death metal band. These are specifically designed to store an average-sized body in the event of an in-flight death.

The Airbus A340-500 model received a specialized installation of these lockers, which made sense, considering that these aircraft operate the world's longest regular non-stop passenger flight.

I'd much rather have a creepy body cabinet on board than be the flight attendant asking first-class passengers if they don't mind being sat next to a corpse for 18 hours to get from Singapore to New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport.

Which of these flight mysteries astounded you the most?

Do you have any of your own to share?

Many thanks to you for flying with My Amazing Flight.

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