86% of statistics are just made up on the spotAccording to Air Crash Investigation (fav. prog), Statistically you have better odds surviving a crash sitting at the back of the plane, so there
86% of statistics are just made up on the spotAccording to Air Crash Investigation (fav. prog), Statistically you have better odds surviving a crash sitting at the back of the plane, so there
Eh?Upstairs in business class is where they put families.
is that a double decker bus ur thinking of??
also most people who die in an aircraft crash die from smoke inhalation due to not using their masks adn trampling all over each other. if you sit at the back then you also avoid all of this so the back seats are far far safer
I found out about them when travelling to the states on Delta about 5 years ago. They were accurate that time and this year when travelling to SA with SAA.Seatguru seat plans are regularly out of date..I gave up trusting them a long time ago!
There are so many things wrong with your post that it's hard to know whether you're being serious or not!The front of the plane is the safest...in the event of a crash landing the pilots will deliberately crash the plane in the way that gives them the greatest chance of survival. Therefore, the safest place to be is as close as possible to the pilots.
There are so many things wrong with your post that it's hard to know whether you're being serious or not!
No idea what they're like for short-haul, but I suspect that maybe those aircraft are more likely to be changed regularly (seat arrangements/facilities etc) especially on Ryanair & AL.
It the pilots were still in control, then it wouldn't be crashing.Such as?
If a plane is going to crash, who has the greatest chance of influencing the way in which it crashes? The pilots of course. So surely, given the chance, they'll try and ensure it crashes in the way that gives them the greatest chance of survival. Therefore, the safest place to be on a plane is as close to the pilots as possible, i.e. the front of the plane.