• vote
    19
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 03 2006 | flying, news, survival
    BBC NEWS | UK | Magazine | How to survive a plane crash

    Surprsing, although it would be interesting to see a breakdown by aircraft type.

    Quoted: In the US alone, between 1983 and 2000, there were 568 plane crashes. Out of the collective 53,487 people onboard, 51,207 survived.

    • hbhanoo - Oct 03 2006

      ass. did you dot this specifically coz I'm flying?

    • mohit - Oct 03 2006

      no, but i was expecting you'd ask that.

    • sung - Oct 03 2006

      lol - did you notice that the seatbelt on plans have not changed for what seems like FOREVER!

      but when you think bout it i guess seatbelts would be kinda useless in a plane crash.

    You must be Mohit's friend before you can comment on this Fave.
    Send Mohit a friend request or a personal message instead.

Related Faves from mohit

  • vote
    16
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 22 2008 | continental, flying, news, 757
    Continental's 757s Running Low on Fuel on Some Transatlantic Flights | Autopia from Wired.com

    Hmm...

    Quoted: But on some of these European routes, the 757, with a range of 3,900 nautical miles, cuts it a little close. Barcelona is 3,398 nautical miles from Newark. Throw weather and holding patterns into the mix, and you're not leaving much room for error. Perhaps not coincidentally, Barcelona-Newark is one of the routes where the FAA found that pilots most often made fuel declarations.

  • vote
    8
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 26 2008 | news, cellphone, flying, airports
    Paper Is Out, Cellphones Are In - New York Times

    This is pretty cool. I am going to give this a try the next time I fly Continental, although I will carry a printed boarding pass as backup.

    Quoted: Their [Continental's] boarding pass is an image of an encrypted bar code displayed on the phone’s screen, which can be scanned by gate agents and security personnel.

  • vote
    8
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 02 2008 | news, new york, bill of rights, flying
    NY1: State Adopts Airline Passenger Bill Of Rights

    When I fly out of Newark (a NY area airport that is actually in NJ), I often have to wait in the plane an hour or more before it takes off.

    Quoted: Under the so-called "Passenger Bill of Rights," airlines would be required to provide food, water and clean toilets to passengers stuck on the ground for more than three hours. Airlines that fail to follow the new law could have to pay a fine of $1,000 per passenger for each violation.

  • vote
    7
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 02 2007 | india, flying, news

    Good idea, given that only 1% of Indians have actually traveled in a plane.

    Quoted: Bahadur Chand Gupta, a retired Indian Airlines engineer, bought an old Airbus 300 from an insurance company in 2003, rebuilt it, and it now sits in a Delhi suburb where people pay $4 per "trip" so they can experience what it must be like to fly.

  • vote
    66
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 15 2006 | news, seatac, northwest, flying, weather, airplanes, video
    Sea Sick on a Plane - Gadling

    Pretty crazy. Even the second try, when they landed successfully, looked scary.

    Quoted: This video is worth watching. A Northwest airlines flight landing at SeaTac had a rough, and aborted, landing, due to high winds the other day.

  • vote
    4
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 26 2006 | liquids, news, flying
    Air travel ban on carry-on liquids relaxed

    This is an improvement. But, I normally carry full-size shaving creme and shampoo. If I want to continue doing that, they have to be checked in.

    Quoted: Now, passengers are allowed to bring travel-size containers of liquids and gels as long as they all fit into a quart-size clear plastic bag available for inspection at the security checkpoints.
    ...
    Under the new rule, containers with personal hygiene products should not exceed 3 ounces. Drinks purchased at shops located beyond the checkpoints will be allowed onto planes.