Think flying is bad now? Wait till you see this

I have trouble seeing that working in the U.S. unless the ticket prices were really low. Like $50 or something like that for an hour flight. Maybe in some other world regions it would work.

I don't care how cheap it it is. I wouldn't take that flight. I think many people would have the same response.
 

There is no way I would fly in that situation. I'd rather drive, boat, train or walk...
 
The A330 is a long haul jet. There's no way people would sit like that for hours. Plus what would happen in a crash?
 
/
Posters are confused. There are two different configurations being discussed in the linked article.

The 10 extra rows has been going on for years. Airline like Delta and Southwest have already reconfigured many of their planes. You remove a couple of inches from each seat and you get a few extra rows. They remove things like seat pockets and seat padding. and switch to smaller frames. Seats are very uncomfortable, for many of us. I've read "experts" say give away free IFE and snacks and passengers won't realize how uncomfortable they are.

The second thing being discussed is the equivalent of standing room. You'll lean against some kind of "padded board" and then fasten a belt. Adding a bicycle type seat is one option being "discussed". The potential market is for very short flights. Intra-island flights in Hawaii is one example. Flights between islands in the Caribbean. How long do we stand on buses in Disney? I guess it might work if the flight was 20 minutes, driving isn't an option and there was no delay on the ground. That configuration won't work for longer flights. An airline will lose the ability to quickly reposition the plane for a different route, irregular ops.
 
Posters are confused. There are two different configurations being discussed in the linked article.

The 10 extra rows has been going on for years. Airline like Delta and Southwest have already reconfigured many of their planes. You remove a couple of inches from each seat and you get a few extra rows. They remove things like seat pockets and seat padding. and switch to smaller frames. Seats are very uncomfortable, for many of us. I've read "experts" say give away free IFE and snacks and passengers won't realize how uncomfortable they are.

The second thing being discussed is the equivalent of standing room. You'll lean against some kind of "padded board" and then fasten a belt. Adding a bicycle type seat is one option being "discussed". The potential market is for very short flights. Intra-island flights in Hawaii is one example. Flights between islands in the Caribbean. How long do we stand on buses in Disney? I guess it might work if the flight was 20 minutes, driving isn't an option and there was no delay on the ground. That configuration won't work for longer flights. An airline will lose the ability to quickly reposition the plane for a different route, irregular ops.


Exactly. And for the second part, all it says is "The company has filed a patent for seats that stretch the definition of what sitting even means."

They filed a patent, so if some nutty airline CEO wants to do it, this company already owns it. My trademark-attorney-SIL would think they are brilliant for doing that. Just in case! :)
 














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