Scheduled flight with your own parachute?
Hello.
Is it permitted to carry your own parachute on a regular commercial airline? Or will you be required to put it in the carry-on baggage compartment (where it's no longer of any use)?
Of course, I know that normally you can't get out of the plane if it crashes. But if it breaks apart in mid-air, or a large part breaks off and I fall out, the parachute can still be of some use…
Hello,
the parachute doesn't help you. Whether it's in the baggage compartment or directly on you. Because if an aircraft breaks in the air, and you are at an altitude of 14-5 kilometers, you are unconscious and no longer capable of opening the parachute by the lack of oxygen within a few seconds. The impact takes place in a few minutes.
If you are under 5000 meters, the probability is minimally greater. However, it is so rare that an aircraft breaks "ideal for you". In addition, you are still hanging on the seat with the belt and most likely on larger aircraft parts. This weight can no longer brake your parachute. And a buckle becomes hard.
And the whole thing comes to being so shocked for a few seconds that you are completely incapable of acting.
And when the plane breaks at the start, you may be at 1000 meters high, 5 seconds shock are estimated 100 meters less. Compress and skip from the aircraft, against the airflow and suction, in the best case takes 10 seconds, which means that the aircraft is already in the case. Height: in the best case 500 meters. Free fall, trigger, unfold and use the braking effect = 5 seconds, 200 meters height. The minimum opening height of parachutes is 250-500 meters high. Well, and that's how the chance of survival is as high as any other victim.
So, leave this with the parachute, planes are also so safe, and the chance of survival is hardly higher in the case of cases. Overcoming your fear of flight, it definitely helps more.
Here is another question linked to the topic:
Greetings
Parachutes do not bring anything at all at the speeds that a passenger plane reaches in the travel flight.
You can assume that in the scenario you can no longer act because the centrifugal forces of several G prevent you from acting. In addition, you will suffer fatal injuries if you are exposed to an airflow of 900km/h from one second to the other. This is not like mission:Impossible, where you could stick to a flying plane outside. In addition, you suffocate in the height before you come into an air layer where breathing is possible.
I know an accident with an airplane full of parachute jumpers who were ready to jump off when a wing broke off. Not one of the parachute jumpers made it out of the plane, everyone died.
And what if the plane breaks right before landing/takeoff? Then it's not so fast and high yet?
Just before landing? Then the parachute won't go fast enough. Aside from the fact that you don't get out because the centrifugal forces are holding you back. Quite simply to prevent further questions and further spinnera: The parachute is a snap.
I don't know what he's talking about when he meets the hand luggage guidelines.
Yes of course. It's a stinky baggage.
He's got nothing on your back, too:
If your plane breaks in the air, it's too late for a reaction before you get what's going on. Of the fact that most people in fear of death are incapable of doing nothing.
About as much as an air mattress in the middle of the Pacific. If you feel this as "one", okay.
Don't parachutes automatically go when you approach the ground? So I'm gonna have to wait until I get slower?
Depending on the model. There are, of course, those with an automatic system which determine the height by means of the air pressure and then open the parachute at a certain limit.
You can't use such a parachute in the passenger plane. Because even in the cabin the air pressure changes – your parachute would trigger any normal sinking flight.
No: Before getting out. The biggest problem is the moment you get out of the wind shadow of the aircraft fuselage into the wind.
By the way, this even affects throwing seats in combat planes. The pilot must also no longer trigger it above a certain speed. Thanks to protective clothing, helmet and everything, this speed is, of course, much higher than the jumping speed at parachute jumpers.
It would solve a problem. But this is only helpful when the question is answered as you even get away from the plane. For this purpose, the combat pilot has a centrifugal seat that blows the cockpit hood away and transports the seat together with pilots with rocket thrust away from the pilot.
So with such a combat pilot suit, a helmet and glasses, would I have a better chance?
Whether the parachute is on your back or in the hand luggage compartment, it doesn't matter, it doesn't bring anything like that!
You should probably take him on board, at least at the start and landing you would have to take him off and store him safely as a hand luggage (because otherwise you could not sit properly and safely)
But what does the parachute do? Line aircraft have pressure doors designed to ensure that the doors cannot be opened in the cabin with overpressure. Although this could be done theoretically with a great deal of strength, since most aircraft doors go outwards and forwards, they could hardly be opened or kept open enough to get out because of the flight at at least about 240km/h. And even if, in military aircraft, where soldiers get out through side doors during the flight, there are flaps that distract the air flow from the door that is virtually in the wind shadow. Without it, you can be slapping against the door frame or immediately behind it to the hull and bringing you fatal injuries. It is not worth building corresponding doors, because even in panic many passengers would probably not jump, and if not could land safely. The chances of survival are higher for everyone even at a breakage!
If the parachute meets the conditions for the hand luggage (size, weight), you can also take it.
Right. If the plane breaks up to 10km, the parachute will also do nothing.
In the hand baggage, he doesn't bring me anything, it would break out panic and everyone would fight for the parachute… May I have done this during it's flight and at takeoff and landing?
No one would ever fight with a mind. A parachute doesn't help you in such a machine.
And yes, I guess you'll be allowed to do it. Mainly the part does not fly through the cabin at turbulence.
You can't do anything anymore. The accelerating forces occurring are much greater than the body forces themselves of the strongest man in the world. The G forces nail on your seat or somewhere in the cabin, and you can't even lift your hand. The demolition of a wing is probably the worst thing that can happen, the plane goes into a spin immediately, from which you can't free yourself. Read my post!
Head –> table.
Yeah, take your parachute and jump out.
Supposed shortly after the start, a bomb goes up. Half the wall from the plane is gone and it crashes. Then I could jump out? Or if a supporting surface tears off.
If you haven't read it, although I mentioned it twice, a parachute won't help you!
Thank you. Then I'll try that. I'd rather be hanging on the parachute than slapping on the water at 250kmh.
If you meet the requirements for hand luggage with the baggage, you can take it to the cabin.
But you will have to stow it accordingly, and thus he will use you nothing more. So my advice: Take a good book, drink a good whiskey and enjoy the flight. If the worst case fits, you still had pleasure, he doesn't happen to be a good flight from what to do.
A parachute wouldn't bring you anything.
People have already died because they had none. Besides, he'd scare me.
How do you imagine a parachute at about 10Km height?
Exactly.
Not at all.