Colombian Airline Wants To Make Passengers Stand (yahoo.com) 249
An anonymous reader writes Budget airline VivaColombia is considering plans to remove all seats from its planes and make passengers stand. They hope the move will drive down fares by allowing them to squeeze more passengers into each flight, opening up air travel to working class Colombians and budget holidaymakers. The no-frills carrier announced last week that it is adding 50 new Airbus 320s to its fleet to capitalise on the country's growing tourist market. The new planes will have more seats and lower running costs with the first one going into service at the start of 2018. VivaColombia's founder and CEO William Shaw told the Miami Herald the airline was looking into vertical travel options. He said: "There are people out there right now researching whether you can fly standing up -- we're very interested in anything that makes travel less expensive." He added: "Who cares if you don't have an inflight entertainment system for a one-hour flight? Who cares that there aren't marble floors... or that you don't get free peanuts?"
That's nothing! (Score:4, Funny)
Its Indian competitor is going to allow people to stand on TOP of the planes, just like on the trains!
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Re:That's nothing! (Score:5, Funny)
What's really going to piss passengers off is the 5 chicken limit.
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Nah, just make the passengers lie down in multilevel bunk beds on wheels in advance in the airport to save on boarding time and roll them into the plane. The multiple levels of the bunk beds would typically have a foot between them.
Ask me, I drive a live chicken delivery truck for a living.
Re:That's nothing! (Score:4, Insightful)
Yip, third-world travel [pinimg.com] can make even our chintziest services seem good in comparison.
Many conservatives point out that even our very poorest often have it better than many in the 3rd world. But, why aim our economic system so low? Don't we want to get better over time instead of back-slide into 3rd-world-ism? Or do they find something sacred about profits?
Re: That's nothing! (Score:2, Insightful)
But there is something sacred abour profits. Profit breeds competition, and focuses our potential into action. American capitalism built the modern world. Everything from the steel of skyscrapers to the airplane to the medical marvels we have are vastly developed and produced in capitalistic environments where the focused have the freedom and capability to do something that improves our way of life in return for the profits of their labor. What's wrong with that?
In America, you have as the French would say:
Re: That's nothing! (Score:4, Insightful)
Ladies and gentleman: American Exceptionalism on display. Meanwhile, back in reality land, the standard of living, standard of eduction, standard of health and standard of infrastructure has hit second tier in a steady downwards trajectory compared with the true first tier countries in Europe and Asia. This is self evident to anyone traveling to the EU or East Asia today, the US is second tier.
American Capitalism was good at building stuff, but you might note that the new sky-scrappers are being built in a Chinese city, not in NYC anymore. And the largest airplane is a European A380, not a Boeing Jumbo jet assembled in Everett, WA. And the best application of medical marvels happens in South Korean with socialized medicine, not America with capitalist medicine.
America needs to pull back on the dive into capitalistic oligarchies and kleptocracy and realize that people live in a society, not an economy.
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I'll have you know that the Chinese are still building plenty of skyscrapers in NYC. saudi, Russian and Chinese oligarchs have to stash their cash somewhere...
Yes but they're probably building them with South Korean steel, likewise any large new bridges that go up.
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http://www.newsweek.com/how-donald-trump-ditched-us-steel-workers-china-505717 [newsweek.com]
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Profit doesn't always breed competition. The barrier to entry might be high, meaning that only a few companies can actually participate in the market even if they get good profits. In addition, a monopoly in the market might result in high prices and the monopoly company squashing any would-be competitors before they pose a risk.
Re: That's nothing! (Score:5, Insightful)
Capitalism means competition. Sometimes the best way to compete is to develop a better product. Great!
But we've learned a lot of other ways to compete, and unfortunately these other methods are often more effective. We hire lobbyists to change the laws in our favor. We hoard patents so that nobody else may compete. We use teams of lawyers to overwhelm competitors with litigation. We leverage monopolies to gouge consumers. We pollute the environment because cleanup costs are socialized and we get to keep the profit. We reduce quality or safety because we can retire with big fat profit sharing bonuses long before damage to the company's image catches up with us.
None of these behaviors improve our collective standard of living, but these things happen on a daily basis because the system incentivizes them. Don't be afraid to question the system. It's not perfect.
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Capitalism means competition. Sometimes the best way to compete is to develop a better product. Great!
But we've learned a lot of other ways to compete, and unfortunately these other methods are often more effective. We hire lobbyists to change the laws in our favor. We hoard patents so that nobody else may compete. We use teams of lawyers to overwhelm competitors with litigation. We leverage monopolies to gouge consumers. We pollute the environment because cleanup costs are socialized and we get to keep the profit. We reduce quality or safety because we can retire with big fat profit sharing bonuses long before damage to the company's image catches up with us.
None of these behaviors improve our collective standard of living, but these things happen on a daily basis because the system incentivizes them. Don't be afraid to question the system. It's not perfect.
Well said. Ideas are meant to be challenged. I feel that these days that they are not challenged and everything has turned into sacred cows. More than that, people are making a profit off of myopic short-sightedness.
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Even Adam Smith warned about them, even if all we ever hear him quoted for is the "Invisible Hand".
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even our very poorest often have it better than many in the 3rd world
This is a Columbian airline that is considering this.
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"Many conservatives point out that even our very poorest often have it better than many in the 3rd world."
But they do not point that out as a goal, but first to set the comparison correctly, IE what is described as being poor in America, with few exceptions*, not nearly as bad as it is proclaimed to be, and second, that despite assistance, the poor persist. That I have no glib answer for.
* - notice many stories of the poor in Appalachia? Not many, for that is true poverty, and none seem very motivated to ad
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Re: That's nothing! (Score:2)
*whoosh*
Re: That's nothing! (Score:2)
Take Off And Landing (Score:5, Insightful)
Take Off and Landing sound like adventures.
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Take Off and Landing sound like adventures.
Probably not as compared to the adventure of being a working-class Columbian.
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Re: Take Off And Landing (Score:2)
Before every landing, the pilot calls out "Hold on tight to those things!"
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The safety video is enacted by puppets.
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Re: Take Off And Landing (Score:2)
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95.7% of people in plane crashes survive, according to google.
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Kind of like a Borg alcove.
Securely fastened into a vertical sleeping chamber where the cabin crew's responsibility us to monitor bodily functions during stasis.
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Seat Belt? That's for First Class only.
I'm thinking a length of twine.
take out the pilots' seats first (Score:2)
and see how that goes.
Never mind that... (Score:5, Funny)
What about the first time they hit some turbulence?
*DING* "Ladies and gentlemen, the Captain has just illuminated the 'Fasten Seatbelt' sign, so we'll all be safe while you bounce around the cabin like rubber balls..."
*DING* "The cabin crew will be passing down the cabin shortly, offering a range of bandages, splints and blood replacement products at very competitive prices..."
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There is basically only one way to make that "safe", and that is to strap everyone to tiedown points. You're going to have to wear a harness, and the harness will have to be attached to the floor and ceiling, and probably also to your neighbor. Air Bondage!
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What about the first time they hit some turbulence?
In the event of turbulence, the pilot is instructed to dive sharply so that the passengers are in free-fall, and they can bounce around safely like in those space shuttle training flights.
... yeah, I wouldn't want to clean up after it, either.
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The pic shows a bare aircraft, so the people at the ends of each section will be squished like bugs, dead, if any significant longitudinal Gs were experienced (such as in every single takeoff and landing). Significant lateral Gs, like from an uncoordinated turn, could similarly squish a crowd of people against the sides of a completely bare aircraft cabin.
Trains and buses don't have big empty spaces like those, and they don't experience signficant Gs in any direction unless there's a crash.
Straps in the roo
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I don't see why, separating each passenger 'compartment' with a woven nylon straps, like what your folding lawn chairs use, secured to floor and ceiling would probably do the job without taking much space at all. Its elastic enough to prevent injury if you are rattled around inside it during turbulence or forced back against it during take off / landing, but stiff enough to keep people from banging into each other to hard.
Not saying it would be pleasant but it would probably work and provide adequate safet
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Yeah I guess stringing up everyone like spider prey with nylon webbing could work :-P
Re: Take Off And Landing (Score:2)
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or turbulence that makes the plane drop faster than gravity. Hence the reason for the seat belts.
Re: Take Off And Landing (Score:2)
Still better than basic economy.
If you could get away with it... (Score:2)
I figure this probably breaks one or two little safety rules, though maybe if it's only on domestic flights they don't apply.
I'm certain that if you could get away with it Try-onair would already be doing it.
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I'm certain that if you could get away with it Try-onair would already be doing it.
You are absolutely right. They asked permission to do this five years ago [theguardian.com], but were denied. Though I suspect they just threw around the plan for free publicity.
I can see it now... (Score:5, Funny)
Super Saver Econo $49.95* New York to Los Angeles
* add a seat with luxurious safety belt for only $449.95
Also, it will be much easier to drag people off flights when its overbooked, without all of those pesky seats and saftey belts in the way.
Re:I can see it now... Reductio (Score:2, Funny)
ad absurdum:
"Fly TREBUCHET airways! So anyone can afford a Weekend Fling!
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Without those seats and safety belts there's no such thing as being overbooked! Just cram them on like a Tokyo subway. It'll only help during turbulence.
No seats on Airlines (Score:2)
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People decide with their wallets.
If people prefer seats over cheaper flights, they will see elsewhere. If they don't, it means they accept the idea.
Re:No seats on Airlines (Score:4, Insightful)
It's all about price.
Think of it this way--the last time you booked a flight, what was foremost in your mind? Was it legroom? Was it the quality of the snacks? Was it the inflight entertainment system?
Nope. It was "How much does this cost?" Price was the overriding factor. If Flight A was $40 cheaper than Flight B, you took Flight A. You bitched and moaned and complained about being stuck in like sardine, but you weren't going to pay the extra $40.
There are a lot of people who feel that way, which is why websites like Expedia have a "sort by price" and don't have a "sort by legroom."
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Honestly, I go by price because I assume all airlines are going to be just as bad as each other. If there were a sort by legroom option, I'd probably at least look at it. If it cost a little more for more room, I'd take it. The problem is, price is all we have to go on.
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Check out United. They have a set of "Economy Plus" seats---no, not just the ones by the exit door--which you can get for an extra $40 or so. They have a bit more legroom, but the left/right distance in the same (you so you still fight over the armrest).
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It Jetstar was $40 cheaper than Air New Zealand, I choose Air New Zealand.
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I know I sound like a United shill, but as I mentioned above, United has "Economy Plus" with more legroom. I booked a flight about a month ago and I'm still getting messages from United saying that for an extra $39.99, I can upgrade.
I assume that means that the seats aren't full. Of course, it's United, so they may already be triple booked.
If all of these people were interested in extra legroom, why are those seats with extra legroom still available?
Works for roller coasters (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yeah I was thinking they would need something like this. It doesn't make sense otherwise.
One thought I had: when they change seat configurations to squeeze more passengers in, at worst some passengers will think "that's odd, I don't remember it being this cramped". However this change is much harder to ignore and I suspect/hope this airline's sales will suffer as a result.
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If you ever been on a stand up roller coaster, are male, and have had the lower restraint (bicycle seat) set too high, you would fear turbulence on a stand up plane.
I recall going around a stand up roller coaster screaming.
It had nothing to do with the excitement of the ride- fortunately, three children prove it didn't do any permanent damage.
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it is technically possible
Of course it is. There's been a patent on it for years.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/... [huffingtonpost.com]
no turbulence in Columbia? (Score:2)
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It is not because you are standing that you are not strapped to something. If you are thinking like in a bus, then yes it is not going to work. But you could stand in front of a padding with straps to hold you in place.
I think it is hard to stay standing up without moving for a long time. But that could work for some people.
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Then the pilot can arc the plane over in to a dive before it stalls to move the passengers forward again.
Center of mass (Score:2)
Standing backrests, perhaps with choir seats? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not saying I'd be interested in using such an airline, but it seems like it could work if they had standing "rests" that passengers could strap themselves to for safety. I mean, you couldn't have passengers being thrown about the plane in turbulent conditions, so they'd need to be secured in place, the way seat-belted passengers are. Also, to reduce the discomfort of actual standing, the backrests could include small, adjustable "choir seats", just a few inches deep, and adjusted to sit high enough that the passenger's legs are almost straight. The cabin would have to be tall enough to accommodate everyone standing, which might require removal of the overhead luggage compartments.
For short flights, it could be safe enough, and not too uncomfortable, and would allow perhaps 75% more passengers on the plane, which would allow ticket prices to be reduced by about 60% -- a $100 flight for $40, for example. Lots of people would be willing to be less comfortable for an hour to save $60, even in wealthier nations.
It could work, I think.
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Turbulence should be fun (Score:2)
As long as it's safe and half the price (Score:3)
Assuming they sort out the safely issues (I mean we stand on busses and trains and subways moving 50mph... my commuter train regularly tops 70mph here in America) yest take off and landing would be a bit sketch if it's setup the way a subway is, but if you take the time and effort to look at the problem from a new way, maybe add some specialized equipment... maybe it still can't be done, but it's certainly worth looking in to.
If it were safe and say, cost half as much, $150 round trip to Seattle from SF at the gate (not buying in advance) vs $350 or even $500 recently, heck yeah I would be willing to stand for two hours!
The elderly and sick, pregnant mothers, and people in wheelchairs would still have priority seating access of course.
It might actually be more comfortable for some (Score:2)
No one kicking your seat back, no one reclining into your lap, no leg cramps, no potential blood clots from long term sitting. Assuming whatever protective harness they put you in isn't all that uncomfortable, I'd be willing to give it a try.
What about lying? (Score:2)
You occupy the same amount of space lying down, but it's a lot more comfortable. I'd actually like to travel on a plane that has bunkbeds on it.
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It's been tried. [fastcompany.com] The passengers didn't like it.
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I've thought that this would be an improvement for a while, especially when flying economy on a long international flight. You ought to be able to get the same density of people lying down as sitting, and I might be able to sleep on a flight for once.
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While I'm not opposed to the idea, it does come with challenges. For instance, the most likely first use for beds on flights would be on long-haul routes, but those are wide enough that keeping the side-by-side orientation we have now with chairs would mean that not everyone would have access to the aisle. So far as I know, trains and other transportation systems don't have to deal with that problem since they're narrow enough that everyone has aisle access. It may be as simple as re-orienting the beds so t
Heh (Score:2)
Different but kinda similar thing, I was saying post 9/11, TSA launch, recent Patriot Act passing fear mongering that given enough room, Airlines would start forcing passengers to get a change of clothes pre-flight, absolutely no carry on allowed, then get sedated, and then pille everyone up like luggage inside planes with the excuse of it being for the security of the flight or something.
I guess this one is at least honest about the objective.
People already get extremely packed inside public transportation
I've been saying this for years (Score:3, Interesting)
What about the water landings? (Score:2)
You're gonna go all Sully on the Hudson without all of those flotation devices? C'mom, man.
Hang them (Score:2)
From the Ryan-Air advertising playbook (Score:3)
Claim you're eliminating co-pilots.
Claim you're offering adult entertainment on flights.
there was another.... hmmmm what was it?
Oh that's right. Standing room only. [dailymail.co.uk]
A recipe to ensure your name stays in the headlines for loads of free advertising.
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I've noticed that on some flights they don't censor the movies as much, keeping in the nudity and sex scenes.
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Probably normal as soon as you leave the puritan ^H^H^H USA airspace.
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Ding ding! Mod up - this is a tried and tested game.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VivaColombia [wikipedia.org]
Make travel less expensive (Score:2)
Use more trains. That would reduce demand for flights. And any libertarian worth his salt will tell you that how supply and demand works.
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Didn't Easyjet or Ryanair suggest this earlier? (Score:2)
After writing that, I just checked. Viva Colombia is owned by Ryanair. It all makes sense now. The idea got nowhere in Europe for safety reasons. Let's just say that Latin America in general has a much more, uh, "relax
Who cares? (Score:2)
How about an hour of extreme torture. Who cares? It's just an hour with no lasting effects. Just stand there, for an hour, with nothing to look at, nothing to see, and only one thing to smell. Try standing in your living room for an hour. Lean up against a wall. For an hour. Don't sit. Don't pace. Don't step.
And without peanuts? Are you high? Have we forgotten the purpose of the peanuts? It's the salt. Salt effectively pauses the digestive system, along with a few other biological systems. It'
Standing during take off and landing? (Score:2)
Provided that someone is willing to stand for a couple of ours, Do they think it will be safe?
Ah, they can cram a few more persons if they ditch the toilet!
Saving money (Score:2)
If the idea is to save costs, at all costs, then the first thing I would do is switch to a plane fleet with flying wing geometry and no passenger windows. Such planes could fit more people, they would have major fuel savings, and they would be far more compatible with standing room passenger compartments.
Soviet Aeroflot did it best (Score:2)
Nice firm wooden bench so you knew where your ass was when it came time to kiss it goodbye.
And a couple things nearby to grip if turbulence got really bad.
Vertical? (Score:3)
Stupid idea. People don't stay vertical by themselves for long.
Horizontal is the way to go, quadruple bunk-beds is way better, I wouldn't mind lying down for a 1 hour flight, not even for a 24 hour one, better than economy any day.
Brilliant phrasing (Score:2)
No, they're not standing up. It's a "vertical travel option".
Good idea (Score:2)
And I do not like those dorky seats anyway. I never watch movies on idiotic displays inbuilt in seats either. My smartphone has got much better display and headset. I just have to pay to transport those low-quality displays, and someone makes money on it.
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I don't think passengers would stand freely like in a bar. I think they still would be strapped to some kind of railing they would lean on. I think on ahort flights (1-2h) this might be even better than sqeezed into a seat, especially for people with long legs. Imagine a seat where your legs are stretched downwards so you take up less horizontal space.
You can just sit on your carry-on, as long as it is no wider than your shoulders.
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Just use standing roller coaster seats. They are now more comfortable than modern airplane seats and you are more likely to withstand the G forces better in the event of a crash.
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You must be new around here; creimer IS our Silicon Valley spokesman.
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"A typical seat in economy class now weighs 74 to 82 pounds."
I'm also sure people wouldnt be hauling a ton of luggage around for a one hour flight, so I can't see this being an issue.
Its a space issue if you need overhead storage. Something would have to change because there would not be enough headroom to stand. Even without overhead storage, I could stand up near a window with the existing floor placement, I would have to crouch.
Re:I feel obligated to say this... (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually a properly executed barrel roll would not even be felt by the passengers, standing or sitting. It's a constant G maneuver. Back in the day, a test pilot rolled a 707 airliner: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] He was reprimanded, even though it was a completely safe maneuver, as the spectators and potential customers were a bit rattled (they were on the ground watching) by the event.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] shows Bob Hoover rolling an ordinary twin-engine prop plane while pouring a glass of iced tea.
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The exit limit is defined by the certifications gained by the airframe from the aviation body responsible for regulating commercial aviation in that territory - most local bodies defer to the FAA and EASA but they aren't required to and can allow something like this in their own territory.
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Easy to solve the luggage problem. Don't allow carry-on bags.
Perhaps they could have feet straps to hold everyone in place.