[email protected] LETTERS
WINDOWS
Another view on cabin design
With Boeing considering a
New Mid-market Airplane, I
wonder if it is considering a
windowless aircraft, except
for the flightdeck.
Emirates, in its new cabin
interiors for the 777, has in-
stalled virtual windows in the
centre suites. The cost of
designing, constructing and
testing a fuselage with win-
dows must be costly. Has
Emirates started a trend?
David Clemow
Auckland, New Zealand
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Money a priority
over health
make money.
I speak from bitter experience
- a 10h haul to Vancouver on a
twin-jet with a Canadian leisure
airline, with only a baguette and
a cold drink for sustenance, and
little opportunity to get up and
stretch my legs. Never again
will I subject my body to such
treatment.
Virgin Atlantic was prudent in
retaining its four-engined Airbus
A340 as a replacement for the
Dreamliners, avoiding even
more disruption.
I recall a fantastic slogan
adopted by British Caledonian
back in the 1970s: “We never for-
get you have a choice.” My
choice is a four-engined aircraft
with an airline that really knows
about customer service.
It’s really down to passengers
and tour operators in the end,
whether money takes priority
over health.
Peter Carey
Portchester, Hampshire, UK
Qantas is to be congratulated for
setting a new record for a non-
stop flight between Australia and
the UK – 17h using a Boeing 787
(Flight International, 3-9 April).
But is this the future of long-
haul flights using only twin-en-
gined planes? I hope not.
In-flight shut-downs are be-
coming more common now, de-
spite engine technology suppos-
edly providing the means of
flying from A to B without C.
There is another issue at stake
here – deep vein thrombosis.
I’m surprised the medical pro-
fession hasn’t raised concerns
that airlines are cramming their
passengers into a narrow tube on
long-haul flights in order to
Emirates’ realistic alternative
Emirates
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