Airline captains please explain this to me ....
I'm not a platinum member with any airline or anything, but I've flown commercial countless times.
And on just 2 occasions, something strange (to my mind) has taken place...
After boarding everyone, the cabin crew has said something like "sorry we are overweight, and need one person (or two people) to de-plane. We will offer you an alternative itinerary and a voucher for X dollars to be used in the future".
So how does an airline crew know they are overweight? Surely there is not a "weight on wheels" sensor? No doubt that would be technologically feasible, but I expect there are numerous reasons why that wouldn't make sense. I always assumed they factored the weight of warm bodies on board by using "FAA average human weight" times the number on the manifest.
But we've all been on plenty of airline flights where there wasn't a single empty seat. So what changes to make that not an option? Is there a scenario where "extra weight in baggage area" or "higher fuel level in tanks" means they have to depart with X number of empty seats in the cabin to offset that configuration?
I supposed they probably know the weight of each item of checked luggage, and any other freight, but does that explain it? "We have 500 lbs more than usual down below, so have to lighten the cabin by X amount"?
Obviously in a 4 seat GA plane we often know we have to leave a seat (or 2 or 3) empty due to fuel load or baggage load. But we come up with that by knowing pretty precise weight of warm bodies.
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To make things stranger, on one of the two occasions where I've experienced this, they didn't get any volunteers. So they chose a name from the passenger list and forced that person off the plane.
But get this, a few minutes pass, and than another person comes on the plane, in some sort of airline attire (I forget if it was apparent what sort of crew person they were), and takes the seat which had just been vacated. And then we depart ... full plane. (but not overweight somehow???)
Sounds sketchy.
I'm not a platinum member with any airline or anything, but I've flown commercial countless times.
And on just 2 occasions, something strange (to my mind) has taken place...
After boarding everyone, the cabin crew has said something like "sorry we are overweight, and need one person (or two people) to de-plane. We will offer you an alternative itinerary and a voucher for X dollars to be used in the future".
So how does an airline crew know they are overweight? Surely there is not a "weight on wheels" sensor? No doubt that would be technologically feasible, but I expect there are numerous reasons why that wouldn't make sense. I always assumed they factored the weight of warm bodies on board by using "FAA average human weight" times the number on the manifest.
But we've all been on plenty of airline flights where there wasn't a single empty seat. So what changes to make that not an option? Is there a scenario where "extra weight in baggage area" or "higher fuel level in tanks" means they have to depart with X number of empty seats in the cabin to offset that configuration?
I supposed they probably know the weight of each item of checked luggage, and any other freight, but does that explain it? "We have 500 lbs more than usual down below, so have to lighten the cabin by X amount"?
Obviously in a 4 seat GA plane we often know we have to leave a seat (or 2 or 3) empty due to fuel load or baggage load. But we come up with that by knowing pretty precise weight of warm bodies.
---------------------------------
To make things stranger, on one of the two occasions where I've experienced this, they didn't get any volunteers. So they chose a name from the passenger list and forced that person off the plane.
But get this, a few minutes pass, and than another person comes on the plane, in some sort of airline attire (I forget if it was apparent what sort of crew person they were), and takes the seat which had just been vacated. And then we depart ... full plane. (but not overweight somehow???)
Sounds sketchy.