Kritchlow
Final Approach
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Kritchlow
I do not think you are of , just uneducated.I have a problem with my vision, I see things as they really are.
I do not think you are of , just uneducated.I have a problem with my vision, I see things as they really are.
Maybe because you are uneducatedNot sure how the DP happened.
If you always use the wrong weight for an average weight than yes your results will be consistent!
I have flown most large airliners both Boeing and Airbus. None had the ability to generate their own weight from the struts or otherwise. I believe it was an option on the MD11 but worked so poorly they stopped using it.But how sensitive is it? I have never seen any aircraft oleo that didn't have some stickiness to it, and the large airplanes I worked on sure wouldn't respond to the weight change of one or two people. Maybe not even ten people.
According to the CDC 74% of adults in the country are overweight
RepostAfter US airways flight 5481, which crashed January 8, 2003, the FAA ordered 15 regional airlines to survey passenger weight. The survey showed average passenger weight with carry-on bag was 26 pounds heavier than the standard so the FAA raised passenger weight by 10 pounds. What? Only 10 lb? WTF
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Where are you getting that info? I was pretty sure that they raised it from 170/average person to 200/average person?
That doesn't include carry on.How much does the average American man weigh?
The average American man 20 years old and up weighs 197.9 poundsTrusted Source. The average waist circumference is 40.2 inches, and the average height is just over 5 feet 9 inches (about 69.1 inches) tall.
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If you’re flying 8 plus hour flights you know if the weights are accurate or not. They are very good.
Yes and we are heavier than everI'm sure you are aware that was 20 years ago, and since that accident the average weights program was substantially changed, and has gone several revisions.
Also, airlines monitor aircraft weights versus fuel consumption. If weights are off, it will show up here.
I can imagine it would work poorly. Sticky struts would do that.I have flown most large airliners both Boeing and Airbus. None had the ability to generate their own weight from the struts or otherwise. I believe it was an option on the MD11 but worked so poorly they stopped using it.
Or more maybe.. what *most* people weigh. However the current system seems to work so "don't fix it" if it ain't broken sort of thing
Thus, median would be a better predictor of the load in any given flight for a multi-polar population.
Imagine a population where 90% of people weigh 200lbs and 10% weigh 300lbs. The median would of course be 200, and that is useful for thinking about the population. When you fill a plane with 100 people, though, those outliers show up! The sum of the weights will be n*(mean weight), not n*(median weight).
The point is that the median is not the correct estimator. The hypothetical distribution is just an example to show that. When estimating the actual sum of passenger weights the mean passenger weight is the correct number to use, not the median.Noted, but that's not the weight population distribution of US passengers. Even a symmetric unipolar mode distribution would be more accurate than a 90/10 hypothetical. To say nothing of the multi-modal population of co-ed pax load representative of most airline flights. My vote is still go with the median.