I'm not sure how that would address having 127 tickets and 126 seats when one of those 127 is supposed to be a "babe in arms".
We really should stop doing the projectile-in-arms thing. I'm pretty sure that we're the last first-world country that does this.I'm not sure how that would address having 127 tickets and 126 seats when one of those 127 is supposed to be a "babe in arms".
Something else you get away with until you don't, no?I have no idea.
I still remember hearing them referred to as "lap rockets" at Skyway because in a high speed, high deceleration RTO you're probably going to hear a loud "POP" at the child hits the cockpit door.
I don't have kids but I seriously question why anyone would want to do that other than saving a few dollars.
If you can't have them in your arms in a car, why the hell is this still legal?
We really should stop doing the projectile-in-arms thing. I'm pretty sure that we're the last first-world country that does this.
I don't have kids, but I wouldn't let mine ride around infant-in-arms. They'll have a ticket and an FAA-approved restraint system.
(If you can't have them in your arms in a car, why the hell is this still legal?)
Read a statement about that somewhere long time ago.
Went somewhere along the lines of "Because it is statistically safer than the said family driving to destination"
I have no idea.
I still remember hearing them referred to as "lap rockets" at Skyway because in a high speed, high deceleration RTO you're probably going to hear a loud "POP" at the child hits the cockpit door.
I don't have kids but I seriously question why anyone would want to do that other than saving a few dollars.
I feel like there's a public-relations joke there somewhere.Yup.
"The crew gave no warning before aborting takeoff…"
Somewhere, in the Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center, Civil Aeromedical Institute in Oklahoma City, there's an accident survivability engineer shaking his head vehemently.Read a statement about that somewhere long time ago.
Went somewhere along the lines of "Because it is statistically safer than the said family driving to destination"
Ahem.Seems inappropriate for an agency charged with regulating aviation safety.
Ahem.
The mission of the FAA is to "regulate and promote" civil aviation.
Do you have kids? Holding a lap child sucks. We do the carseat thing it sucks too but we have a pretty efficient system down.Personally I'd have zero issues holding a kid on my lap. The probability is extremely low. Personally I get a kick out of the parents who bring car seats on board, what a huge cluster and PITA.
That being said, you can't have a laptop out but a baby is fine according to the FAA? Their rules have no logic.
Personally I'd have zero issues holding a kid on my lap. The probability is extremely low. Personally I get a kick out of the parents who bring car seats on board, what a huge cluster and PITA.
Ahem.
The mission of the FAA is to "regulate and promote" civil aviation.