Originally posted by BoeingBobby
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Originally posted by Gabriel View PostWrong. The distance between your knees and the back of the seat in front of you doesn't improve when you recline your seat, and in some newer seats it actually diminishes if you do.
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Originally posted by BoeingBobby View PostAll you guys that are bitching about leg room. Buy a G-5 and hire me to fly you around. Lots of leg room, eat what you ordered and no TSA! PM me for my resume.
More interestingly, 3WE, I am one of those polite travellers that asks the person behind me if it’s OK with them if I recline my seat.
ATL wrote.....I'll rephrase: what if the guy seated in front of Brian has herniated discs and will be in great pain if he does NOT recline? Why is Brian's pain the only one that matters?
Easily fixed ..... We swap seats. He can then recline to relieve his pain,
Gabriel wrote......I don't know what blame does Brian carry regarding his knee conditions and "size". But I have no control whatsoever over my height (and while I am higher than most, I a am not an outlier either. Being in about the 1% percentile you can expect a few of us on average in every flight.
I am just over 6 feet tall with an inside leg measurement of 32”. That creates the start of the problem in a 30” or less seat pitch but my personal issues are 34 years of working as a paramedic lifting and carrying the lame and lazy, working 12hr shifts which very regularly turn into 14hrs with a late call out, getting a 30 minute meal break if I am very lucky and eating fast food as result. Taking healthy food with me was not an option as we generally took our breaks on the run with no fridge availability.
As a result of this I suffer from bone on bone bilateral knee arthritis, am overweight and cannot exercise to lose weight so my orthopaedic surgeon refuses to give me new knees which would fix my problems at a stroke.
Half a lifetime devoted to public service ‘ain’t all its cracked up to be is it ?If it 'ain't broken........ Don't try to mend it !
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Originally posted by brianw999 View Post
Interestingly, I am told that if 10 people were to get together and rent a private jet to fly within Europe the cost per seat would not be much more than a scheduled airline business class seat cost.
....More interestingly, 3WE, I am one of those polite travellers that asks the person behind me if it’s OK with them if I recline my seat.....
That creates the start of the problem in a 30” or less seat pitch but my personal issues are 34 years of working as a paramedic lifting and carrying the lame and lazy, working 12hr shifts which very regularly turn into 14hrs with a late call out, getting a 30 minute meal break if I am very lucky and eating fast food as result. Taking healthy food with me was not an option as we generally took our breaks on the run with no fridge availability.
As a result of this I suffer from bone on bone bilateral knee arthritis, am overweight and cannot exercise to lose weight so my orthopaedic surgeon refuses to give me new knees which would fix my problems at a stroke.
Half a lifetime devoted to public service ‘ain’t all its cracked up to be is it ?
I expect and trust pilots are treated better. So many lives depend on THAT, too.
CarolW
Broom navigator
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Originally posted by Evan View Post
It doesn't get any worse though, does it? You would know more than me. Anyway, on long haul I'm reclining. (little dot is not a question mark)
Is it clear or you need a picture? (and judging by how he is seated not fully against his own back and he still have some small clearance between his knees and the back of the seat in front, I am taller than this guy).
--- Judge what is said by the merits of what is said, not by the credentials of who said it. ---
--- Defend what you say with arguments, not by imposing your credentials ---
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Originally posted by BoeingBobby View PostAll you guys that are bitching about leg room. Buy a G-5 and hire me to fly you around. Lots of leg room, eat what you ordered and no TSA! PM me for my resume.
Are you G5-rated?
--- Judge what is said by the merits of what is said, not by the credentials of who said it. ---
--- Defend what you say with arguments, not by imposing your credentials ---
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Originally posted by brianw999 View Post
Interestingly, I am told that if 10 people were to get together and rent a private jet to fly within Europe the cost per seat would not be much more than a scheduled airline business class seat cost.
More interestingly, 3WE, I am one of those polite travellers that asks the person behind me if it’s OK with them if I recline my seat.
ATL wrote.....I'll rephrase: what if the guy seated in front of Brian has herniated discs and will be in great pain if he does NOT recline? Why is Brian's pain the only one that matters?
Easily fixed ..... We swap seats. He can then recline to relieve his pain,
Gabriel wrote......I don't know what blame does Brian carry regarding his knee conditions and "size". But I have no control whatsoever over my height (and while I am higher than most, I a am not an outlier either. Being in about the 1% percentile you can expect a few of us on average in every flight.
I am just over 6 feet tall with an inside leg measurement of 32”. That creates the start of the problem in a 30” or less seat pitch but my personal issues are 34 years of working as a paramedic lifting and carrying the lame and lazy, working 12hr shifts which very regularly turn into 14hrs with a late call out, getting a 30 minute meal break if I am very lucky and eating fast food as result. Taking healthy food with me was not an option as we generally took our breaks on the run with no fridge availability.
As a result of this I suffer from bone on bone bilateral knee arthritis, am overweight and cannot exercise to lose weight so my orthopaedic surgeon refuses to give me new knees which would fix my problems at a stroke.
Half a lifetime devoted to public service ‘ain’t all its cracked up to be is it ?
I used a tall person (me in this case) as an example where such an argument would just not work. Short of cutting your legs, there is no decision or "healthy habit" that one can implement to reduce one's height (or to never be too tall in the first place). While some persons can blame an overweight person for being overweight, nobody can blame a tall person for being tall.
--- Judge what is said by the merits of what is said, not by the credentials of who said it. ---
--- Defend what you say with arguments, not by imposing your credentials ---
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Originally posted by Gabriel View Post
Oh yes it does get absolutely horribly worse. How could leaning the back of the seat in front of your knees back towards your knees not reduce the clearance (if any) between that seat back and your knees? On the other hand, leaning your own torso back doesn't change either the position of your knees or of the seat back in front of your knees.
Is it clear or you need a picture? (and judging by how he is seated not fully against his own back and he still have some small clearance between his knees and the back of the seat in front, I am taller than this guy).
But you own the tall passenger credentials on this forum.
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Originally posted by Gabriel View Post
But the G5 is not a single-pilot jet, is it? You will need an FO.... or... on a second thought... I would need one.
Are you G5-rated?
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Originally posted by Evan View Post
Yes, but the seat in front of this guy is not reclined. The pivot point for the seat is at about the armrests, so as the seat back comes toward you, the seat moves away from you. It appears to me from this photo that the recline does not affect knee room if all the seats are reclined. Especially if the person straightens out his legs rather than bending them when reclined.
But you own the tall passenger credentials on this forum.
If it 'ain't broken........ Don't try to mend it !
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Originally posted by brianw999 View Post
ATL wrote.....I'll rephrase: what if the guy seated in front of Brian has herniated discs and will be in great pain if he does NOT recline? Why is Brian's pain the only one that matters?
Easily fixed ..... We swap seats. He can then recline to relieve his pain,
Please keep paramedicine out of it, I've been in EMS on and off since 1996, your situation is hardly typical.
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Originally posted by BoeingBobby View Post
If you can afford the Gulfstream, you can afford to send me to FlightSafety for the type. I have a couple of dozen ex 74 Captains to fill the right seat no problem. You would need to have a touch more experience before any insurance company would let you be PIC I'm afraid. Not to mention a multi and instrument rating.
But the multi and instrument rating is not the only thing I am lacking. I am also lacking a few dozens of palos vedes.
--- Judge what is said by the merits of what is said, not by the credentials of who said it. ---
--- Defend what you say with arguments, not by imposing your credentials ---
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Originally posted by Evan View Post
Yes, but the seat in front of this guy is not reclined. The pivot point for the seat is at about the armrests, so as the seat back comes toward you, the seat moves away from you. It appears to me from this photo that the recline does not affect knee room if all the seats are reclined. Especially if the person straightens out his legs rather than bending them when reclined.
But you own the tall passenger credentials on this forum.
Now, I can also explain the reasons why this fact is a fact.
1) First of all, in most airplanes the back does NOT pivot at the armrest but at the bottom of the back. It is true that newer seats like the one in the picture pivot higher, but even then...
2) As you can see in the picture, this guy's knees are clearly higher than the pivot so the clearance would clearly shrink if the guy in front reclined his seat.
3) You are also not taking into account the horizontal distance between the pivot and the back "wall" of the seat (let's call it "d"). That horizontal distance becomes vertical if you could recline your seat to an horizontal position. Of course you cannot do that, but you still have some of that effect at intermediate angles. If we call the height of the pivot "h", any point of the seat back that is higher than h-d will move back shrinking the distance.
4) Look at the guy, he has his knees bent more than 90 degrees. In any flight of more that a couple of hours that is unbearable, it simply cuts the blood flow to your legs. If the guy had his lower legs and feet more forward, or as forward as they would go until his tibia bone hits the seat structure in front, his knees would be higher.
5) In my case, I am taller than this guy and my knees are wedged in the corner between the back "wall" and the lower edge of the tray. Do you know what will happen if you try to recline your seat and I am seated behind you? You wont. It is a geometric impossibility (unless something gives away). But in the process of attempting to do it, you will cause me a lot of pain.
But you are pointing in the right direction. In a previous post I proposed that the seats are not reclinable anymore or that they pivot at a higher point so the one suffering the shrinking legroom is the reclining guy and not the guy behind. It's just not high enough yet (it should be at about the tray pivot).
And I could give another rant about these new seats regarding the lower backs with the headrest. The lower back looks great, the cabin feels so much more open and spacious as your head is above all the seats. But that head rest for a tall person like me acts more like a shoulder rest. It pushed the upper part of my back forward and leaves my head unsupported, which is utterly uncomfortable.
--- Judge what is said by the merits of what is said, not by the credentials of who said it. ---
--- Defend what you say with arguments, not by imposing your credentials ---
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