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It also requires a changing and locker room for engine room personnel. [7] Article 10 requires that, with some exceptions, headroom in crew accommodation spaces may not be less than 198 cm or 6 feet 6 inches. [8] Article 11 is concerned with lighting. [9] It requires that crew accommodation spaces be properly lighted. [9]
A multiple-bunk Class 1 crew rest compartment. A crew rest compartment is a section of an airliner dedicated for breaks and sleeping by crew members during off-duty periods. [1] [2] Federal Aviation Regulations have provisions requiring crew rest areas be provided in order to operate a long-haul flight by using multiple crew shifts. [3]
After unloading they would be released (still at the aircraft) at 0923. That is a total of 12 hours and 43 minutes on duty, and 5 hours and 8 minutes of flying. Flight crew report at 2100, fly from 2200 to 2300, "stand-up" on duty overnight from 2315 to 0515, then fly 0600 to 0700, followed by a rest period from 0700 to 1700.
American Airlines flight attendants were sent a union memo about leaving passengers on empty planes. The AFPA said cabin crew members should check lavatories and under seats for sleeping passengers.
Pilots landing a Boeing 777. In aviation, the sterile flight deck rule or sterile cockpit rule is a procedural requirement that during critical phases of flight (normally below 10,000 ft or 3,000 m), only activities required for the safe operation of the aircraft may be carried out by the flight crew, and all non-essential activities in the cockpit are forbidden.
actions required of passengers prior to takeoff (sometimes referred to as “final cabin check” and often accompanied with a physical check by crew): a reminder that seat belts are securely fastened and that all aisles, bulkheads and emergency exit rows must remain clear at all times
There's a reason you may be feeling frisky in Hawaii or romantic in Aspen. Science tells us why we have more sex on vacation, and it has nothing to do with fruity drinks by the pool.
In-flight crew relief (commonly referred in noun form as the relief aircrew, relief flight crew, or just relief crew), is a term used in commercial aviation when referring to the members of an aircrew intended to temporarily relieve active crew members of their duties during the course of a flight. [1]