Posted on 04/16/2024 8:41:11 AM PDT by libh8er
I agree. If the seat tilted along with the back, then it would be more comfortable for the leaner, and it would give more knee room to the person behind if he also tilted his seat.
Thank you! I really believe that the satisfaction people get from the minimal recline of the seat is more psychological than physical. It's the one thing they have control over during the flight.
All of our(wife & I)airline travel ended just before 911 & so I have missed all of the unpleasantries that came forth since then. Now I only hear about them thankfully.
I don’t fly anymore (by choice), but reclining seats should GO! You don’t need to sleep on a plane. If you must, sleeping upright is good enough if you are THAT tired.
Yep, hardly at all. So they should just install non reclinable seats that have a natural recline between the two options and call it a day.
If they took out a row or two (that's just 6 or 12 passengers), there would be enough legroom between rows that reclining a seat won't be an inconvenience anymore. It would also alleviate the overhead bin space problems, too.
-PJ
Have you tried getting a front-row seat so there isn't someone in front of you to bother you?
-PJ
Those are worse! Can't stretch my legs. and no place for a carryon
My question was posed to show the dilemma between making a choice worse for you but doesn't impose your problem (long legs) onto the innocent person in front of you, or getting a seat more convenient for you but requires the person in front of you to accommodate your comfort to their own discomfort.
That's why I said up-thread that this all began when the airlines kept stuffing more and more rows into a plane. Over the years I began to realize that it was becoming harder and harder to put my same carry-on bag under the seat in front of me because the space between seats got to the point where my bag wouldn't fit between them to get to the floor.
The airline's dilemma is to remove a few rows to appease the customers and reduce the number of conflicts between passengers, or to make it even worse for the passengers (no reclining at all) but make more profit for the airline. One would think that market forces might entice one airline to remove a row in economy and give everyone else a few more inches of legroom as an advertising campaign. They might lose a few dollars per flight but make it up in volume over time as some people make that airline their first choice in the future.
Instead, as this article indicates, the airlines are making it worse for passengers in economy class as a way of getting them to upgrade to the oxymoronic "premium economy."
-PJ
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