Airplane Window Seats - An Update
News Flash – TEN years ago, I posted a complaint about flying in a window seat with no window. Little did I know my seven readers got a glimpse into the future. Recently, the Washington Post reported that a class action lawsuit has been filed against two airlines for charging extra for window seats when the seats have no windows.
Silly me. When Boeing designed and built their planes, they added windows with the reasonable notion that they would line up with the rows of seating. However, the carriers have taken that basic plane body and cram-squeezed as many seats into that space as humanly tolerable. Of course, seats no longer align with windows. Get used to it. The airlines’ response to the recent challenge is to identify certain places where ductwork and electrical conduits are located. Please, child.
Older flyers can remember when there were two seats on either side of the aisle. Then it became three and two. Now, only the puddle-jumper, short-haul planes have fewer than six seats in every row.
I imagine it would be easier to avoid this litigation by simply knowing the seating plans in each plane and X-out those seats that no longer line up with a window, then stop charging extra for the insult. How hard would that be? Certainly, it is less costly than paying lawyers to defend your deception. Apparently, other airlines do that.
We’ll see where this goes. In the meantime, stay with Images and More for a head start on what should make you nuts.
1 Comments:
We just returned from a trip where one leg each way was15 hours. We had a window seat each leg but realized there is not much to see. Since there are three seats getting out is a bother and you have to bug the aisle person each time you get up. I guess it’s good we’re down to one trip a year as travel for us old folks is getting harder. By the way a bigger problem is that some airlines allow zero checked bags even on international flights. So another $100 or so for two people.
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