Should Airplanes Have Shoulder Seat Belts? - podcast episode cover

Should Airplanes Have Shoulder Seat Belts?

May 17, 20186 min
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Episode description

Cars have shoulder seat belts to protect passengers, so why not large airplanes? Learn the physics involved, plus why buckling up on planes is important, in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works, Hey, brain Stuff, Lauren vog obam here. When the fastened seatbelt sign flashes on in airplanes, with its accompanying provenly gentle ding, it's often met with equal parts annoyance and resignation, like, what again, really do I have to The answer, of course, is yes, you really have to. It's for the good of your skull and that's where you keep your brain. We spoke with Richard mcspaden, the executive director of the Aircraft Owners

and Pilots Association's Air Safety Institute. He said, I think it's the old it's not going to happen to me syndrome. Aviation accidents are so rare that people say, what are the odds that's going to happen to me? And I would agree with them that the odds are extremely low, But he continued, I would then add that even though the odds are low, the consequences of something happening can be pretty significant. Even if it's just a bump in turbulence.

If you're not strapped in right, your head could hit the top of that airplane. That can result in a serious injury. And it's so effortless to drop a seatbelt around you, and he's right. Though folks of above average size may argue with the effortlessness of those seat belts, but airplane companies are working on that, and in flight

turbulence is more than a mere nuisance. The Federal Aviation Administration, or f a A, reports that fifty eight people are injured by turbulence on airplanes every year while not wearing their seatbelts. Most are not ticket holding passengers. Of the two hundred and ninety eight serious injuries from turbulence that the f a A recorded from eight hundred and eighty

four involved flight attendants. A simple lap belt or even other restraints like shoulder harnesses, may not be enough to save a life if an airliner undergoes a catastrophic midair failure, but the rare accidents like that are not the main reasons for seat belts on airplanes. They're designed to protect you from the airplane during flight. Oatherpool and American Airlines flight attendant and author put it this way to the Telegraph.

In the reason you must wear a seat belt, flight crew include it is because you don't want the plane coming down on you. People think they're lifted up in the air during turbulence. But the truth is the plane drops, it comes down hard, and it comes down fast, and that's how passengers get injured by getting hit on the head by an airplane. It's simple physics, Newton's first law of motion. A body at rest will remain at rest unless an outside force acts on it. But let's unpack that.

If you're not wearing a seat belt on an airplane that drops suddenly, which often happens with turbulence, you're the one at rest. You'll stay at rest as the plane very literally drops out from under you. If you're strapped in, the seatbelt serves as an outside force acting on you, taking you with the plane as it drops, and saving you from bonking your head on that overhead been above you. Mc batten said. It allows you to stay in place

and ride along with the airplane. It's just that added safety margin that if something unexpected happens, you're still going to stay with the airplane. But if that's the case, would shoulder harnesses be better? A little reasoning might suggest that if a lap belt is good while flying, a shoulder harness like those in cars and those in smaller so called general aviation planes would be even better. Indeed, shoulder belts or harnesses might help, according to some experts.

Mcpadden said the answer would be yes. It certainly would help because it would prevent the movement of the upper torso aggressively in terms of some kind of sudden impact. How you can do that is another question. Entirely, such harnesses would be costly to install and trickier to get to work correctly on bigger commercial planes that probably be uncomfortable on longer flights, And because of all of that, wearing shoulder harnesses might meet a lot of resistance from

the flying public. In large commercial airlines, lap belts do the trick against the vertical forces typically experienced in a malfunction or crash. In smaller aircraft, though, shoulder harnesses work and work well, which is why they are required for all seats in all small airplanes manufactured since December twelve.

Used with lap belts, shoulder harnesses in smaller planes have been shown to reduce serious injuries from accidents by percent in fatalities by twenty according to the f a A. Ironically, the safety record of commercial airlines may be the overwhelming reason that shoulder harnesses have not been required of large passenger planes. In seventeen, no one was killed in a commercial jet airliner incident anywhere in the world, making it

the safest year ever for big passenger planes. In its civil Aviation Safety Review for twenty seventeen, which examined accidents on large passenger aircraft, the Dutch aviation consulting firm t O seventy estimated that there were zero point zero eight fatal accidents per million flights. That is a rate of

one fatal accident for every twelve million flights. With a safety record like that, it's hard to argue that shoulder harnesses would lower the risk of flying enough to offset the costs, the effort, and the resistance that such a major change would generate. Lat Belts, though they help, they help a lot, so when flying it's probably best to buckle up and stay that way. It's for your brain's

own good. Today's episode was written by John Donovan and produced by Tyler Clang, with kind engineering assistance from Ramsay youngt. For more on this and lots of other skull saving topics, visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com.

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