elmerfud 13 hours ago

A lot of people think planes are this sealed tube in the air. Nope, they use compressor stages of the engines to pressurize the cabins. This kind of thing can happen. They should have been able to close off the effected engine from pressurizing the cabin and the other should have been able to clear the air quickly, unless the was another failure too.

I've been on some where you can smell the jet fuel (kerosene) when they start the engine because they forgot to close off the cabin. They said it was normal and "harmless". It was probably harmless for me, considering the infrequent flights I take, but not to cabin crew.

  • bn-l 6 hours ago

    Do planes use leaded fuel?

    • rcxdude 5 hours ago

      Not something like a passenger jet. Leaded fuel is generally a thing for smaller general aviation aircraft where the designs are ancient and there's a huge barrier to updating anything about how they are operated within regulatory boundaries (which might, finally, have been worked through and there's now I think a lead-free alternative).

burnt-resistor 8 hours ago

I refuse to fly. 75% of the time I've flown, I've smelled the diesel fuel-like odor of Jet A in the cabin at startup. It's way too normalized.

Also, like astronauts, flight crew receive significant cumulative ionizing radiation exposure.

LargoLasskhyfv 9 hours ago

Airbus A350, Airbus A220(ex Bombardier C-Series), Boeing 787, Embraer E-Jet E2 Series, don't use it. Maybe future models of ATR-72(or descendants) won't.

4d4m 9 hours ago

Another name for this is Toxic Air Syndrome

Felquinhas 12 hours ago

[flagged]

  • xorbax 8 hours ago

    Why post 3 distinct versions of the same statement?