Airline Seat Guide

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Transcript of Airline Seat Guide

Page 1: Airline Seat Guide

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Airline Seat Guide

Best seats on Airplanes

Page 2: Airline Seat Guide

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Luxury is at its peak in today’s air travel. Travelers are more concerned about the in-flight

amenities, cabin comforts and cozy seating arrangements.

Different airplanes have different seating arrangements and the number of seats. Some

have as few as 10 seats while some others have as many as 300. The seat maps available for

different airplanes can clue you into key area of that particular aircraft.

Page 3: Airline Seat Guide

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Travelers have to be aware of what make them more comfortable. Seat pitch, seat width, seat type etc, also differs on various cabin classes. ‘Standard’,’ Recliner’ or’ Lie-flat’ are different seat types

and are frequently equipped with modern amenities. .

Standard Seat Lie-flat seatRecliner Seat

Page 4: Airline Seat Guide

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Front, Middle or Aisle seat is again a matter of personal choice. Exit rows, aisle or window seats, and seats close to the front of the plane are typically considered the best. Contrary to expert statements that "one seat is safe as the other," the study found that it is safer to sit in the back as there are more chances of survival in a crash.

Page 5: Airline Seat Guide

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Few seating terms

Seat Pitch: Distance between a row of seats (space between a point on one seat and the same point on the seat in front of it). Seat pitch differs on basis of carriers and cabin classes. Economic class generally offers 31-32 inches seat pitch

Page 6: Airline Seat Guide

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Seating terms

Seat Width: Distance from armrest to armrest

Bulkhead Seats: Seats located immediately behind a solid cabin divider

Jump-Seat: Seat for crew members or flight attendants during take-off and landing

Bulkhead Seats

Page 7: Airline Seat Guide

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Seating terms

Legroom Space: Area under the seat in front