Body & Soul0 min ago
Dimming cabin lights during landing and takeoff
14 Answers
Hear is one for you all why do airline pilots dim the cabin lights during landing and take off I think I know?????
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No best answer has yet been selected by ukkid76. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's only done after dark, and the reason is so that if there should chance to be an emergency requiring passengers to evacuate the aircraft, they will have some night vision and not be blind for a vital couple of minutes. To be pedantic, it's the cabin crew who turn the lights down, not actually the pilots! Is that the reason you were expecting?
Sorry, ukkid, you still haven't got an answer from "other people". I'm a former airline pilot, so both your answers are from professionals. As for Easyjet, maybe it's a subtle way of making passengers quieten down and concentrate during take-off. or perhaps their drill is to dim the lights every time, then they won't be forgotten for night flights.
No problem. For the benefit of anyone who's worried by the mere mention of emergencies, in over 30 years of flying I only had to leave an aircraft in any sort of hurry once - and that was in the RAF, a test flight after major servicing. Even then it was because of a false fire warning. I never went down those chutes except for training, and never saw them deployed for real.
I wonder if EasyJet dim the lights so that when they put them back to bright it means, "Right, boys and girls, bar's open!"
I wonder if EasyJet dim the lights so that when they put them back to bright it means, "Right, boys and girls, bar's open!"
Squirrel, if (which God forbid) you should have to evacuate an aircraft when it's dark outside, you will see better if your eyes are already adapted to low light. Any emergency situation will be made ten times worse if the passengers are stumbling about unable to see.
And no, it's not EasyJet trying to save money! The electricity for the lights comes from the aircraft's own generators run by the engines - otherwise you'd need a heck of a long cable to connect to the mains!
And no, it's not EasyJet trying to save money! The electricity for the lights comes from the aircraft's own generators run by the engines - otherwise you'd need a heck of a long cable to connect to the mains!
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