0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
To cram more passengers in obviously.If you increase seat spacing and have fewer seats you lose customers on every full flight, but only benefit <1% of the population who didn't have enough legroom. It's not cost effective.I'm 6'5", I could write a book about what it's like living in a society of shortarses, but what's the point? Like it or lump it.
This borders on a persistent problem in medical engineering. Whatever assistive device you design, even without budget constraints, there will always be someone who can't use it, and an understandable and legitimate demand to fulfil the needs of everyone. If you multiply by the requirement for public transport to move people from A to B at a competitive price, you end up designing for a "90%" passenger (used to be 95% but people have got bigger) of average weight.
Given physics dictates work done is the same for a given weight making a plane a bit longer is not an expense.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 09/05/2022 18:21:42Given physics dictates work done is the same for a given weight making a plane a bit longer is not an expense.Please design my next plane. I would like it the same width (it's a bit snug but comfortable) and a foot longer, but the same weight and therefore the same price. And the additional surface area will not contribute to form drag.
Why is leg room on transport so limited ?
the only thing changed was a lengthened fuselage, contributing a very very small increace inefficiency
I also designed an airliner with a spindly appearance, smaller wings, lighter apperatus.
Train as a pilot, so their seat can adjust to a comfortable distance
Planes and trains seem to wish to encourage knees around earholes. What is the necessity for this?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/05/2022 00:52:20 the only thing changed was a lengthened fuselage, contributing a very very small increace inefficiency Please let me know where you get your weightless (but stronger) metal from.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/05/2022 00:52:20I also designed an airliner with a spindly appearance, smaller wings, lighter apperatus. Would that be a fighter or a rocket, with the addition of your weightless passenger compartment?
One reason for making planes fatter is the surface/volume ratio. If you double the cross-sectional radius you get 4 times the surface drag but 8 times the payload volume.
One reason for making the wings longer is to increase the lift/drag ratio, which is why a single-seat glider is bigger than a 2-seat powered aircraft,
Quote from: OPWhy is leg room on transport so limited ?Because most passengers don't want to pay extra for:- An emergency exit row- Business Class- First Class- Train as a pilot, so their seat can adjust to a comfortable distance
Makes you wonder why nobody has put wings on a train. Bloody engineers, always concerned about physics and safety. Fly the dream!
I have also thinned the wings in the new plane
Quote from: alancalverd on 10/05/2022 19:59:45Makes you wonder why nobody has put wings on a train. Bloody engineers, always concerned about physics and safety. Fly the dream!I have designed a new train..........https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/A%C3%A9rotrain
Quote from: PetrochemicalsI have also thinned the wings in the new planeThe wings are also where they carry most of the fuel.Is your new plane nuclear-powered?