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Fetlocks_Glistening t1_iuihgo9 wrote

The answer was surprising - most of the seats survived with little damage. The occupants, however…

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JetPunk t1_iuih0wl wrote

All scientists aboard were killed, proving that the seat doesn't matter.

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archery713 t1_iuij2js wrote

Complete edit:

Cave Johnson here. I would like to thank you for flying with Aperture Airlines today! The boys in the shop tell me we've got something really special. Now... Safety is for losers. You don't learn about science by being safe. That's for those pansies over at Delta and American.

Should the airplane experience a forceful landing in some random corn field, we need those seatbelts on tight so we can find out who you are after our HIGHLY experimental jet fuel does... Well whatever it does to humans, we just don't know!

We hope you enjoy the flight and remember, the snacks aren't free you just paid for them with your ticket.

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Pauzhaan t1_iuj0xwz wrote

I sit to the rear & count the seat backs between me & the emergency exits.

I’ve been TO a few plane crashes while I was in the USAF. More than once, the only thing recognizable was the tail.

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Full_Temperature_920 t1_iuk4j36 wrote

How do you reproducibly crash a 727 in order to make statistical observations about seat survival???

Edit: opened the article an it says this was conducted by TV studios, and only once. why does the title say scientists did this rubbish?

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RedSonGamble t1_iujeid7 wrote

It was a shame they did it with a loaded plane

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TheUglyTruth527 t1_iuik7xv wrote

I flew for the first time in a while recently and I couldn't help but roll my eyes at the safety announcement. Flying is statistically the safest way to travel but when shit goes wrong you're pretty much dead. I understand why they have the farce at the beginning of every flight but people must know, deep down, that every time you fly you should be prepared to die.

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el_coremino t1_iuin0xe wrote

> The European Transport Safety Council estimated that 90% of aircraft accidents were technically survivable in a study in 1996.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-45030345

> Airplane accidents have a 95.7% survivability rate, according to the US National Transportation Safety Board

https://www.businessinsider.com/seven-ways-increase-your-odds-surviving-plane-crash-2020-1

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TheUglyTruth527 t1_iuioqnn wrote

When I say "shit goes wrong" I'm not talking about a little tumble right after takeoff. Crashes from very low altitude pad the survivability rates, I'm sure, but that's not what I'm talking about. Also, that second article was really just polishing a turd: wear the right clothes and sit in the right seats and you, too, could survive a plane crash! Put your head right against the seat in front of you so when it comes loose it can break your neck! Be sure to huff the oxygen so you get nice and high so you ragdoll on impact (too bad you'll be disoriented if you do survive)!

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HoaxMcNolte_NM t1_iujters wrote

The lower force crashes may not be what you're talking about.

It's exactly what the flight attendants are talking about.

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rapiertwit t1_iuj2dtl wrote

And also every time you get in a car, train, bus, or boat, or ride a bike, climb a ladder, or mouth off to a stranger.

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