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sdfhbdf | 1 year ago
I mean it all sounds fun but when you consider for example low-cost airlines in Europe (WizzAir, Ryanair) they’re really efficient without any of this, since their margins depend on it. Surprisingly their boarding isn’t as structured (only priority and then the rest) and they still only take around 30 mins total from first to last passengers being let through a gate in my experience. Their trick is probably some combination of motivated passengers, asking people to put stuff under the seat in from, remote stands that need a bus and flight attendants constantly announcing „please don’t block the aisle”.
cryptonector|1 year ago
This also explains why many airlines do the boarding group thing: because it rewards the frequent flyers with access to overhead bin space!
That's the reason that people want to board first!
So why not just charge for overhead bin space? Because it's unseemly and -anyways- hard to get right.
evanb|1 year ago
It worked great except that the bag-check process was absolutely terrible: every passenger had to go to the desk outside security. But other airlines have solved that issue (separate check-in and self-service-tag-printing+bag-drop-only queues make a big difference).
rafaelmn|1 year ago
enlyth|1 year ago
If everyone has priority, no one has priority.
stavros|1 year ago
nox101|1 year ago
Compare to the Shinkansen (bullet train) in Japan which loads 3x the number of people in 2-3 minutes
FireBeyond|1 year ago
rsynnott|1 year ago
thaumasiotes|1 year ago
What's surprising about that? That's how you do quick boarding. Southwest has always done it that way. They start boarding 30 minutes before departure. And stop 10 minutes before.
What the long boarding line accomplishes is that it forces people to wait in a long line, which you can charge them to skip. Think of it as a mobile game with microtransactions, but for airplanes.