Question:

Can I bring a parachute as a carryon for a commercial flight?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

Why don't they have emergency parachutes on airplanes?

 Tags:

   Report

3 ANSWERS


  1. Yes, you may bring a parachute system onto an aircraft.  For more details about traveling with rigs check the TSA website and/or the United States Parachute Association's website for details www.uspa.org.

    Keep in mind that the vast majority of accidents happen at take off or landing, where a parachute is useless. there is not enough altitude or time to use a parachute.

    Take it from someone that jumps out of planes for fun. There is not enough room to put on a parachute in a commercial plane. Everyone would have to wear the rigs before getting on the aircraft. Even if everyone had a parachute there is no safe way to exit the aircraft. You would need special equipment and training to survive the 560 + mph winds and 30,000 foot plus altitudes. Without extra oxygen and protective gear you would die in that environment. The fastest skydiving jumps are at 150 knots, not 500 + knots and are made from 18,000 feet MSL or lower. Just getting out of the airplane could kill you as you'd be slammed into the door on exit.  Further, the location of the wing and the engines with respect to the location of the doors would make it nearly impossible to exit the aircraft without hitting the wings, stabilizer or the engine.  The next issue would be landing a parachute. Most likely this case would use rounds and you'd just have to do a parachute landing fall. That is easy enough to learn. The steering of the canopy would require training. I'd say that about 25% of the people on any flight are not healthy enough to survive a normal skydive. The very young, old, and anyone not in good health would have no chance at surviving the exit, parachute flight or landing.

    As a skydiver we know that at some point we will have to exit our aircraft during an aircraft emergency, it doesn’t happen very often, almost never, but it does.  But here is the catch, you need time and altitude to open up the parachute.  We wear seat belts in the plane for taxi, take off, and if needed landing.  If there is a problem with the aircraft under 1000 feet above the ground you go down with the plane.  In a commercial flight you will climb past 1000 feet very quickly but there will not be enough time to put on a parachute system, nor enough time to get everyone out of the plane.  The vast majority of the very rare commercial accidents happen right after take off or on landing…. A parachute would be useless.

    For more information about traveling with a parachute you can check out www.uspa.org and there is a link to the TSA rules about traveling with rigs.

    In the big picture. commercial airline flights are very safe and not something to worry about.  I travel for a living.  Taking two or more flights a week across the US.  I hate landing in planes because I’d rather be jumping out and landing my parachute, but it is impossible to do that safely from a commercial aircraft; never mind the less than legal part of it.

    As for flotation devises, I don’t know about you, but when I get into water all I do is prolong my drowning.  I’m very glad there is something there to help me float if needed.  The parachutes are pointless, the flotation device, might of might not be useful, but I like having the piece of mind.  Perhaps having a parachute on the plane would give piece of mind, even if it couldn’t be used.


  2. Yes, you can bring a parachute, since it's not on the list of prohibited items.

    But it's rather a stretch to figure out a scenario where a parachute would be useful in an emergency on a commercial airliner. After the DB Cooper hijacking many decades ago, they changed the way the doors work to prevent opening them at altitude, to prevent that kind of hijack.  And as has often been pointed out, you're far more likely to be killed in a car crash on the way to the airport than to experience any sort of in-flight emergency.

  3. no, because the Automatic doors do not open above 3000 feet

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 3 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.