Airplane airbags
Airplane airbags are airbags that are located in the seat belts on some airplanes. They are designed to lessen the impact of crashes with minor injuries. Dependent on an airline's choice of installation, airplane airbags are most often installed in First class, Business class, Premium Economy, and Economy bulkhead/exit row seats. The use of seat belt extenders deactivates the airbag mechanism, so some airlines require seat belt extender users to be reassigned to seats without airbags.
Airlines which use airplane airbags include, but are not limited to:
Aeroflot | B777-300ER (18C, 18H) A320-200N and A321-200NX (Bulkhead rows only) |
Air Astana | B767-300 |
Air Canada | A319-112/114, A320-214, A321-211, 767-300ER, A330-300, 777-233LR, 777-333ER |
Air France | A330-200, 777-300ER |
Air New Zealand | 747-400, 777-300ER, 777-200ER (Business Class), A320-232SL |
Alaska Airlines | 737-900 (First class and Premium Class bulkhead) |
Alitalia | A330 |
Avianca | A319, A320-200, 787-8 (all in Business Class) |
American Airlines | 737-800 (First Class and bulkhead row seats), 777-200ER (Business Class), 777-300ER (Business Class), A319 (First Class, Main Cabin: Exit and bulkhead row seats), A321T (First Class) |
British Airways | A321-200 (Club World) |
Cathay Pacific | 777-300ER, A330-300, A340, A350, 777-300 |
China Airlines | 777-300ER |
Delta Air Lines | 767-300ER, 767-400ER, 777-200ER, 777-200LR (BusinessElite Only), 717-200 (Comfort Plus only), A321 business class row 1 at bulkhead.
A220-100 row 10 |
Emirates | A340-500 |
Finnair | A330-300 (Business Class Only), A350-900 (Business Class Only) |
Iberia | A340-600 |
Japan Airlines | 787-9 (1st Class, Business, Premium Economy) |
KLM | B787-9, B787-10, B777-200, B777-300ER |
Singapore Airlines | A340-500, A350-900, A380-800, B777-300ER |
Sky Airline | A320neo, A321neo |
South African Airways | A340-600 |
Spirit Airlines | A320 |
SwissAir | A330-300 (Business and First Class only) |
Thai Airways | 787-9 (Business Class) |
United Airlines | 737-9MAX, 767-400ER (Business and First Class only) |
Virgin Atlantic | 747-400, A340-600, A340-300 |
Virgin Australia | A330-200, 777-300ER[1] |
See also
References
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Safety & Supercars - Virgin Australia safety video. YouTube.
- Andy Pazstor, "Putting Air Bags In The Air", The Wall Street Journal, November 16, 2006.