The process of exiting a plane can be dramatically improved. This project exists to prove that fact.
I've called the process "Fill & Flush" to represent the way the limited resource, plane aisle space, can be more effectively used by "filling" the aisle, then "flushing" the aisle.
- plane connects to jetbridge, and passengers are allowed to stand
- passenger gathers belongings
- passenger stands idle for some period of time (sometimes 0 seconds in status quo, if they're in an aisle seat and are first to stand)
- person in front of passenger leaves
- passenger places some time buffer between themselves and that aisle neighbor that just left
- passenger walks plane with belongings
- Deplaning order is row by row in quasi middle out - 1C -> 1B -> 1A -> 1D -> 1E -> 1F -> 2C...
- Deplaning order is column by column, middle out - 1C -> 2C -> ... -> 60C -> 1D -> ... -> 1F ...
- what about the elderly and people with children?
- they should exit in later flushes or in the final flush
- how do you model the final "flush" if it's all these oddball cases?
- not sure!
- what about groups who wish to exit together?
- make "trades" with individuals in outside rows, wait for later flushes
- what about car-traffic style accordion effects in the aisle as passengers walk the aisle?
- how to model the randomness of time:
- it takes to gather belongings
- any one passenger places as a buffer between themselves and the person leaving ahead of them
- should there really a "gather belongings" penalty in Fill & Flush. i.e. - do you actually take longer to gather belongings with aisle neighbors relative to status quo? if there is, what's the discount in later flushes (currently 5% speedup for each wave - less baggage in overhead)
- what about massive international flights with 2 exit rows?
- what about first class?
- you can still let them off first and apply this system in coach and get the improvement
- Won't the person in 1F get mad watching people go by?
- got to have education. this makes everyone better off. lives are at stake
- why go strictly column by column? why not be MORE laissez-faire and say just manage waves? wave 1, wave 2, wave 3, etc.?
- this could be an even further improvement and in a way can solve the 1F problem by letting 1F occupy space if it is there - I suspect a few more people can fit the aisle than there are rows so you may lose some value being strict. OTOH could lead to conflict
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