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Can you smoke on a plane?

The short answer to this question is no. anywhere onboard their planes. These passengers didn't want to be exposed to secondhand smoke during their flight. Today, all major U.S. airlines have completely non-smoking cabins.



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Pilots can and sometimes do smoke in the cockpits of business jets. These can be as large as airliners (see BBJ), but usually aren't. Even when a country and/or airline ban smoking in the flight deck, some pilots will ignore the ban and still light up.

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While both the moisture from rain and fog and the smoke from wildfires can lead to reduced visibility – and thusly, flight delays – smoke can pose a greater danger. This is due to the navigation systems pilots and air traffic controllers depend on, according to Kevin Morris with the Federal Aviation Administration.

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Under the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) 's direction, ashtrays must be on the bathroom doors of all airliners. The reason is that ashtrays are there for the passengers who do smoke. Despite warnings and laws prohibiting inflight smoking, some stubborn customers continue to disobey the rules.

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Question: Captain Cox, why is smoke seen when an aircraft's landing wheels touch down onto the runway? Answer: The smoke is the result of a wheel which is not turning in flight making contact with a stationary runway. The wheel must accelerate to the landing speed very quickly.

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Most airplanes leave behind a white smoke trail, though some may leave behind a black smoke trail. Black smoke trails aren't caused by condensation in exhaust gases. Instead, they are caused by an incomplete combustion processes. Just like cars and trucks use combustion to produce power, so do airplanes.

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According to the FAA, 696 people have been cited for smoking on board planes over the last five years. It falls to flight attendants to report it, people like Gailen David who's been with American Airlines for over 20 years.

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Whereas internal FAA regulations call for maximum $25,000 fines for smoking on planes and distracting crews, several incidents involving cigarettes in lavatories resulted in fines of $500 or less.

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Most aircraft smoke detectors can't differentiate between vapour and smoke. If you vape in the toilets, the smoke detector will go off. This raises in alarm in the flight deck and has to be investigated by the Cabin Crew.

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There'a a few reasons for this: Safety: During takeoff and landing, everyone should be buckled into a secure seat. They have these seats in the cockpit, and in large aircraft, they're actually very comfortable. Laying down in a crew bed would not be allowed during takeoff or landing (though it happens, off the record).

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