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Can you take pictures in cockpit?

Yes, a passenger can take a picture in the cockpit, but it's not as common as you might think. If you're an influencer with a large following, you may be able to get away with it, but it's still not something that's generally done. Why do airlines pilots keep the cockpit door open during boarding operations?



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Even in airplanes equiped with mobile reception during the flight, where passengers can use them, mobile phones are not permitted to be used in the cockpit during flight.

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While the flight deck used to be accessible to passengers and especially children, it has been strictly closed off since the beginning of the millennium. In the meantime, only the pilots and, in exceptional cases such as some standby flights, airline employees are allowed to fly in the cockpit.

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Yes, you can enter the cockpit if the captain or the first officer allows you that too before take off or after landing. While cruising it's NOT ALLOWED.

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It just isn't possible, plus it's illegal (according to the FCC). Cell signals fade out as one gains altitude. It's possible to send and receive texts at low altitudes, but eventually the signal goes away.

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Use of visual entertainment such as movies, television programs, video games, etc., is not allowed for a flight crew as they are required to maintain visual scanning outside the aircraft, if able, for situational awareness and collision avoidance.

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Under this program, flight crew members are authorized by the Transportation Security Administration to use firearms to defend against acts of criminal violence or air piracy undertaken to gain control of their aircraft.

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If you are flying an aircraft for pleasure, it is certainly allowed to take photos. There is no rule against it. A good pilot does not allow anything to distract them when the right thing to be doing at a particular moment is aviating, navigating, or communicating.

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The CVR records the flight crew's voices, as well as other sounds inside the cockpit. The recorder's cockpit area microphone is usually located on the overhead instrument panel between the two pilots.

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Planes have headlights so that pilots can see what is in front of them. Unfortunately, they are only effective during takeoffs and landings. Even with the slight illumination offered by the headlights, only darkness is visible when looking out the front window of a cockpit.

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Many airlines provide crew rest areas on their aircraft, where pilots can sleep during long-haul flights. These areas are usually located in the tail, cargo area or above the cabin of the plane and are designed to be as quiet and comfortable as possible. Other crew members prefer to use business class seats to rest.

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Answer: Yes, pilots know what every button and switch does. The school to learn the specifics of an airplane is very intense, requiring great concentration for several weeks.

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Bottom line. Despite all the security procedures in place nowadays, cockpit visits are still very much possible on most airlines. Just be sure you ask the flight attendant first, and be ready to take “no” for an answer if the pilots are busy and/or not very social.

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If it's a two-pilot aircraft, a passenger should never be allowed to sit in one of those seats, said Bob Conyers, director of safety for Global Aerospace. Passengers sometimes want to sit there in flight to see what it's like, but it is against Federal Aviation Regulations.

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