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What is the first letter to pilots?

The ICAO phonetic alphabet has assigned the 26 code words to the 26 letters of the English alphabet in alphabetical order: Alfa, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo, Foxtrot, Golf, Hotel, India, Juliett, Kilo, Lima, Mike, November, Oscar, Papa, Quebec, Romeo, Sierra, Tango, Uniform, Victor, Whiskey, X-ray, Yankee, Zulu.



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Superstition around numbers influences the omission of row 13 on Ryanair and Lufthansa flights, as well as other airlines like Air France and Virgin Atlantic. The number 13 is considered bad luck in various cultures, leading to its avoidance in many aspects of everyday life, including airline seat numbering.

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This means that an 'A' seat is always a port-side window, and 'F' is always a starboard-side window. If they labelled first class seats with AB, CD, then 'C' seats would be a port-side aisle in economy, but a starboard-side aisle in first. Airline seats do not skip letters for rows since rows are always numbers.

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We used to skip 33 on certain maps to make the [final] row standardized, but the end row is no longer standardized, a United Airlines spokesperson told Travel + Leisure. In short, the reasoning behind having a unanimous seating map is a math equation of sorts.

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What do pilots say right before takeoff? These can vary, but in general, the announcements are relatively standard across different airlines. Most pilots will typically introduce themselves and the cabin crew; state the aircraft type, flight number, and route, and remind passengers of the airline's seatbelt policy.

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Affirm: Contrary to popular belief, pilots do not say “affirmative” when they mean “yes” – the correct term is affirm, pronounced “AY-firm”.

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Airlines quickly realized the value of jet streams and began implementing them while planning routes. Since the jet streams flow from west to east, they make one leg of the journey much faster (when flying with the stream) and one slower (against the stream).

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In a bizarre Friday-the-13th coincidence, a flight bearing the number of the beast went straight to HEL today. That's right. Finnair Flight 666 took off from Copenhagen (CPH) and flew directly to Helsinki (HEL) on Friday. Even better?

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Former pilot Bubb told Newsweek that two dings mean the plane is climbing through 10,000 feet and/or the pilots are asking flight attendants to prepare the cabin for landing. A whoosh sound means the landing gear is extending in preparation for landing, Bubb added.

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Pilots are instructed to land at the nearest possible suitable airport in the event of a Code Red. Hearing Code Red at the terminal typically means there's a confirmed security risk, such as a bomb or terrorist. Airport security and police are almost immediately mobilized to deal with the situation.

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