Gwen Cooper wrote: » Not worth spending another €200. I still fit into the one seat - yes, with some serious struggle, but I fit. The rule is (although it's often ignored) that as long as you can get your armrest down, you don't need an extra seat. Would you be buying an extra seat for being one centimeter short?
Andrew Beef wrote: » I don’t agree with that. If a seat reclines, a person is entitled to recline it (except during meal times). The airlines are to blame for the lack of legroom.
Wanderer2010 wrote: » I think its rude for someone to impose on someone elses comfort for such a long flight purely for their own comfort. It being an option to recline doesn't change my view.
plodder wrote: » One of the rare occasions when Ryanair's penny pinching creates a favourable outcome for passengers as well as saving money.
billybonkers wrote: » Why all the hate for reclining seats?
LionelNashe wrote: » The function shouldn't be there. Not everyone has short enough legs to sit comfortably behind a reclining seat.
plodder wrote: » Ithat guy in front of you just flicks the seat back for no better reason than he can, is what annoys me. I try to use a laptop on short flights (often just to watch a movie) but you literally cannot keep a laptop open, when seats are reclined.
trellheim wrote: » this one is another bugbear
spurious wrote: » You should go for special assistance. It suits the airline if you are going to be a bit slower, or hold up boarding in anyway to get you on early and 'out of the way' so to speak. You don't need to necessarily have a disability, needing more time qualifies you.
Gwen Cooper wrote: » When I said struggle, I meant violently shaping the fat on my body so it fits into a seat. After all the years of flying it only takes me about 10 seconds longer than the other passengers. And since I’m always amongst the first people on the plane and usually the last one to leave, I’m not holding anyone up. It’s a technique I perfected
Wanderer2010 wrote: » But do you need an extension? From what ive seen its people who have a very very wide waist who simply cant make that connection meet. If you don't need it then surely it cant be that hard to "contain" yourself as your mentioned in your technique?
Olsky wrote: » My Nr 1 pet peeve is definitely reclining seats. Really annoys me and I am short. Find it rude and an intrusion of my personal space. Why oh why do airlines provide this function though?
billy few mates wrote: » There's no point in paying for two seats, the check in staff at the boarding gate will only see it as an empty seat on departure and allocate to another passenger or a staff member travelling standby and there's absolutely nothing you can do about it...
Jamie2k9 wrote: » Passengers who stand up as soon as the plane stops even though they could be waiting 10 minutes for the doors to open.
Wanderer2010 wrote: » Another bugbear- couples who have to sit apart for short (3 or less hours) flights because they didn't book the seats at the time of paying for flight. Then they get all annoyed and panicky and start asking other people to accommodate them so they can sit together. You have your whole life together, what difference does 2 hours apart make? Never understood the weirdly clingy nature of some couples.
lion_bar wrote: » People who use my seat to drag themselves up when getting up. Usually just as I nod off.
lawred2 wrote: » my old man is guilty of this - product of being overweight the instant recliner is a piece of sh!t in my opinion... Reclining should only be for long haul flights when cabin lights are dimmed. Doing so at any other time makes you a cnut in my eyes.
L1011 wrote: » I was between a couple who had checked in the aisle and window of a 3 seater hoping nobody would get the middle. Didn't want to move. Talked Quebecois noisily all night and passed stuff over me (in front of my screen) constantly. Made the upgrade to E+ pretty much a downgrade
Wanderer2010 wrote: » Obese people sitting next to you- its a complete hot potato and most airliners are just too scared to upset the obese person for fear of lawsuits and bad publicity etc. Ive seen one guy who had to be about 30 stone and he needed an extension seat belt but he was literally sitting on the poor woman next to him not a bother, Really, they should have to pay for two seats.
Wanderer2010 wrote: » I have a mate who is 6ft3 so plane seats leg room are never great for him but his legs are so long that the person in front literally CANNOT recline the seat because his legs are pressed against the back of the chair in front of him. He says he often gets real funny looks from people who cannot fathom the physics of chairs not being able to recline because of legs in the way and looks at him as if to say "cant you make your legs disappear so I can recline"....people can really be absolutely dumb.
HeidiHeidi wrote: » I have a bad lower back, and sitting bolt upright for any length of time is incredibly uncomfortable. I'll suffer it on a short flight (usually because I have no choice) but on a long flight I absolutely will use the recliner on my seat (usually checking first that the person behind isn't eating or drinking). Should your long legs trump my bad back?