Questions tagged [flight-attendant]

Flight attendants or cabin crew (also known as stewards/stewardesses, air hosts/hostesses, cabin attendants) are members of an aircrew employed by airlines primarily to ensure the safety and comfort of passengers aboard commercial flights, on select business jet aircraft, and on some military aircraft.

Flight attendants or cabin crew (also known as stewards/stewardesses, air hosts/hostesses, cabin attendants) are members of an aircrew employed by airlines primarily to ensure the safety and comfort of passengers aboard commercial flights, on select business jet aircraft, and on some military aircraft.

The primary role of a flight attendant is to ensure passenger safety. In addition to this, flight attendants are often tasked with customer service duties such as serving meals and drinks, as a secondary responsibility.

The number of flight attendants required on flights are mandated by international safety regulations. For planes with up to 19 passenger seats, no flight attendant is needed. For larger planes, one flight attendant per 50 passenger seats is needed.

The majority of flight attendants for most airlines are female, though a substantial number of males have entered the industry since the 1970s.

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Why do flight attendants continue to stand, when the seatbelt sign is on?

Especially during turbulence, I notice that passengers are warned to sit and fasten seatbelts, but flight attendants continue to serve only cold beverages (since the overflow, slosh, spill of hot beverages would be dangerous), stand, walk, and work.…
user128
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How common is it for flight attendants to have pilot certificates?

When looking up some information for the recent question Have there been any solo flights on airliners?, I found this article that lists several incidents in which a pilot has become incapacitated in flight. One thing that I found particularly…
reirab
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How many aircraft types are cabin crew qualified for?

I always wonder, how many types of aircrafts can a cabin crewmember be qualified for? is there a limitation by say IATA, FAA or EASA?
Him
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What are CP-like codes or designations after SAS or Scandinavian flight attendant names?

While browsing through Wikipedia I came across this photograph: It's description says (emphasis mine): SAS DC-9, interior of cabin, service on board. Air hostess Kirsten Andersen and Birthe Bymose both CPHCV serves lunch to Elisabeth Pinske CPHKA…
trejder
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After takeoff, why do some airlines' flight attendants rise from their jump seats earlier than other airlines'?

For one airline (Air France, IIRC), I've heard a cabin chime (presumably to apprise flight attendants ("FA") that they can get up) then saw FAs leaving their jump seats, far sooner after rotation than other First World airlines. Why does the…
user128
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What does the phrase “flight attendants: stand by for all call” mean?

At the end of an announcement on a recent flight, a crew member said: “flight attendants stand by for all call”. What did the crew member mean and what exactly were the flight attendants waiting for?
dalearn
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Why don't flight attendants get tired when passengers can, despite sleeping?

This Reddit thread refers to "stressors of flight" (many of these stressors are also present in automobiles), sudden altitude adjustment, lower cabin humidity., proximity to strangers. Yet flight attendants face these stressors too, but they don't…
user128