American Eagle CRJ-700

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  • Anonymous
    Guest

    24/1/2015; AA3478; LGA – DTW; Economy

    I booked this flight using BA Avios and was happy that it “cost” only 9,000 Avios and $10! The regular fare was nearly $400, so a fair saving! Despite me having no elite status with BA (I’m only a Blue member), the AA boarding card stated I had Priority Access. This meant the use of fast track security and priority boarding. A google search showed that this is a “glitch” when booking AA via BA Avios! Anyhow, I wasn’t complaining!

    I arrived at a snowy La Guardia airport about 2 hours prior to departure. As I was travelling with hand luggage only and had printed off my boarding pass at home, I went straight to security. Fast track wasn’t needed here as there was absolutely no one in the queue. I was through security in less than 5 minutes – probably one of the fastest and easiest security screenings I’ve been through! LGA is a small airport so wasn’t a huge walk to the gates.

    Boarding commenced on time and was one of the first to board via the jet bridge. Priority boarding was not really required as there were only about 20 passengers on this morning flight to Detroit. We settled into our seats and then the captain advised that we had a change of aircraft and we should disembark! The cabin crew and pilots were also on the plane ready for action. Must have gone tech or an issue due to the snow! As there were 20 of us it wasn’t a big deal disembarking, but could have been very time consuming and frustrating had it been a full flight.

    We then boarded the 2nd aircraft and then were told we had to wait for the plane to be de-iced which took about 20 minutes. I was sat one row behind the exit seats and the CC was happy for me to move there. We finally departed about 1 hour behind schedule. Non-alcoholic drinks were complimentary with alcoholic drinks and snacks available to purchase. As the flight was empty, service was very good with soft drinks being topped up.

    The plane was generally clean with blue leather upholstered seats. The exit seat naturally had lots of legroom. The economy cabin was a 2-2 layout and the first class cabin was 1-2 layout. The first class seats were obviously a bit larger but legroom seemed the same as economy. There appeared to be an issue with the lavatory by overhearing a passenger speak with the CC. The CC then took a bottle of nearly full water from the drinks trolley and went in the lavatory and returned with half, so appeared to be a flush issue! I then watched to see what happened to that bottle of water! Fortunately it did not make it back on the drinks trolley!!

    We had a smooth landing at DTW and was impressed by this large airport. We entered the terminal by jet bridge and was in a taxi 5 minutes later on the way to Downtown for the motor show!

    Overall a great flight, primarily because it was empty!

    Review courtesy of Seatplans.com. Original review by user SunnyM can be found here


    pheighdough
    Participant

    Reading this reminds me of a review Mike Rowe posted on Facebook last year on his experience in flying in a CRJ. Unlike the review above, his flight was not so empty…

    “The woman standing at the back of the plane is about to p*ss her pants. I know this because five minutes ago she crawled over me and said, “I’m sorry to disturb you Mr. Rowe, but I’m about to p*ss my pants.” Sadly, the kid across the aisle beat her to it. No doubt about it. The whole plane smells of urine, and it’s not coming from the bathroom. It’s coming from the kid.
    We’re on a CRJ700 – a Canadair Regional Jet flying from San Francisco to Kansas City. It’s a three hour flight, but it feels a lot longer. Why? Because the CRJ700 was designed by The Marquis de Sade. There’s only one bathroom on board, and it’s all the way in the back. One bathroom for 74 people. On a three-hour flight that was delayed on the tarmac for 35 minutes.
    Seasoned travelers will immediately understand the implications, and behave accordingly. But most of my fellow passengers do not possess the institutional knowledge required to endure three and a half hours on a CRJ700. At the airport, they drink their breakfast beverages like it was any other day, enjoying their lattes and orange juice with impunity. Then they blithely board this long and skinny Tube of Despair with no sense of how a solitary toilet can conspire with a bad floor plan to humble the strongest among us. Once settled, many avail themselves of the beverage service, cruelly offered by a smiling flight attendant who must have surely known what would follow. Poor b*stards.
    It began with lots of anxious head-turning – the way it always does when people realize they’re on a plane with only one cr*pper located far behind them. People needing relief look worriedly toward the back of the plane to see if the restroom is occupied. Invariably, it is. So they stay seated, but they keep looking back every five seconds. The effect is interesting. As more heads turn, more people realize their own need is identical to the need of those around them – and getting worse. So a line forms in the aisle. Not good.
    Soon, people realize the inevitable – we’re all going to need to urinate before landing – but not necessarily at the precise moment of our own choosing. Thus, the fundamental certainty upon which all continence depends is suddenly compromised, and a series of unusual but pressing questions begin to form in the mind every traveler.
    When exactly, does one get up and join the line? Does one wait until one needs to go, or does one wait in a line of ever-changing length? What is the proper protocol? Are those seated closer to the restroom obligated to remain seated if they see someone getting up in front of them? Do women and children deserve some kind of deference? If so, how much?
    These questions are important, because standing in line to pee on the CRJ700 is a journey in personal humiliation. The aisles are so narrow it’s impossible to remain upright without invading the personal space of those still seated. (If you zoom in to my seat-mate, now standing in the back, you’ll see that her ass now occupies the space reserved for the face of the man still in 17C. That guy, or whatever’s left of him, is now crammed into the lap of the stranger next to him, who is no doubt trying to jam himself through the window, happy to pay the ultimate price for a little fresh air.) Point is, waiting in line to pee on a CRJ700 is actually worse than p*ssing your pants, as evidenced by the peaceful countenance of the soggy kid, sleeping across the aisle.
    Anyway, the situation really devolved an hour ago, when the line grew to fifteen people. Everyone who hadn’t yet peed was fumbling through a personal calculus involving time, space, bladder capacity, prior liquid intake, arrival time, and basic self-control. Those in line were the most desperate, and no doubt counting the minutes to relief. Alas, they forgot to factor in the big unknown – turbulence. As we flew through some very heavy chop, the Captain demanded everyone take their seats. Desperate people who had been waiting in line – some for a half hour – had no choice but to follow orders. Mutiny was out of the question, as the chop would have made hitting the toilet – even from a seated position – all but impossible.
    The agony in the plane was palpable, and when the safety belt sign was finally turned off twenty minutes later, it was like a scene from Pamplona. The stampede toward the stern was immediate and chaotic. Good manners and decorum were forgotten, as once civilized people scratched and clawed their way over the young and helpless, fighting backwards for a few private moments in a defiled outhouse 37,000 feet in the sky.
    I have pictures, but out of respect, I’m not going to show you. After yesterday’s post, I’m worried about sharing as much as I already have. I will however, show you the inside of the briefing card, which the flight attendant strongly advised we refer to during the mandatory safety briefing of the CRJ700. In it, you’ll see all sorts of helpful illustrations regarding what to do in the event of an emergency.
    Alas – there are no helpful tips for how to politely pee all over yourself and your neighbour.”

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