Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • "Flying doesn't affect your body."

  • Ooh.

  • It does!

  • "Autopilot flies the plane for you."

  • No, it does not!

  • "It is more dangerous to fly during the night than the day."

  • No, it's the same.

  • Hi, my name is Captain Zoya,

  • and I'm a commander on the Boeing 777s

  • with Indian flight carrier Air India.

  • And I have been doing this for the last, well, 17 years.

  • I'm Rajalakshmi Eshwar. People call me Raji.

  • I'm first officer on a Boeing 777

  • with our national carrier, Air India.

  • And today, we are going to be debunking myths about flying.

  • "Bad turbulence can crash a plane."

  • Not true.

  • So, chances are the turbulence that you're going to face

  • on your flight is not going to crash your airplane.

  • A lot of times, how the turbulence happens

  • is there is a wind shift,

  • the change of wind direction and/or speed.

  • That's what destabilizes the airflow,

  • which is what causes turbulence.

  • We are well prepared to avoid these circumstances.

  • First of all, we, on ground, go through all the papers

  • and the research required to avoid them.

  • We have the weather reported to us.

  • We have radars on board.

  • Agarwal: Which can depict on our screen

  • that there is turbulence this way and you may get it.

  • And even if we do enter some turbulence,

  • we can always slow the aircraft down.

  • These aircrafts are structurally built

  • to withstand such turbulence.

  • So more often than not,

  • the turbulence that you encounter is probably just mild

  • and something that you're going to sail through

  • in just a few minutes.

  • Agarwal: So long as you stay seated,

  • put your seat belts on, stay calm,

  • breathe in, breathe out, you'll be fine.

  • "Lightning can bring down a plane."

  • No.

  • I know it sounds scary, right?

  • Lightning.

  • There are occasions that there could be lightning around.

  • But the aircrafts that we fly these days

  • are structurally built to handle these lightnings,

  • and we have static dischargers and various other things

  • that just discharges any lightning

  • that would possibly strike an aircraft.

  • So that right there is a myth.

  • "Cabin air will make you sick."

  • Hmm.

  • Does it?

  • Cabin air will not make you sick.

  • We have air purification, two HEPA filters, on board.

  • That air is continuously recirculated,

  • which is mixed with the outside fresh air.

  • It's going through various filter,

  • various stages before it reaches you.

  • Agarwal: So at any point in time,

  • you're breathing in fresh combined air.

  • Eshwar: Probably one of the other

  • thing that you're confusing is motion sickness,

  • or altitude sickness.

  • But it's not the cabin air.

  • So watch your food intake,

  • please be hydrated,

  • and you will be fit as a fiddle.

  • "Flying doesn't affect your body."

  • Ooh.

  • It does!

  • Have you gone on these flights, and then you come land,

  • and then you're so exhausted and dehydrated?

  • Agarwal: I wonder why that is! Eshwar: All the time!

  • All the time.

  • So, yes, flying does affect your body.

  • Let's talk about the dehydration bit, right?

  • Your aircraft air is pressurized.

  • And it is pressurized to an altitude

  • between 5,000 to 9,000 feet.

  • It's not natural to be at such an elevation

  • for a human body.

  • And then, secondly, the aircrafts do feel pretty dry.

  • In the air, what you're dealing with

  • is very, very dehydrated air.

  • The humidity levels of the air is extremely low.

  • And also, when you're in the airplane

  • taking those 16-hour-long flights,

  • chances are you're going to have coffee

  • and alcohol, perhaps,

  • which is going to dehydrate you further.

  • Secondly, you're also sitting down

  • for a long period of time.

  • Agarwal: And you have limited space,

  • and that kind of reduces the airflow in your body,

  • which is why we are always encouraged on the flights

  • to move around every now and then

  • to increase the blood flow in your body.

  • The best thing you can do is hydrate yourself

  • and maybe get up and stretch a little bit.

  • Your body will definitely readjust once we land,

  • so don't worry about it.

  • "It is more dangerous to fly during the night than the day."

  • No, it's the same.

  • The only difference is that during the day

  • we have some visual references,

  • which probably makes us feel slightly more comfortable.

  • But with the instruments that we fly,

  • day or night makes no difference.

  • Typically, as pilots, we fly instrument flight rules,

  • which means that we have predefined routes.

  • Eshwar: So we don't require any visual references

  • in the night. We have the route data,

  • which we put into the flight-management system,

  • and pretty much guide the aircraft through the route.

  • We ensure that whether it's day or whether it is night,

  • those air routes are followed to the T.

  • "Flying is more dangerous than driving."

  • No! No, no, no! No.

  • Flight is by far one of the most safest means of travel,

  • if you ask me. Agarwal: Yeah.

  • We follow high standards of safety.

  • Everything, from the get-go.

  • The aircraft is maintained with safety in mind.

  • Pilots are trained with safety in mind.

  • Air routes are planned with safety in mind.

  • Imagine, a million miles of air travel

  • and not a single accident.

  • Now imagine a million miles on the road.

  • Do you think it would go on without an accident?

  • No, no.

  • No. I guess there must be something, right?

  • Yeah.

  • So flying is, I think, way safer

  • than something like crossing the road.

  • It's super, super safe.

  • Everything is based on passenger safety.

  • That is our priority.

  • "Autopilot flies the plane for you."

  • No, it does not!

  • There are so many times I'm with friends and they're like,

  • "You have an autopilot, right?

  • It pretty much does your job.

  • You're pretty much sitting back and relaxing

  • while your autopilot is doing your job."

  • We control the autopilot. We tell the autopilot what to do.

  • We give all the commands for it.

  • What altitude to fly, what airspeed to fly,

  • what route to fly.

  • We are right there monitoring every single thing.

  • And the purpose of the autopilot

  • is to reduce the workload of a pilot,

  • so the pilot can think on the bigger picture.

  • Thinking about what next can we do

  • to make the flight better in every single way.

  • "Pilots must have perfect vision."

  • No.

  • Perfect corrected vision, that's something we need.

  • You must see plenty of pilots with glasses on, right?

  • Even if you have spectacles on,

  • as long as it is 20/20 vision, it's all right.

  • I have 6/6.

  • She has 6/6, which is 20/20 over here.

  • But by far, so long as you have corrected vision,

  • you can totally fly, yes.

  • "Pilots all have parachutes under their seats."

  • No, we don't.

  • Agarwal: Only the fighter airplanes, yes.

  • Eshwar: Yeah. Not the commercial ones.

  • What we have is life vests,

  • which are same as every other passenger on board.

  • "Pilots sleep for most of the flight."

  • Yeah, we don't have that choice.

  • Like, really, we don't.

  • I mean, except if it's a long-haul flight,

  • then you have multiple crew.

  • When the flights are very, very long,

  • that's when you are given your designated rest

  • in which you must rest.

  • Which is what exactly we did yesterday

  • from Delhi to New York.

  • We flew almost ...

  • Eshwar: 16 hours.

  • Agarwal: Yeah. On the other side of the world.

  • When you're doing such long flights,

  • you do have multiple set of crew.

  • Two captains, two first officers.

  • What normally happens is there is one set of crew

  • that sits on the control in the cockpit

  • while the other two goes into the bunk, rests up,

  • so that when the first set of crew is tired,

  • we come and replace them.

  • And we sit while they go sleep,

  • 'cause it is humanly not possible

  • to be attentive for 16, 17 hours straight.

  • "Staying awake through a flight will cure jet lag."

  • No.

  • No, it does not.

  • In fact, it'll worsen it.

  • What I have discovered in my career

  • is there is no cure for jet lag.

  • There is no shortcut for jet lag.

  • You know, I have been asked this question so many times.

  • "Oh, you must be a pro at handling jet lag."

  • No, you never become a pro at handling jet lag.

  • I wish I did.

  • You can minimize it by resting.

  • You can minimize it by staying fed, hydrating yourself.

  • And the best thing to do is when you land back,

  • just try to adjust as much as you can to the local time.

  • Try to eat at their times, sleep at their times.

  • That's the best you can do.

  • But you have to go through the process. Sorry.

  • Yeah, all of us do after every flight.

  • It's just there.

  • And there is no escape.

  • I wish there was a magic potion, though.

  • I'll be the first customer.

  • So, for people who are boarding an aircraft,

  • please don't be afraid to fly.

  • You are in hands of very well-trained crew, pilots,

  • and the aircrafts are built to handle the stress.

  • So don't be afraid.

"Flying doesn't affect your body."

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it