Obese guy first time flying












6














i'm flying from Frankfurt to Seattle(condor airlines - Boeing 767-300 economy class) in few weeks for the first time, and the seat width in the plane is 17 inches,while my width is around 19 inches, will there be any problems ?










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Qr14 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
    – Honorary World Citizen
    2 hours ago










  • Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago










  • Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
    – phoog
    2 hours ago










  • @phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago






  • 2




    @KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
    – Mark Stewart
    1 hour ago
















6














i'm flying from Frankfurt to Seattle(condor airlines - Boeing 767-300 economy class) in few weeks for the first time, and the seat width in the plane is 17 inches,while my width is around 19 inches, will there be any problems ?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Qr14 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
    – Honorary World Citizen
    2 hours ago










  • Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago










  • Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
    – phoog
    2 hours ago










  • @phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago






  • 2




    @KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
    – Mark Stewart
    1 hour ago














6












6








6







i'm flying from Frankfurt to Seattle(condor airlines - Boeing 767-300 economy class) in few weeks for the first time, and the seat width in the plane is 17 inches,while my width is around 19 inches, will there be any problems ?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Qr14 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











i'm flying from Frankfurt to Seattle(condor airlines - Boeing 767-300 economy class) in few weeks for the first time, and the seat width in the plane is 17 inches,while my width is around 19 inches, will there be any problems ?







air-travel






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New contributor




Qr14 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago





















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asked 2 hours ago









Qr14

312




312




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Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
    – Honorary World Citizen
    2 hours ago










  • Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago










  • Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
    – phoog
    2 hours ago










  • @phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago






  • 2




    @KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
    – Mark Stewart
    1 hour ago


















  • Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
    – Honorary World Citizen
    2 hours ago










  • Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago










  • Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
    – phoog
    2 hours ago










  • @phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
    – Qr14
    2 hours ago






  • 2




    @KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
    – Mark Stewart
    1 hour ago
















Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
– Honorary World Citizen
2 hours ago




Well of course from the measurements you quote there will be problems. You can purchase two seats for comfort or hope you get an empty seat adjacent to you. People have been known to get into arguments even fights with seatmates over such inconveniences
– Honorary World Citizen
2 hours ago












Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
– Qr14
2 hours ago




Thanks for your answer. I'll try to lose those 2 inches in few weeks, but i'm also traveling with someone, could that help? I've seen that you can lift the arm rest, somewhere on google..
– Qr14
2 hours ago












Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
– phoog
2 hours ago




Where is your width 19 inches? Does that include your arms?
– phoog
2 hours ago












@phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
– Qr14
2 hours ago




@phoog upper part of my legs(im not sure if you call it like that) and my buttocks is 19, arms are around 20 inches
– Qr14
2 hours ago




2




2




@KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
– Mark Stewart
1 hour ago




@KeithLoughnane I've always (within in the United States) raised the armrest the first thing I do before I even take my seat when traveling with my wife and I've never heard an announcement about armrests needing to be lowered for takeoff/landing.. Qr14: 2" inches should be no problem, especially with a raised armrest. An aisle seat might be a bit more wiggle room but then you face bumps from passengers and drink carts.
– Mark Stewart
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














You can purchase an extra seat or make sure there is an empty set next to you. Some people get annoyed when people take up to much room. You can push the armrest up if you want.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




D Manokhin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















  • If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
    – jcaron
    52 mins ago



















2














As the 767 has 2-3-2 seating and you are travelling with a companion, if you are able to select seats, you can:




  • book 2 seats on one of the sides, and use the window seat for yourself. There's usually a little bit of extra room on that side, at chest/arm level (there's of course plenty of extra room at chest/arm level if you are in an aisle seat, but then you get bumped into constantly).


  • book 2 aisle seats on the same row in the central portion, which an empty seat between you. There's evidently no guarantee that it will remain empty, but such seats are always the last to go, so if the flight isn't completely full, you may have an empty seat next to you. If there's someone in the end, they will probably gladly switch their middle seat for an aisle seat. The further back in the plane you select the higher the chances the seat will remain empty, usually.



Note: do NOT book seats on the first row of any section (like row 22 for instance, and 23 on some versions). You may have extra legroom, but the TV screen and/or tray table are often in the armrest, so the armrest can't move and is usually thicker than on other seats, reducing width even more.






share|improve this answer























  • Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
    – phoog
    3 mins ago



















2














Many airlines do have rules around this (primary for safety reasons). Typical are




  1. If the seat belt doesn't close, they will give a seat belt extender

  2. If one extender isn't enough either, you may be prohibited from flying since they think you can't be kept safely in the seat during severe turbulence (which is rare, but happens)

  3. Both armrest need to be able to come down. If you the arm rest won't go down, you need to buy an extra seat. Some airlines have an extra category for this type of seat


I couldn't find the specific rules for Condor so I recommend to contact the airline directly and ask.



EDIT
It looks like Condor flies a 767 with a 2-3-2 configuration on this route. If you buy an extra seat and you and your companion get a 3 seat row in the middle, you'd be quite comfortable. It's a lot of extra money, but it's also an 11 hour flight.






share|improve this answer























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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

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    3 Answers
    3






    active

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

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    2














    You can purchase an extra seat or make sure there is an empty set next to you. Some people get annoyed when people take up to much room. You can push the armrest up if you want.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    D Manokhin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.


















    • If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
      – jcaron
      52 mins ago
















    2














    You can purchase an extra seat or make sure there is an empty set next to you. Some people get annoyed when people take up to much room. You can push the armrest up if you want.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    D Manokhin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.


















    • If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
      – jcaron
      52 mins ago














    2












    2








    2






    You can purchase an extra seat or make sure there is an empty set next to you. Some people get annoyed when people take up to much room. You can push the armrest up if you want.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    D Manokhin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    You can purchase an extra seat or make sure there is an empty set next to you. Some people get annoyed when people take up to much room. You can push the armrest up if you want.







    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    D Manokhin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer






    New contributor




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    answered 1 hour ago









    D Manokhin

    59115




    59115




    New contributor




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    New contributor





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    • If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
      – jcaron
      52 mins ago


















    • If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
      – jcaron
      52 mins ago
















    If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
    – jcaron
    52 mins ago




    If you want and your neighbour agrees (unlikely) or you don't have one, of course.
    – jcaron
    52 mins ago













    2














    As the 767 has 2-3-2 seating and you are travelling with a companion, if you are able to select seats, you can:




    • book 2 seats on one of the sides, and use the window seat for yourself. There's usually a little bit of extra room on that side, at chest/arm level (there's of course plenty of extra room at chest/arm level if you are in an aisle seat, but then you get bumped into constantly).


    • book 2 aisle seats on the same row in the central portion, which an empty seat between you. There's evidently no guarantee that it will remain empty, but such seats are always the last to go, so if the flight isn't completely full, you may have an empty seat next to you. If there's someone in the end, they will probably gladly switch their middle seat for an aisle seat. The further back in the plane you select the higher the chances the seat will remain empty, usually.



    Note: do NOT book seats on the first row of any section (like row 22 for instance, and 23 on some versions). You may have extra legroom, but the TV screen and/or tray table are often in the armrest, so the armrest can't move and is usually thicker than on other seats, reducing width even more.






    share|improve this answer























    • Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
      – phoog
      3 mins ago
















    2














    As the 767 has 2-3-2 seating and you are travelling with a companion, if you are able to select seats, you can:




    • book 2 seats on one of the sides, and use the window seat for yourself. There's usually a little bit of extra room on that side, at chest/arm level (there's of course plenty of extra room at chest/arm level if you are in an aisle seat, but then you get bumped into constantly).


    • book 2 aisle seats on the same row in the central portion, which an empty seat between you. There's evidently no guarantee that it will remain empty, but such seats are always the last to go, so if the flight isn't completely full, you may have an empty seat next to you. If there's someone in the end, they will probably gladly switch their middle seat for an aisle seat. The further back in the plane you select the higher the chances the seat will remain empty, usually.



    Note: do NOT book seats on the first row of any section (like row 22 for instance, and 23 on some versions). You may have extra legroom, but the TV screen and/or tray table are often in the armrest, so the armrest can't move and is usually thicker than on other seats, reducing width even more.






    share|improve this answer























    • Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
      – phoog
      3 mins ago














    2












    2








    2






    As the 767 has 2-3-2 seating and you are travelling with a companion, if you are able to select seats, you can:




    • book 2 seats on one of the sides, and use the window seat for yourself. There's usually a little bit of extra room on that side, at chest/arm level (there's of course plenty of extra room at chest/arm level if you are in an aisle seat, but then you get bumped into constantly).


    • book 2 aisle seats on the same row in the central portion, which an empty seat between you. There's evidently no guarantee that it will remain empty, but such seats are always the last to go, so if the flight isn't completely full, you may have an empty seat next to you. If there's someone in the end, they will probably gladly switch their middle seat for an aisle seat. The further back in the plane you select the higher the chances the seat will remain empty, usually.



    Note: do NOT book seats on the first row of any section (like row 22 for instance, and 23 on some versions). You may have extra legroom, but the TV screen and/or tray table are often in the armrest, so the armrest can't move and is usually thicker than on other seats, reducing width even more.






    share|improve this answer














    As the 767 has 2-3-2 seating and you are travelling with a companion, if you are able to select seats, you can:




    • book 2 seats on one of the sides, and use the window seat for yourself. There's usually a little bit of extra room on that side, at chest/arm level (there's of course plenty of extra room at chest/arm level if you are in an aisle seat, but then you get bumped into constantly).


    • book 2 aisle seats on the same row in the central portion, which an empty seat between you. There's evidently no guarantee that it will remain empty, but such seats are always the last to go, so if the flight isn't completely full, you may have an empty seat next to you. If there's someone in the end, they will probably gladly switch their middle seat for an aisle seat. The further back in the plane you select the higher the chances the seat will remain empty, usually.



    Note: do NOT book seats on the first row of any section (like row 22 for instance, and 23 on some versions). You may have extra legroom, but the TV screen and/or tray table are often in the armrest, so the armrest can't move and is usually thicker than on other seats, reducing width even more.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 34 mins ago

























    answered 40 mins ago









    jcaron

    10.8k12054




    10.8k12054












    • Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
      – phoog
      3 mins ago


















    • Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
      – phoog
      3 mins ago
















    Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
    – phoog
    3 mins ago




    Excellent point about the front row seats. Some people quite like being in the front row, though I (at 6'5" or 195 cm) generally do not, because even though my knees and shins are happier in the front row, I usually cannot stretch my feet enough. If OP ends up in the front row, though, it should not be too difficult to find someone willing to switch, since most people view these seats as more desirable.
    – phoog
    3 mins ago











    2














    Many airlines do have rules around this (primary for safety reasons). Typical are




    1. If the seat belt doesn't close, they will give a seat belt extender

    2. If one extender isn't enough either, you may be prohibited from flying since they think you can't be kept safely in the seat during severe turbulence (which is rare, but happens)

    3. Both armrest need to be able to come down. If you the arm rest won't go down, you need to buy an extra seat. Some airlines have an extra category for this type of seat


    I couldn't find the specific rules for Condor so I recommend to contact the airline directly and ask.



    EDIT
    It looks like Condor flies a 767 with a 2-3-2 configuration on this route. If you buy an extra seat and you and your companion get a 3 seat row in the middle, you'd be quite comfortable. It's a lot of extra money, but it's also an 11 hour flight.






    share|improve this answer




























      2














      Many airlines do have rules around this (primary for safety reasons). Typical are




      1. If the seat belt doesn't close, they will give a seat belt extender

      2. If one extender isn't enough either, you may be prohibited from flying since they think you can't be kept safely in the seat during severe turbulence (which is rare, but happens)

      3. Both armrest need to be able to come down. If you the arm rest won't go down, you need to buy an extra seat. Some airlines have an extra category for this type of seat


      I couldn't find the specific rules for Condor so I recommend to contact the airline directly and ask.



      EDIT
      It looks like Condor flies a 767 with a 2-3-2 configuration on this route. If you buy an extra seat and you and your companion get a 3 seat row in the middle, you'd be quite comfortable. It's a lot of extra money, but it's also an 11 hour flight.






      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2






        Many airlines do have rules around this (primary for safety reasons). Typical are




        1. If the seat belt doesn't close, they will give a seat belt extender

        2. If one extender isn't enough either, you may be prohibited from flying since they think you can't be kept safely in the seat during severe turbulence (which is rare, but happens)

        3. Both armrest need to be able to come down. If you the arm rest won't go down, you need to buy an extra seat. Some airlines have an extra category for this type of seat


        I couldn't find the specific rules for Condor so I recommend to contact the airline directly and ask.



        EDIT
        It looks like Condor flies a 767 with a 2-3-2 configuration on this route. If you buy an extra seat and you and your companion get a 3 seat row in the middle, you'd be quite comfortable. It's a lot of extra money, but it's also an 11 hour flight.






        share|improve this answer














        Many airlines do have rules around this (primary for safety reasons). Typical are




        1. If the seat belt doesn't close, they will give a seat belt extender

        2. If one extender isn't enough either, you may be prohibited from flying since they think you can't be kept safely in the seat during severe turbulence (which is rare, but happens)

        3. Both armrest need to be able to come down. If you the arm rest won't go down, you need to buy an extra seat. Some airlines have an extra category for this type of seat


        I couldn't find the specific rules for Condor so I recommend to contact the airline directly and ask.



        EDIT
        It looks like Condor flies a 767 with a 2-3-2 configuration on this route. If you buy an extra seat and you and your companion get a 3 seat row in the middle, you'd be quite comfortable. It's a lot of extra money, but it's also an 11 hour flight.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 32 mins ago

























        answered 41 mins ago









        Hilmar

        20k13264




        20k13264






















            Qr14 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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