Hearing Loop Question
Thread Starter
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 35
Likes: 0
From: Isle of Wight, UK.
Over the last few years I have been going slowly deaf, in fact I am now totaly deaf in one ear and have only about 20% in the other, I wear a hearing aid but find that with all the backround noise in the cabin of an aircraft I am unable to hear any of the safety or information announcements. Can anyone please tell me if there is any technical reason why a hearing loop cannot be fitted in commercial aircraft?
MP
MP
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 376
Likes: 0
From: A long way from home
I can't say for sure but...
Everything in aviation costs about 20 times as much as it cost on the ground (no kidding).
Anything which broadcasts or receives a signal could potentially play havoc with aircraft systems (hence no phones / radios etc. allowed).
Have you seen how much fuss has been made about using mobile phones on a plane? EVERYONE wants to use their phone and they'd (grudgingly) pay high call costs, so there's plenty of money to be made... if only they could get a system certified.
A hearing loop system would also cost an arm and a leg to develop, certify and install. But unlike the phone system, how many passengers would actually use it? And how many of them would pay for it?
It's much cheaper and just as effective (from a safety point of view) for the airline to give you a breifing card and then a stewardess can go through it with you personally.
HTH
Everything in aviation costs about 20 times as much as it cost on the ground (no kidding).
Anything which broadcasts or receives a signal could potentially play havoc with aircraft systems (hence no phones / radios etc. allowed).
Have you seen how much fuss has been made about using mobile phones on a plane? EVERYONE wants to use their phone and they'd (grudgingly) pay high call costs, so there's plenty of money to be made... if only they could get a system certified.
A hearing loop system would also cost an arm and a leg to develop, certify and install. But unlike the phone system, how many passengers would actually use it? And how many of them would pay for it?
It's much cheaper and just as effective (from a safety point of view) for the airline to give you a breifing card and then a stewardess can go through it with you personally.
HTH




