FAA Rules for Airbus's Wonky 49-Degree Seats with Airbags
Published Date: 2/5/2025
Rule
Summary
Airbus is adding a cool new seat design in their A321neo ACF and XLR planes—a single seat tilted at 49 degrees with airbags and special seatbelts. Since current safety rules don’t cover this setup, new safety tests and rules are needed to keep passengers safe. Airlines and manufacturers will need to follow these updated rules before these planes take off.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
New safety rules for tilted airplane seats
Airbus is adding a single passenger seat tilted at 49 degrees with an airbag and a 3-point or pretensioner seatbelt on the A321neo ACF and A321neo XLR. The FAA issued special conditions requiring extra safety tests and standards so these seats must meet an equivalent level of safety for passengers.
Airlines and makers must meet new test rules
Airlines and aircraft manufacturers that install the single-occupant oblique seat at a 49-degree angle with airbags and 3-point or pretensioner restraints on the Airbus A321neo ACF and A321neo XLR must follow the FAA's special-condition safety tests and standards before those airplanes may be placed into service.
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