|
|
|
|
|
by inferiorhuman
1222 days ago
|
|
Sure, but then you're talking 10,000 ft or more. The pressure differential between 2,200 ft and 775 ft is much smaller. It's possible some folks' ears popped, but IMO unlikely that they would've attributed it to a steep descent. Instead I'd expect folks chalked it up to the cabin pressurizing if they even noticed. If passengers noticed and thought there was something wrong this would've made news much sooner. I presume due to the lower partial pressure of oxygen.
Probably the lower oxygen content. My pilot friend claimed to have raised the cabin altitude a smidge back in the DC-10 days if FAs complained about e.g. noisy babies. I assume he's full of shit, but you never know. |
|
Irrelevant. The cabin pressure is controlled independently of the Earth's environmental altitude pressure.
> Probably the lower oxygen content.
That's literally exactly the same thing as the thing that I said.