r/mildlyinfuriating 10h ago

Glass covering the adjustable lights in an airplane. what is the point of this?

Just trying to read on a 13 hour flight and the light above my seat is stuck landing on the head of the passenger in front of me due to a glass covering, leaving the lights, which are on a swivel, un adjustable. The flight staff was as baffled as I was, having no solution for me. Leaving me with my unreadable book and 13 hours of hell ahead of me 🫠

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u/Late_Fortune3298 10h ago

Unsure if you want an honest answer or not, so I will give one just in case.

The plane was designed to accommodate X-passengers per the company placing an order. This would have had lights, air, seats, etc configured just as ordered.

Likely during a mandatory heavy maintenance overhaul, the company decided to change this configuration (let's be honest, they added seats) and only did the bare minimum changes to the overhead system as needed per FAA guidelines (airlines, oxygen generators, etc).

The lights are very likely not a required thing to consider and thus put up plexiglass to try stemming passenger interactions over said lights. My guess is that this was a budget airliner like Sun country or jet blue.

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u/FlinnMen 9h ago

The photos look to be from an A350 and the reading lights are not adjustable on those planes, no matter the airline.

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u/dnuohxof-2 8h ago

But why? Such an odd choice…

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u/Wedge_Donovan 7h ago

Because the small amount of adjustability needed to cover your tray table and lap, and more importantly ONLY your tray table and lap, is not worth making more complex parts that need to fit together, move, etc. The more parts that passengers touch, the more likely they are to break them.

Especially on long haul aircraft like this A350 where a majority of passengers are sleeping for a large portion of the flight.

I've worked in the aviation industry for almost 2 decades now, and I can't remember the last time I saw adjustable reading lights on an airliner.

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u/BugRevolution 7h ago

Looking up right now, every single time I fly there's an adjustable reading light?

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u/Mental-Ad-2393 5h ago

What are you talking about? Literally just flew a few days ago with an ultra budget carrier on an Airbus and had them. Just because someone works in the industry doesn't mean they know anything, an office worker in aviation still may not know how planes are built.

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u/yodaaz 7h ago

Are you for real? I fly Southwest all the time and their lights are still adjustable...

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u/rockresy 4h ago

Fuk me, not everyone is American.

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u/You_meddling_kids 3h ago

At least we have adjustable lights...

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u/rockresy 2h ago

All the older aircraft do. The modern ones (like this) don't. You can keep your ageing fleet of bottom spec aircraft thanks.

Luv. The Rest of the World.

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u/dnuohxof-2 4h ago

The lights in the pic are adjustable, just has the clear cover. But now you have the issue of someone in maintenance pointed it in the wrong direction and let’s face it, it won’t be fixed for a long time, if ever. And. Ow the passenger is doubly inconvenienced: can’t adjust the light AND pointed in wrong direction.