Am I weird for avoiding flying on prop planes, and only fly on jets?
Just wondering if this is a common thing people do lol. Saw a flight to Ireland was an ATR-72, a prop plane. so I chose another flight and I got an A320 instead
Sounds like your basing this on a new tech vs. old tech? Not looking at safety rates?
You can achieve airspeed at 35 mph in a small enough craft. A propeller plane is simply slower. Airplanes as a whole are extremely safe. Turbulance is normal and not a sign of the aircraft failing.
Not necessarily. Depends a lot of the reason behind your choice. Propeller aircraft are usually slower and more noisy, so if those are your reasons, then that's fair enough.
They are, however, generally also smaller and turboprops are great for short flights, so they have their niches.
I fly both relatively often. My local airport is serviced exclusively by DH Dash-8, so I take those flights to get to the much larger regional airport around an hours hop away.
I mean that style of plane is better for the environment. I would understand a small like 4 seat prop plane. But jets have no better chance of staying aloft than an ATR-72. As long as they are maintained at the same level as the jet.
Answering the titular question, I personally don't find it weird that someone might avoid certain types of aircraft, in the same way that some people strongly prefer certain aircraft. For example, the big windows and the more-comfortable pressurization of the Boeing 787 is appealing for some. But alternatively, some might prefer the modern Canadian design of the Airbus A220.
Objectively speaking, though, propeller planes is a very wide category, and I'm curious which specific aspect you want to avoid. Piston-powered propeller craft are basically non-existent in commercial passenger airline service, with the exception of small "puddle jumper", 15-seat air taxi services. Such airplanes tend to be loud and also use leaded gasoline -- hilariously still called "low lead" despite apparently having more lead additive than what motor gasoline had in the 1980s.
Then there are turbo prop aircraft, like the ATR-72, which are basically a propeller taking power off of a jet engine core. No lead here, and noise is slightly less bothersome due to continuous jet combustion, but the sound of the propeller remains. Though this is offset by the lower cruise speeds, so less "wind noise".
If perhaps the concern is about propeller failures, bear in mind that commercial passenger aviation is exceptionally safe, across all aircraft types. The propulsion method is small-fries compared to the backend support and logistics of an airliner and ATC, plus having two pilots, and all manner of other things which blend into the background but are essential for safety. Pretty much only the elevator would be safer than air travel, even accounting for some rather unfortunate recent incidents here in USA airspace.
That said, I would be remiss if I didn't mention that propeller and jet fan failures have had fatalities in living memory, with a notable event being the blade ejection of a Southwest Boeing 737 that pierced the fuselage and partially ejected a passenger.
Overall, I personally have zero qualms about commercial passenger propeller aircraft, and up until the Boeing 737 MAX fiasco, most people did not care at all which type of airplane they were boarding. Since that event, booking websites added filters to allow excluding specific types of aircraft by model. But I've not seen one which excludes by propulsion type.
I have only flew on planes once when I was immigrating to the US. I haven't flown in a plane for a while, but I would not want to ride in any Boeing planes right now.
Flew in a 737 yesterday. Only issues were the asshole sitting next to my wife (got seated in different rows) and the fact that the pilot didn’t turn the AC down and everyone on board was sweating profusely by the time we got to our destination.
It should still be very safe. But with the recent Boeing 737 MAX autopilot causing crashes, and then a lot of news worthy Boeing plane failures, plus the shitty press Boeing executives they've been getting, and also the US also under an administration that loves deregulation, as shown with the ATC failures causing plane crashes, I just have no confidence anymore.
I don't want to fly in a Boeing, nor in US Airspace at all. So omenous, don't wanna get final destination'ed
Turboprops are no less safe than your typical turbo engine. If that's your concern, then I would suggest reading up on how they work just to ease your mind a bit. They are loud AF though. If that's your issue, then ANC work well, but outside of that, a different flight may help.
I know at least one person like that. They won't outright avoid prop planes, and they know its illogical, but the idea of flying on one still makes them nervous.
Jet engines are enclosed in a cowling that is designed to handle the engine coming apart. The smallest defect in a jet engine's turbine blades can mean it detaches or deforms, which then causes further damage that will be injested by the engine.
Propellers have free access to the cabin but are subjected to far less forces than the blades of a jet engine, so their failure is less likely, even if damage is undetected.
Not sure if I remember right, and I’m happy to be corrected, but isn’t the stats for plane crashes/accidents skewed by the smaller prop planes? When I see the typical conversation that flying is safer than driving etc., and then one side points to the numbers for plane accidents, the counter to it is that most of those accidents aren’t the big commercial planes most people fly on, rather the smaller aircraft.
Small planes and jets are the lion's share of aircraft incidents. They aren't inspected as often(more in the case of personal planes), lack the stability of larger craft, and aren't always flown by experienced pilots. Not to mention they frequent small dirt or grass airfields instead of commercial airport tarmac.
There are like 3-5 small aircraft crashes a day. Small aircraft crash at like 25x the rate of larger craft.
Please don't diminish the word "fascist". We have plenty of actual fascists in governments of multiple countries all around the world. We have a real problem right now.
If everything is fascist, then nothing is fascist. It's the boy who cried wolf. And it gives freedom to actual fascists to continue being fascists. Because if you call them out on it, they brush it off like "Oh you people say EVERYTHING is fascist these days!"