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Seat 11A is the safest seat on an airplane. Experts say no.

A passenger's survival after escaping through an exit just seconds after the crash of his Air India plane, which killed everyone on board, has led to speculation about whether or not his seat 11A is the most safe.

Aviation experts claim that it's not as simple as you might think. Aircraft have different seat configurations. Crash situations are also unique. And survival is often dependent on the complex interaction of many factors.

Mitchell Fox, director of Flight Safety Foundation in the United States, said that each accident is unique and that it's impossible to predict survival based on seat position.

Viswashkumar said that his 11A seat on the Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner, bound for London and crashed in Ahmedabad last Thursday was close to an emergency exit. He managed to get out.

It's possible to survive an accident by sitting next to the exit door, but that doesn't mean it will always be 11A. There are dozens of different configurations for aircraft.

Ron Bartsch of Sydney-based AvLaw Aviation Consulting said that the seat was the most safe because it was adjacent to the emergency exit.

The Boeing 787 is configured in a specific way that makes it 11A.

Popular Mechanics' 2007 study of crashes from 1971 showed that the survival chances of passengers at the rear of the plane were better. Some experts believe the wing section provides more stability.

Ramesh was fortunate to have sat next to the exit, which allowed him to be the first person out of the aircraft after the crash. However, some exits do not work. He said that the opposite side of his plane was blocked by a wall from a building he crashed into.

A panel that was missing several bolts blew away from the side of a Boeing 737 MAX in mid-flight last January, creating a large hole and damaging the seat next to it. The incident was not fatal because no one was in the seat at the time.

It may be faster to get out of an aisle seat, but you are more likely to be hit by the luggage that falls from the overhead bins. This is a far more common event than major accidents.

SAFETY BRIEFINGS

Experts say that paying attention to the safety briefing before a flight, which is often overlooked as routine, will increase your chances of survival.

The lives of 379 passengers and crew on a Japan Airlines flight last January were saved by a strict adherence to cabin crew evacuation instructions, which included leaving bags behind.

Five of the six crew on the smaller plane were killed when the Airbus A350 collided at Tokyo's Haneda Airport.

The safety briefings usually include important instructions, such as how to secure your seatbelt, adopt the correct brace posture and plan your escape route.

It is a good idea to count the rows between your seat, and the closest exit. This is important if there is a lot of smoke in the cabin and visibility is poor.

Fox stated that despite tragedies such as the Air India accident, plane designs have improved to make it more likely for passengers to survive a rare plane crash.

There are also floor lighting, extinguishers and fire detection, a reduction in cabin materials that can ignite and an improved access to the emergency exits.

Fox stated that "there have been remarkable advances in aircraft cabin design which have improved the survival of accidents on the ground or near it." (Reporting from London by Joe Brock and Lisa Barrington; editing by PhilippaFletcher).

(source: Reuters)