20th July 2015.
British Singer McElvar Tries to Outsmart Excess Baggage ~ Collapses on Plane
Posted on the 20 July 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
When you
travel, often the difeficult part is getting ready – packing the goods
required. Packing by itself is an art
and most talented too fail. The tagline
is ‘travel less – travel more comfortably’- yet, there would be circumstances,
where you forget or leave out some only to find their requirement elsewhere 0r
– carry much more than what is necessary.
Every Airline
have in place restriction with regard to size of baggage as also weight !
- Air India states the baggage exceeding
in size, the sum of the 3 dimensions (length + breadth + height) in excess of
45 inches or 115 centimeters, cannot be treated as hand baggage and will have
to be checked in. For checked-in
baggage, it is 40 kgs by 1st Class and 20 Kgs by some Economy while
it is 15 kgs for some other. The maximum
weight permissible for a single piece of baggage is 32 kgs.
Some Airlines
allow the passenger to carry up to a total of 10 checked bags per person,
including your free allowance; but extra charges will have to be paid for. There have been occasions where people have
attempted ingenuous ways to defeat this….. here is what a singer did and ended
up collapsing with heat exhaustion on easyJet flight after wearing 12 layers of
clothes to avoid excess luggage fee.
James McElvar was flying to
Glasgow when told he had too much luggage. EasyJet staff said he'd either have
to pay £45 or bin his clothes to get on…. He decided to wear them all instead -
including five pairs of trousers.
Unfortunately, his body temperature went through the roof, causing him
to have a fit and pass out while airborne
James McElvar, a singer
with Scottish five-piece Rewind, thought he was having a heart attack when he
lost consciousness at 37,000 feet flying from London to Glasgow.Little did he
know he'd passed out from heat exhaustion - having dressed himself in six
t-shirts, four jumpers, three pairs of jeans, two pairs of jogging bottoms, a
pair of jackets and two hats. It was those 12 layers of clothing he had worn to
beat excess luggage fee, that caused his collapse with heat exhaustion.
Staff said he was allowed
to take only one bag on board, so would have to pay a £45 ($70, 63 euro) excess
charge or bin his second bag.With his bandmates already aboard and just minutes
to spare, he made a foolhardy snap decision, emptying his rucksack and donning
the entire contents. Wearing six
T-shirts, four jumpers, two jackets, one pair of shorts, three pairs of jeans,
two pairs of jogging bottoms and two hats – he tweeted that there was a lot of
clothes and added that it was difficult to walk on the plane; he managed to
seat for a minute or two but was not able to take the heat.
Barely able to move, he
could not even get the seatbelt round him.
He was sweating profusely and felt sick - cabin crew laid him out, stripped
down, on an empty row of seats, where he was violently sick and then
fainted.The singer had no memory of the rest of the flight and was taken off
the plane at Glasgow Airport to a waiting ambulance.
Do you know
that there are restrictions with regard to luggage in Railways too – though we
have seen people carrying so many items on Railway coaches – there are
restrictions with regard to size, weight and nature of items. The personal effects of a passenger which are
normally required in the course of travel and immediately thereafter alone will
be booked as luggage. Some bulky articles, offensive goods, explosives, and
dangerous goods will not be booked as luggage. General merchandise, and heavy
articles in considerable quantity intended for commercial business shall not be
accepted as luggage and should be booked as parcels.
Each
passenger is allowed a free allowance up to which he can carry luggage with him
in the compartment, free of cost. The free allowance varies for different
classes of travel. Children aged 5 and below 12 years are allowed half of the
free allowance subject to the maximum of 50kg. There is also some marginal allowance – free
allowance is 70 kgs by AC 1st Class – marginal allowance is 15 kgs
and max quantity permitted including free allowance is 150 kgs. It is 40 / 10 / 80 kgs by Sleeper class. If luggage weight marginally exceeds the
free allowance, one will be charged at
the normal luggage rates applicable to the class of travel. Upon payment of prescribed charges, the ticket
would be endorsed by cross-referencing the luggage ticket details. Free allowance is not admissible for articles
such as scooters, cycles etc.Only one scooter, motor-cycle, or moped can be
booked as luggage (in the brake van) on one ticket.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
20th July 2015.
20th July 2015.