USA TODAY US Edition

Why it takes so long to exit your airplane

- John Cox Have a question about flying? Send it to travel@usatoday.com.

Q: I was wondering what takes so long to get the exit door open after we land. Could you please go through the steps?

— Submitted via email

A: Once the airplane arrives at the gate and is properly chocked, the captain shuts down the engines and switches off the “fasten seat belt” light. The anti-collision light (this is the red blinking light on the top and bottom of the airplane) is switched off, informing ground crew that it is safe to approach the airplane.

Ground crewmember­s then position the jet bridge, aligning it with the door. Once the jet bridge is mated to the aircraft and the cover is in place, the ground agent either opens the door or taps on it for the flight attendant to open it. This varies depending on the type of airplane to minimize the chance for an inadverten­t slide deployment.

Once the door is initially opened, the ground agent assists in fully opening it and ensuring that it is locked in the open position.

This is the generic procedure for most jet airliners. Regional or smaller airplanes have a slightly different procedure as their stairs are built into the door.

Q: What does “prepare the doors for arrival and crosscheck” mean? Were the doors ever unprepared for arrival?

— Fred Coale, Cincinnati

A: Doors have evacuation slides attached. During ground operations, takeoff and landing, the slides inflate automatica­lly when the doors are opened. When approachin­g the gate, the door’s automatic inflation systems must be disabled. The lead flight attendant informs the other flight attendants when to disarm the doors (“prepare doors for arrival”) and then check that the other doors nearby are also properly disarmed (“cross-check”).

Once disarmed, they are then ready for arrival.

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