It will be harder to break into the cockpit on new airline planes. The Federal Aviation Administration issued a final rule Wednesday that will require commercial planes built after mid-2025 to have secondary barriers for extra security when the main cockpit door is open. Pilot groups have been lobbying for the change. Officials call the rule an important step to give pilots more protection. In 2018, Congress ordered the FAA to require secondary barriers, but the agency didn't issue a proposal until last year.
I’m surprised this took so long to become a rule, but it’s still pretty lame. Airliners are in service for years. A decade after this rule goes into effect, there will still be lots of planes flying that don’t have this additional security measure in place.
I’m surprised this took so long to become a rule, but it’s still pretty lame. Airliners are in service for years. A decade after this rule goes into effect, there will still be lots of planes flying that don’t have this additional security measure in place.
They could retrofit the old gen airframes with a velvet rope 2m before the pit door?