Does anyone how much more x-ray exposure checked baggage has compared to the carry on?
Does anyone how much more x-ray exposure checked baggage has compared to the carry on?
Yes, I suspect not every airport uses high-power baggage scanners, or they may only scan random (or carefully chosen) samples. And of course the powers that be will never disclose what airports do and what ones don't. My wife accidentally left two exposed 400 APS cartridges in her checked bag from Italy a few years back and they were OK. My impression is that one dare not count on this good luck as a regular thing. however.My guess is that for one reason or another, my bag was not scanned with x-ray.
Hmm ... first and only post and this is what he talks about. I don't buy it.
Sorry, Art.
I don't fly that much, but I do fly enough, and agree 100%. On my last trip when I was going out early Monday morning, one of the TSA people even joked about how good Monday mornings were because everybody knew the drill.Disclaimers - I fly a lot (over 100,000 miles per year) and as a result often am flying in an upgraded class. Also, I think that if you are a regular through the security screening, and you know what the drill is, it shows, and they give you fewer hassles.
My personal experience is that the TSA is better than the less professional screeners who were there before - the variability drove me nuts. TSA have a rigid set of rules that they follow (many of which are stupid), but having those uniform rules helps everybody.
Gee art where is your faith in humankind? I don't see anything here to make me think he is lying or has some agenda. My travel experiences aren't similar, but it gives me no reason to suspect the OP is lying.
Last year I flew just over 100,000 miles, 8 trips back and forth from Japan to the US. My experience with the TSA has varied from semi-professional to down right disgusting. The rules are not applied the same at every airport, often screeners arbitrarily decide to grant or not grant hand inspections when the rules clearly state the must. Screaming at passengers that they have to remove their shoes, threating secondaries to anyone who questions them, the list goes on and on.
I asked for a film inspection at ORD (Ohare), and was refused saying he "didnt want to bother with it", so I asked for a supervisor. They said if the screener didnt want to do it, they didnt have to. The supervisor told if I wanted to fly that day, I had to have my film xrayed. I didnt just to avoid the hassle, after which I got the screener and the supervisors name and filed a complaint. I got the standard TSA form reply, which means nothing was done about it, even though legally I was correct. For the record, I am always polite and business like, getting rude with them will get you a free secondary if not worse.
The TSA is a joke anyway, for all its theatrics, their screening is half assed at best, and they dont even screen the biggest danger to airplanes....air cargo. They do a great job of harassing passengers though.
At least in Europe and and most parts of Asia where I have been and go often, the rules are more consistent and appear to be followed more closely. The TSA is a joke.
Gary
You ARE NOT better than the TSA person. She/He DOES have the power to make your passage smooth or rocky.
In the past year or so, I've been in and out of security in Manchester (NH), Boston, Tampa, Tallahassee, LA, Orange County, Seattle, Sacremento, Las Vegas, Reno, Indianapolis, and probably one or two others I've forgotten. Some of them multiple times. I've traveled with and without cameras, and occasionally asked for, and been granted hand inspections. It has not been my experience to witness any outright rudness or threats on the part of the TSA people, as described.
Has some of the checking been a bit lackluster?, Yes. Have I witnessed people who don't look mainstream getting more secondary checks? yes. But generally all the TSA folks have been very professional, even when dealing with lines of 100's of tourists. Even the time I forgot that my Swiss Army knife was in the bag. (the smallest one made, they found it).
Are they perfect, no. And neither is anyone else. What was a joke was the security system before the TSA, and in some of that era I flew a lot more than 100K.
If you hate Kodak too, you'll fit right in.This is my community?
My orginal intent was to bring something constructive to the community based on my recent experience. ...
However one thing that has not changed in the last two decades or so are the rules of polite civil discourse. ... I may be old school, but if I'd have spoken thus, it would not have gone down well with my parents.
I'll admit, I probably am not as savvy about the post 9/11 air regulations and how they interact with our desire to carry sensitized goods on commercial flights as some of you. For instance, I was sadly unaware that film should not be run in checked bagage.
Faith in humankind has nothing to do with it. As was quoted in another thread related to airport screening ...Gee art where is your faith in humankind?
OK in this case n=3, sorta ... well, not really, but you get the idea.Hmm. For n = 1, the standard error of estimate is infinite.
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