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mtnman
03-11-2025, 1:08pm
What a chithole

Air India plane returns after plastic bags and rags clog toilets

Air India has confirmed that one of its flights from the US was forced to turn around last week after passengers trying to flush away plastic bags, rags and clothes clogged up most of its toilets.

The plane, which was heading from Chicago to India's capital Delhi, spent several hours in the air before it returned to the US city.

Video clips from inside the aircraft showed scenes of confusion as passengers huddled around crew members who seemed to be explaining the situation.

The incident has stirred a lively debate on social media, with many Indians weighing in on aeroplane bathroom etiquette.

The incident took place on 5 March on Air India Flight 126, according to a statement by the airline released on Monday.

About two hours into the flight, crew members reported that some of the toilets were "unserviceable".

Subsequently, they found eight of the 12 toilets in business and economy class could not be used, "causing discomfort to all on board". The plane can carry up to 342 passengers.

At that point the plane was already flying over the Atlantic Ocean, according to Air India's statement. Due to restrictions on night operations at most European airports at the time, the pilots decided to return to Chicago for "passenger comfort and safety".

A BBC check on flight tracking website Flightradar24 found the plane was near Greenland when it turned around, and had spent a total of 10 hours in the air.

Air India said an investigation later found "polythene bags, rags and clothes that had been flushed down and stuck in the plumbing" of the plane's toilets.

It released several pictures showing bags containing waste cleared from the toilets. One photo showed a crew member holding a drainage pipe completely stuffed with what appeared to be rags.

The statement said that all passengers and crew disembarked normally in Chicago and were provided with accommodation and alternative flight options.

Plane toilets store human waste in special tanks and use a vacuum system for flushing. These are normally disposed of once the plane has landed.

While clogged toilets are not uncommon, it is "next to impossible" for all toilets to break down "due to only passengers' fault, and in a way that it causes an emergency diversion", Mark Martin, an aviation expert, told the Hindustan Times newspaper.

But Air India said it had previously found objects such as blankets, underwear and diapers flushed down its planes' toilets.

"We take this opportunity to urge passengers to use lavatories only for the purposes that they are meant for," it said.

On X, many criticised the airline for poor upkeep and the lack of sanitation facilities on its aeroplanes.

"Only Air India has such frequent mishaps. Honestly what has happened is indefensible," one user said.

But others pointed out that the airline could not be held responsible for the situation.

"Can we honestly dump all the blame on Air India and the crew, when people can't follow basic travel etiquette?" another user said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cr42drdkwyxo

Louie Detroit
03-11-2025, 1:11pm
The jeets just can't master how to poo in the loo.

Tikiman
03-11-2025, 1:12pm
Is anyone really surprised?

Yesfam
03-11-2025, 1:13pm
Maybe they were trying to get the plane to smell like home.

Don Rickles
03-11-2025, 1:19pm
OP’s a whiner!

GTOguy
03-11-2025, 1:21pm
Maybe they were trying to get the plane to smell like
back home in Canada.


Fixt...

mtnman
03-11-2025, 1:49pm
Is anyone really surprised?

...
https://media.tenor.com/vLK4Mq3jiKIAAAAM/cat-no.gif

mtnman
03-11-2025, 1:50pm
OP’s a whiner!

...
https://media.tenor.com/IrQ-0cCDVHAAAAAM/penguin-lol.gif

Anjdog2003
03-11-2025, 2:36pm
I got as far as "What a chithole" tnen i figured members would go at each other for the next two days.

Unsuspicious
03-11-2025, 2:45pm
Back home they have like half a billion of them that still shit in their rivers in the open, I guess the first civilized step is shitting into a plastic bag and trying to flush it because airplane toilet and toilet paper technology is confusing? What the

dvarapala
03-11-2025, 2:51pm
What a chithole

Air India plane returns after plastic bags and rags clog toilets

Air India has confirmed that one of its flights from the US was forced to turn around last week after passengers trying to flush away plastic bags, rags and clothes clogged up most of its toilets.

Many years ago our then-management got the brilliant idea to outsource some work to India. So they brought a bunch of the workers here for training. It wasn't long before the urinals started clogging up; turns out these guys were throwing paper towels and other such things into the urinals.

To this day there are signs pasted on the walls above the urinals telling people not to pee on the floor and not to flush any paper down the urinals. :D

Oh, and (surprise, surprise) the company lost money on their little experiment. However, that didn't stop them from selling out to a larger company and riding their golden parachutes off into the sunset. :rolleyes:

mtnman
03-11-2025, 2:55pm
Fixt...

Frozen chit doesn't stink.

mtnman
03-11-2025, 2:55pm
I got as far as "What a chithole" tnen i figured members would go at each other for the next two days.

I had similar thoughts...

mtnman
03-11-2025, 2:58pm
Many years ago our then-management got the brilliant idea to outsource some work to India. So they brought a bunch of the workers here for training. It wasn't long before the urinals started clogging up; turns out these guys were throwing paper towels and other such things into the urinals.

To this day there are signs pasted on the walls above the urinals telling people not to pee on the floor and not to flush any paper down the urinals. :D

Oh, and (surprise, surprise) the company lost money on their little experiment. However, that didn't stop them from selling out to a larger company and riding their golden parachutes off into the sunset. :rolleyes:

Not surprised. Every similar exercise I have heard of has gone the same way. Kind of like traffic circles... They rip them out because they're stupid (actually it's because people are stupid) - then after a few years they hire some genius that puts them in again... And the cycle continues.

BRUIZER
03-11-2025, 4:02pm
Not surprised. Every similar exercise I have heard of has gone the same way. Kind of like traffic circles... They rip them out because they're stupid (actually it's because people are stupid) - then after a few years they hire some genius that puts them in again... And the cycle continues.

We have those in MT.
If I'm in something lifted, I go straight over them the majority of the time.

Anjdog2003
03-11-2025, 4:18pm
Frozen chit doesn't stink.




And Ice Creme has no bones.

dvarapala
03-11-2025, 9:56pm
Not surprised. Every similar exercise I have heard of has gone the same way. Kind of like traffic circles... They rip them out because they're stupid (actually it's because people are stupid) - then after a few years they hire some genius that puts them in again... And the cycle continues.

I love traffic circles. The only drawback to traffic circles are the incompetent ****s who don't understand how to use them.

In my town they have stuck by their guns and continued to put them in without ripping any of the old ones out. After a while even the retards get used to them and start to use them more or less correctly, which benefits everyone. :yesnod:

ft laud mike
03-12-2025, 11:59am
What a chithole

Air India plane returns after plastic bags and rags clog toilets

Air India has confirmed that one of its flights from the US was forced to turn around last week after passengers trying to flush away plastic bags, rags and clothes clogged up most of its toilets.

The plane, which was heading from Chicago to India's capital Delhi, spent several hours in the air before it returned to the US city.

Video clips from inside the aircraft showed scenes of confusion as passengers huddled around crew members who seemed to be explaining the situation.

The incident has stirred a lively debate on social media, with many Indians weighing in on aeroplane bathroom etiquette.

The incident took place on 5 March on Air India Flight 126, according to a statement by the airline released on Monday.

About two hours into the flight, crew members reported that some of the toilets were "unserviceable".

Subsequently, they found eight of the 12 toilets in business and economy class could not be used, "causing discomfort to all on board". The plane can carry up to 342 passengers.

At that point the plane was already flying over the Atlantic Ocean, according to Air India's statement. Due to restrictions on night operations at most European airports at the time, the pilots decided to return to Chicago for "passenger comfort and safety".

A BBC check on flight tracking website Flightradar24 found the plane was near Greenland when it turned around, and had spent a total of 10 hours in the air.

Air India said an investigation later found "polythene bags, rags and clothes that had been flushed down and stuck in the plumbing" of the plane's toilets.

It released several pictures showing bags containing waste cleared from the toilets. One photo showed a crew member holding a drainage pipe completely stuffed with what appeared to be rags.

The statement said that all passengers and crew disembarked normally in Chicago and were provided with accommodation and alternative flight options.

Plane toilets store human waste in special tanks and use a vacuum system for flushing. These are normally disposed of once the plane has landed.

While clogged toilets are not uncommon, it is "next to impossible" for all toilets to break down "due to only passengers' fault, and in a way that it causes an emergency diversion", Mark Martin, an aviation expert, told the Hindustan Times newspaper.

But Air India said it had previously found objects such as blankets, underwear and diapers flushed down its planes' toilets.

"We take this opportunity to urge passengers to use lavatories only for the purposes that they are meant for," it said.

On X, many criticised the airline for poor upkeep and the lack of sanitation facilities on its aeroplanes.

"Only Air India has such frequent mishaps. Honestly what has happened is indefensible," one user said.

But others pointed out that the airline could not be held responsible for the situation.

"Can we honestly dump all the blame on Air India and the crew, when people can't follow basic travel etiquette?" another user said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cr42drdkwyxo

ignorant curry breathed raghead idiots

Tikiman
03-12-2025, 1:58pm
'

dvarapala
03-12-2025, 10:33pm
https://www.thevettebarn.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=125630&stc=1&d=1741805906

Because in India they only make 10 Rupees a day. DUH!!

Unsuspicious
03-12-2025, 10:34pm
They're not full of brilliant engineers, they're full of cheap engineers.

Louie Detroit
03-13-2025, 5:10am
My friend is a retired engineer from Chrysler, back when he was working complaining to HR or management about the jeets disgusting shitting habits was a firing offense.

mtnman
03-13-2025, 7:16am
My friend is a retired engineer from Chrysler, back when he was working complaining to HR or management about the jeets disgusting shitting habits was a firing offense.

My father in law is a licensed heavy duty mechanic. He quit and went trucking because he was sick of working on trucks driven by Indians. They drive 2 to a cab so they don't have to stop, and cut holes in the cab floors and chit on the transmission. Makes it real fun to work on the transmission.