I thought I would repost from a previous thread as there are somewhat new 2012 airline carry on regulations concerning guitars. Here are a couple of links about the new regulations courtesy of Guitar World:
http://www.guitarworld.com/acoustic-nation-alert-you-can-carry-your-guitar-it-s-law
And the full text:
http://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/reauthorization/media/PLAW-112publ95[1].pdf
Comments
Weird that this news didn't make a bigger splash and first time I'm hearing about it is in 2014.
Finally! This is such a relief.
2012 Airline Carry On Regulations for Guitars
Great News to take away Travel anxiety.
@Joli Gadjo…..
The reporter of the Guitar World article summarized the law with the following.
@scot made a great post in a related discussion
Good news for bringing guitars on airplanes!
http://www.djangobooks.com/forum/discussion/10228/
pick on & Carry On
pickitjohn :peace:
Last year when I went to DIJ I flew Southwest and paid a little extra for early boarding, went to the back of the plane which was empty at the time, everyone is going for the front seats, and the case fit in the overhead no problem.
I am pretty sure the law only applies to US domestic flights and US carriers departing from the US. For foreign climes. Likely they wouldn't change policies on the return flight but technically, foreign aviation law rules the airwaves while in that countries airspace....so if some country prohibited guitars in hard cases....then no go.
Note that the law would be pretty grey for alliance partners. Also be aware that most EU carriers have a smaller carryon baggage sizea and most US sized carry ons are not acceptable thus generating more revenue. Many overheads are sized differently (smaller) than the North Americans standard. If your flight overseas is US carrier make sure you are coming back or if continuing on either on the same carrier or find out ahead of time what the alliance carriers policies are. e.g.Star Alliance (United Air Canada Lufthansa et al)
Flight crews are like all professionals, they have good ones, tired ones, having a bad day ones,.....one thing is for certain, A warm caring smile and particularly on a day when there are lots of cancellations and delays therefore lots of CRABBY PASSENGERS, asking how they are doing and actually caring about their answer can work wonders. I have been on a flight where there was no room in the cabin but the poor harried FA responded well to being treated as a real human put my guitar up in the forward galley. She had to move it around a few times every time she did the food service but she had taken ownership of it and looked after it. Only a few minutes conversation at the end of a harried boarding service and I was from a late connection...I arrived late at the gate but my first comment was asking her how she was faring on the day and listeneing sympathetically, I then explained my predicament and asked if she could help.
I always make travel plans with the guitar in mind: I check the aircraft to make sure it's not one of the regional jets with narrow/short overheads. (That almost guarantees gate-checking.) If I can't get the early-boarding option (which generally is part of the less-awful-coach-seat extra-charge deal), I book a seat as far back as possible. (Delta generally boards from the back.) Before boarding, I position myself near the gate, so that I'm among the first in my group to board. I sling my case on the side away from the gate agent. (This is a pretty weak way of de-emphasizing its alarming size. It works better if I'm flying with the GS-Mini rather than the Dunn or an archtop.)
And if it's a very full plane or the overheads are too small or an attendant rules against carrying it on, I can gate-check with much-reduced anxiety because I've chosen cases with a decent chance of surviving any but the most outrageous treatement. (And I've insured my traveling instruments for full replacement value, though in the case of the Dunn that would be cold comfort.) No. Gigbag. Ever.