MoeFaux said:Let's also not forget that D.B.Cooper opened the emergency exit door in flight and jumped off of the plane, while no one else was injured. So one little bullet hole wouldn't make a difference. (though, after DB emergency exit doors all have locks that make it so you are unable to open the door mid-flight)
No one is going to get sucked off an airplane. Now, sucked off IN an airplane, that's a whole 'nother story.
I voted yes.
Er, if I recall correctly, the plane D.B. Cooper leapt from was only flying at around 15,000 feet - enough for a stiff breeze, but not nearly high enough to decompress. If he'd been trying to bail out of a plane cruising at 35,000-40,000 feet (where airliners hit cruising altitude), he would have discovered that he may well have suffocated before he had a chance to pull the cord.
The reason emergency hatches won't open in flight - and this was true before the Cooper stunt - is that internal air pressure prevents even the strongest man from pulling the door in (which they must do before swinging out). The locking feature is moot in this case.