Yes—this actually happened, and it wasn’t a joke. Boeing once filled an aircraft with about 20,000 pounds of potatoes to test in-flight Wi-Fi performance.

Why potatoes? Because human bodies are mostly water, and water absorbs radio signals. Potatoes have similar electromagnetic properties, so from a signal’s perspective, they behave much like passengers. Instead of flying hundreds of people repeatedly, engineers used potatoes to simulate signal absorption, interference, cabin density, and worst-case connectivity scenarios—same physics, far less logistics.

This is how aviation works. Engineers don’t guess—they recreate real-world extremes and test against them. Your in-flight Wi-Fi wasn’t designed for empty cabins; it was optimized for a fully packed plane… or vegetables acting like one.

So here’s the surprising thought : does knowing your internet was tested against 20,000 pounds of potatoes make it feel more reliable—or just amusingly overengineered?
Yes—this actually happened, and it wasn’t a joke. Boeing once filled an aircraft with about 20,000 pounds of potatoes to test in-flight Wi-Fi performance. Why potatoes? Because human bodies are mostly water, and water absorbs radio signals. Potatoes have similar electromagnetic properties, so from a signal’s perspective, they behave much like passengers. Instead of flying hundreds of people repeatedly, engineers used potatoes to simulate signal absorption, interference, cabin density, and worst-case connectivity scenarios—same physics, far less logistics. This is how aviation works. Engineers don’t guess—they recreate real-world extremes and test against them. Your in-flight Wi-Fi wasn’t designed for empty cabins; it was optimized for a fully packed plane… or vegetables acting like one. So here’s the surprising thought : does knowing your internet was tested against 20,000 pounds of potatoes make it feel more reliable—or just amusingly overengineered?
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