Posted on 08/25/2018 5:03:57 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
Good Evening Everybody.
Blessings to you all.
(((HUGS)))
other pilots.
It’s a big fraternity - about 124,000 or so.
I had a good day.
Good night and blessings on you.
Mexican breakfast in the AM at Mariachis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oo8F5DOSwRo
Too funnie ... ‘nite
Good evening, ML...((HUGS))...hope you and Penny had good hiking weather today.
A Blessed Lord’s Day and Shavua Tov to you and yours.
Overcast all day here and possible rain tonight.
Greetings to all at the Canteen!
To all our military men and women, past and present,
THANK YOU
for your service!
It got a bit hot, so we only did a mile. We are gradually working back up to our 4-5.
I am looking forward to autumn.
What I don’t understand about commercial pilots is all the regimen. Lol I’m an independent guy, I like to get in.. get out... landing is a bit of an issue.
Take off is easy
I are a slow learner, I can’t just read things on paper and get it,I have to get it in my bones
I can land but it aint pretty LOL
Good evening, lightman, and thank you for the Psalm.
A Blessed Lord’s Day to you and yours.
Has it finally stopped raining in your area? Any more trees down?
Panini’s is OK. Pittsburg thinks they invented that stuff
Primanti brothers PHhht.. LOL
Looks pretty good.
Here's the best way to describe my yearly flying:
Flight hours are limited to 30 hours in 7 days, 100 hours in a month and 1000 in a year. Scheduling rules also say I need at least 1 day off a week, so 6 day trips are the max for me (121 US domestic scheduled).
Let's look at a typical trip, which at my company tended to be a 4 day trip. You want good productive trips, but you can't always get them. On a 4 day trip let's say I have 6 hours of flight scheduled each day, or 24 hours scheduled that week. I am getting paid the better of 24 hours or the actual flight time. Now let's look at my duty day. For a 6 hour day with 4 legs it was not unheard of to have a 12 hour duty day. So now for a 4 day trip, I'm "at work" 48 hours and being paid for half of that. Now consider that I'm not going home every night and my trip starts at 6 am on Friday and ends at midnight Monday night -- that totals to 90 hours away from home.
How does this compare to a 40 hour work week in an office? In that case you are on duty 40 hours, getting paid 40 hours (or salary) and if you have a 1 hour commute one way, you are spending 50 hours away from home.
Back to the flight schedule. A given month will have trips less productive than 24 hours and although you can probably build a 96 hour month if you tried, the average line of flying is typically going to be 75 hours of flying. You can ballpark that will equate to 150 duty hours and 300 hours away from home for the month.
Extrapolate that to a year, and you have 900 flight hours, 1800 duty hours and 3600 hours away from home. I would say this represents the average US domestic 121 pilot. Some do more, some do less, but this is pretty typical.
What do we do with all of that duty time that isn't flying? Let's see:
Note, that all of these activities require we are at the airport, in the secure area and we are not being paid. The pay clock starts (roughly) when the airplane is buttoned up and the parking brake is released and ends when the parking brake is set and main cabin door opened. 14 CFR 121 contains the legal limit for flight time for airline pilots in the US (you didn't specify whose regulations you were interested in): (a) No certificate holder conducting domestic operations may schedule any flight crewmember and no flight crewmember may accept an assignment for flight time in scheduled air transportation or in other commercial flying if that crewmember's total flight time in all commercial flying will exceed (1) 1,000 hours in any calendar year; (2) 100 hours in any calendar month; (3) 30 hours in any 7 consecutive days;
Howdy, Kathy.
Hope you’ve had a good day. Have you had any more rain?
It is not in my bones LOL
I get it, I just hate the bureaucracy
Howdy, PRO.
I hope your day was smoke-free at last.
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