wheelsup
Well-Known Member
Geez...Why would you never want to SE taxi? What negatives does it have to warrant the company specifically saying not to do it?
Something about increasing the lifespan of the engines, or at least time between the hot section inspection.
Additionally, they found that at heavier weights, you actually burn more gas on a single engine taxi <15 minutes due to the added thrust needed to get the plane moving and keep it moving on one engine.
However, apparently the company doesn't realize pilots can think, and if we pull out onto the taxiway and see 50 aircraft waiting, we aren't smart enough to shut one down and light it up again. They are big into having the engine at idle power 2 or more minutes before t/o thrust, and they don't trust the pilots to start it at the appropriate time.
You're preaching to the choir...it's frustrating working for a company that, in my eyes, has zero initiative. US Air is gonna boot us ASAP. It's like they intentionally burn the most gas they can. They really only care about the things that directly impact them - if they could do something that saves the mainline partner money and it wouldn't help them out too, they won't do it. Talk about out of touch with reality...so frustrating.Additionally...especially at Newark, to have both engines up and the APU for an hour long taxi would be about 900lbs of fuel...For a short taxi it's obviously less but still adds up.
Maybe I'm missing the "big picture" here, I seriously hope so.