autosave36
Go High Go Fast and Hold.
So does only EDV use ATL radio or can any regional that runs DL tails use it (OO, EV, G7)?
No clue there. I would imagine so
So does only EDV use ATL radio or can any regional that runs DL tails use it (OO, EV, G7)?
I though anyone could use it. While it is run by Delta, I thought anyone willing to pay for it has access to it.
There's an operator but you talk directly to the pilot. But you can have the operator patch in someone if needed as well. The operator just sits and listens. It's just like talking on the phone with Arinc. with Delta Radio, it's a push to talk star to talk, pound to listen type thing which is trickier and if im dealing with an inflight situation, i'd rather focus on just talking and listening and not having to press buttons and having to think about which buttons you're pressing. Hope that makes sense.
Cant you use a ptt phone or headset in leu of doing star/pound?
The grids are the working spreadsheet of the flights to plan out. Green means the flight has been planned and released. Yellow means that it is coming due and red means that it is due within an hour (or whatever parameters the company sets it to). The Flight Trak plot is the timeline of each airplane (where it goes, block time, next legs, etc.....).Going back to that snapshot, I saw that they have flight explorer, sabre flight trak plus, and dispatch monitor. But what do sabre flight trak and dispatch monitor do? Also whats with the green/yellow/red grids on monitor. Im guessing the Green means you have time til the departure time, yellow means you are cutting it close, and red means the flight is past departure time without a release?
So with Flight Trak are dispatchers dispatching flights and scheduling them/rearraging schedules or are they just looking at a snapshot of the days operations?The grids are the working spreadsheet of the flights to plan out. Green means the flight has been planned and released. Yellow means that it is coming due and red means that it is due within an hour (or whatever parameters the company sets it to). The Flight Trak plot is the timeline of each airplane (where it goes, block time, next legs, etc.....).
The routers look at a much larger picture of the plot. I used it to see where the airplane would end up in case of performance penalty MEL (no ice, cat I airplane only, etc....) and/or if the captains wanted an airplane change. I would look to see that the airplane is routed for maintenance and is staying on that line of flying.So with Flight Trak are dispatchers dispatching flights and scheduling them/rearraging schedules or are they just looking at a snapshot of the days operations?
The plot is the official method of flight following
Just get your license. Flight explorer/fusion are not official flight following, they are for reference only.Huh? I thought Flight explorer or dispatch monitor were the official flight following methods.
Mmmm that depends on your Ops Specs.Just get your license. Flight explorer/fusion are not official flight following, they are for reference only.
Fusion isn't so good when you are over the Pacific and your flight is hollowed out. It's like when you are over Mexico.Mmmm that depends on your Ops Specs.
But why would dispatchers need access to Sabre Maint Control? Unless at EDV dispatchers do both dispatch and maint control?