We taxied around PHL for three hours once. And just as we got to the runway they switched them so then we got to go back the other way. And then they canceled the trip so we got to spend 45 minutes taxiing back to the gate. Good times. :banghead:
3.5 hour? I would imagine a lot of that time has too do with runway crossing restrictions. Is it the norm on such an instance too taxi on one engine when this occurs? I have also reviews a 737 checklist that says the packs are turned of after landing. On a cold day would this happen also? (And what do you guys do on a 3.5 hour taxi)? Wow!ORD on a bad WX day. About 3.5 hours.
Since I work for Mesa, we only get paid for historical average block time, and not block or better, so I elected to taxi for 2 more hours all the way to the runway (knowing I couldn't takeoff), and then asked to go back to the gate. Return to gate pays block.
This may be a silly question, but I honestly don't know the answer: If you are taxiing around for 2.5 hours and return to the gate, can you log that time? Or is it you can just log time that the plane is actually moving for the purpose of flight?
I had an instructor once who said that taxi time is loggable. I told him he was padding his logbook with taxi time. He said I was understating my total time. Who's right?
yea well.. they dont realizd that 1/16" of ice decreases overall lift by 40% according to some stuff I was reading in Flying magazine last winter...Our pax were pissed because we had to wait in line for 1 hour + for de-ice.
JFK - PVD normal day 2.5 hours taxi time for a 40 minute flight.
yea well.. they dont realizd that 1/16" of ice decreases overall lift by 40% according to some stuff I was reading in Flying magazine last winter...
I had an instructor once who said that taxi time is loggable. I told him he was padding his logbook with taxi time. He said I was understating my total time. Who's right?
Where did you get the idea taxi time is no time? Heres an example to think about-If you're doing full stop taxi backs do you note the hobbs on landing, then note the hobbs on take-off over and over and over and then note the hobbs when you get back to the field after the last one and subtract all that from the total hobbs?
Thats a lot of work to cheat yourself. When I was renting airplanes I logged the time the flight school charged me for! WHY CHEAT YOURSELF!![]()
Well, if the aircraft is taxiing, it is not moving for the purpose of flight. I would not start logging "flight time" until we were on the takeoff roll.
And I was in my own aircraft, so I wasn't directly paying by the hour.
What if you are repositioning the aircraft from one place on the field to another? Is that flight time?
Well, if the aircraft is taxiing, it is not moving for the purpose of flight.
The definition of "flight time" is from the time the aircraft leaves the ground untill the time it touches down again.
However
If you are taxiing to or from the runway, the aircraft "is moving under it's own power" "for the purpose of flight" and therefor is logable under the FARs.
Taxing to and from the fuel pumps, or from one parking spot to another, would not be flight time, because you do not intend to fly.