Departure and arrival times
Thread Starter
Departure and arrival times
All, what is your interpretation of published departure and arrival times ?
Door closed ?
Request taxi ?
Start pushback ?
Start forward taxy ?
Wheels up ?
And while we are at it, for arrivals as well.
Touchdown ?
Stop on stand ?
Door open ?
Baggage in hall ? (just kidding that last one).
Looking at published punctuality statistics vs. actual performance.
Door closed ?
Request taxi ?
Start pushback ?
Start forward taxy ?
Wheels up ?
And while we are at it, for arrivals as well.
Touchdown ?
Stop on stand ?
Door open ?
Baggage in hall ? (just kidding that last one).
Looking at published punctuality statistics vs. actual performance.
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Somewhere between 501 and 593...
Posts: 38
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I can give you some information, which may be of use:
Gate Closed STD -10
Doors Closed STD -3
Not sure there are engagement times for push/taxi/runway/wheels up.
The A/C should be on stand at STA, and doors open shortly after, although I know some flight crew will say we're on schedule if we touch down at STA...it's a kind of poetic licence I think.
As for baggage in hall, I'd start with baggage in right country first.......
tsb
Gate Closed STD -10
Doors Closed STD -3
Not sure there are engagement times for push/taxi/runway/wheels up.
The A/C should be on stand at STA, and doors open shortly after, although I know some flight crew will say we're on schedule if we touch down at STA...it's a kind of poetic licence I think.
As for baggage in hall, I'd start with baggage in right country first.......
tsb
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Below EDDL REP November
Age: 50
Posts: 27
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
The industry usually refers to the off-block time as the published "departure" time, i. e. on a gate position requiring push-back it's the time the aircraft is pushed-back. On a stand without a pushback it is the time of the movement of the plane from the stand.
Of course there are some variations by different airlines, for example (my knowledge):
KLM Cityhopper: Time of Switching Anti-Collision Light on
Delta/Northwest: Releasing Brakes on Stand
No airline refers the Departure time to the actual "departure" (airborne) time.
Arrival? Well, it's the on block time at the stand/gate, not the "landing" time.
Greets,
Trabbi
Of course there are some variations by different airlines, for example (my knowledge):
KLM Cityhopper: Time of Switching Anti-Collision Light on
Delta/Northwest: Releasing Brakes on Stand
No airline refers the Departure time to the actual "departure" (airborne) time.
Arrival? Well, it's the on block time at the stand/gate, not the "landing" time.
Greets,
Trabbi
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Wiltshire
Age: 55
Posts: 59
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Our lot refer to off chocks time, which is frustrating as somewhere like Amsterdam that can result in a 30+ minute taxi - hardly of use for calculating accurate ETAs and/or starting overdue action in less salubrious parts of the world.
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: It wasn't me, I wasn't there, wrong country ;-)
Age: 79
Posts: 1,757
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Ascot BZN
The way (Ascot) cacl'd mvt times were not as we (civil) did.
Trad way which still applies to most operational applications are:
A flight commences/terminates at Off Blocks/On Blocks (Brakes Off/Brakes
On) Published schedule times are basec on these times.
Flight time is cacl'd form wheels off to wheels on.
Doors closed/opened is a specific pax handling/traffic application.
Too simple really, there are so many interpretations operationally, but for pax ops the IATA terms are applied.
PS. I wasn't Ascot, but involved with BZN & the Truckers @ LYE
Trad way which still applies to most operational applications are:
A flight commences/terminates at Off Blocks/On Blocks (Brakes Off/Brakes
On) Published schedule times are basec on these times.
Flight time is cacl'd form wheels off to wheels on.
Doors closed/opened is a specific pax handling/traffic application.
Too simple really, there are so many interpretations operationally, but for pax ops the IATA terms are applied.
PS. I wasn't Ascot, but involved with BZN & the Truckers @ LYE
Join Date: Nov 1999
Location: East Midlands
Posts: 723
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
OOOI
All doors closed Wheels turn (Brake off)
Wheels off ground (no correction for taxi time)
Wheels on ground
Wheels stop Brake on (No correction for taxi time)
AD (Brakes off, push commence / Airbourn)
AA (Landed / Brakes on)
Off / Out / on / in
All doors closed Wheels turn (Brake off)
Wheels off ground (no correction for taxi time)
Wheels on ground
Wheels stop Brake on (No correction for taxi time)
AD (Brakes off, push commence / Airbourn)
AA (Landed / Brakes on)
Off / Out / on / in
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: occ
Age: 51
Posts: 47
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
there are also automatically generated mvt messages coming directly from sensors in the aircraft. they are transmitted via acars.
out: offblock (m1a)
air: airborne (m1b)
on: touchdown (m1c)
in: onblocks (m1d)
often a good means to control the mvt messages sent by the handling agent
out: offblock (m1a)
air: airborne (m1b)
on: touchdown (m1c)
in: onblocks (m1d)
often a good means to control the mvt messages sent by the handling agent
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: UK
Posts: 849
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
It is basically whatever time the dispatcher (with non-ACARS aircraft) decides to falsify his/her paperwork with, as subsequently amended by equally devious managers. I've seen lo-co flights logged as on-time despite departing 20 mins late.
Believe what you choose.
Believe what you choose.
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Switzerland ... oh wait: Swaziland
Posts: 799
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
often a good means to control the mvt messages sent by the handling agent
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: North of CDG
Posts: 1,043
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Maude Charlee is right; the dispatcher's paperwork is generally used for compilation of DEP/ARR times. When I was a dispatcher, we used on chocks, engines & beacon "off" as ARR time; start of pushback (or taxi on self-manoeuvering stands) for DEP (with the exception of KLM/KLM Cityhopper who use beacon "on" instead).
Now that I fill in the PLOG (always being PNF on the ground), my company use start of pushback/taxi as DEP and "chocks on" as ARR time - to the nearest minute (from the GPS to be accurate). No rounding up or down. Good for mental arythmetic when calculating block and flight times!
As Maude Charlee wrote, at some lo-cost outfits the cpt. agrees an off-blocks time with the dispatcher while he/she is still on the flight deck - let alone doors closed, chocks off, beacon "on" or pushback started! Talk about creative accounting...
Cheers
Now that I fill in the PLOG (always being PNF on the ground), my company use start of pushback/taxi as DEP and "chocks on" as ARR time - to the nearest minute (from the GPS to be accurate). No rounding up or down. Good for mental arythmetic when calculating block and flight times!
As Maude Charlee wrote, at some lo-cost outfits the cpt. agrees an off-blocks time with the dispatcher while he/she is still on the flight deck - let alone doors closed, chocks off, beacon "on" or pushback started! Talk about creative accounting...
Cheers