Pilots are pushed too far on 7days
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: DXB
Posts: 164
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: 3rd Rock From the Sun
Posts: 9
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Good start....Get it out there guys!! Feed what is happening to the press. Not just 7 Days but to all the international press (the Canadian press would be a good start). We have had enough of being treated like rags... If our management will not allow us to dialogue with them in a civil manner and pay proper attention to our concerns, then we will only respond in a typical "human reaction" manner. Find someone else who will hopefully listen. It is starting to become a desperate cry. In such a repressive environment like EK and the lot, and the if you don't like it leave mentality. one has no choice to spill the beans if you do not like it but... Let it rip!!!
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Egypt
Posts: 85
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
tired pilots
Its funny, I read in yesterdays newspaper, about the air india express that crashed in mangalore. The Indian DGCA published that its was un professional for the captain to sleep during the flight, and the captain ignored all the sofisticated equipment warning him to abort the landing. It also stated that multi millon dollar aeroplanes are equiped with safety equipment to assist the pilot in making descions...
Its sad the blamed the crew, and never stated anything with regard to flight duty time limitation, or what duty the crew had done in the past week. Im sure the were on minimum rest though out. THIS IS GRADUALLY BECOMING A WAY OF LIFE AMONGST AIRLINES IN THE GULF. REMEBER IF ITS LEGAL, IT DOESN'T MEAN ITS SAFE. seven days in a row can be very hectic...so for now until changes are made. flysafe and remain vigilant.. If the FAA publishes new rules regarding FDTL, then im sure the rest of the world will follow.
happy landings everyone
SKYGOD
Its sad the blamed the crew, and never stated anything with regard to flight duty time limitation, or what duty the crew had done in the past week. Im sure the were on minimum rest though out. THIS IS GRADUALLY BECOMING A WAY OF LIFE AMONGST AIRLINES IN THE GULF. REMEBER IF ITS LEGAL, IT DOESN'T MEAN ITS SAFE. seven days in a row can be very hectic...so for now until changes are made. flysafe and remain vigilant.. If the FAA publishes new rules regarding FDTL, then im sure the rest of the world will follow.
happy landings everyone
SKYGOD
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Betwixt and between
Posts: 666
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Regardless of the other points, saying it is impossible to sleep during the day is BS. There is no reason why, generally (we all have bad days), a pilot shouldn't arrive sufficiently reseted for such a flight.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Im with him
Posts: 19
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
No reason we should be rested???
Kids, wife, traffic noise, getting up at normal hours, and dont forget the call to pray 5 times a day. Oh and a life!
No reason at all my back side.
Kids, wife, traffic noise, getting up at normal hours, and dont forget the call to pray 5 times a day. Oh and a life!
No reason at all my back side.
Join Date: May 2008
Location: pit
Posts: 314
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Hilarious, but useless. Just look at the answer of Sciolistes. He is the archetype of the ones who know better although they've never been there. Passengers think we're a lazy overpaid bunch until they fly for their annual stint to BKK, then they want a well rested, well trained and well paid guy up front so as to feel safe.
I once challenged a journo to follow me on a 13h flight, 9h time difference pairing, from the evening before to the evening after, staying awake with us (at the time this was allowed in the cockpit) and trying to rest. He actually did (officially) and later had to admit that it was very, very strenuous and his following article was not bad. But he forgot quickly, meeting some months later he said laughing ' ... we had a good time, hadn't we. You guys really have a good life ...'. He didn't remember that he needed three days off to recover from the lag and I was already on my way to another 'good time'!
Nothing will change but a smokin' hole, and even that will only last for a few months.
Brave new world.
I once challenged a journo to follow me on a 13h flight, 9h time difference pairing, from the evening before to the evening after, staying awake with us (at the time this was allowed in the cockpit) and trying to rest. He actually did (officially) and later had to admit that it was very, very strenuous and his following article was not bad. But he forgot quickly, meeting some months later he said laughing ' ... we had a good time, hadn't we. You guys really have a good life ...'. He didn't remember that he needed three days off to recover from the lag and I was already on my way to another 'good time'!
Nothing will change but a smokin' hole, and even that will only last for a few months.
Brave new world.
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Back home
Posts: 160
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I can only imagine who/what resides at the Indian DGCA, probably the same people in charge of organising the commonwealth games. So any comments that come out of there don't hold much water with me.
Secondly, Sciolistes you are either a total ****, or not a pilot.
An article a week would be a great start.
Secondly, Sciolistes you are either a total ****, or not a pilot.
An article a week would be a great start.
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Blighty
Posts: 569
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Pool,
You make a good point re the dare you set the journo...
A good friend of mine was fed up having to listen to his Mrs moaning as to how he was paid for sitting there and doing nothing for hours and when he got to destination he just sat on the beach for a couple of days...
So he took her on a trip with him, when she got on the A/C he made her sit on the jumpseat instead of first...no drinking champers, no movies etc, just sit there through the night, when they got to destination of course she was shattered and didnt feel like sitting by the pool etc... same on the way home, it quickly dawned on her how tiring it can be...
Needles to say they are no longer together
You make a good point re the dare you set the journo...
A good friend of mine was fed up having to listen to his Mrs moaning as to how he was paid for sitting there and doing nothing for hours and when he got to destination he just sat on the beach for a couple of days...
So he took her on a trip with him, when she got on the A/C he made her sit on the jumpseat instead of first...no drinking champers, no movies etc, just sit there through the night, when they got to destination of course she was shattered and didnt feel like sitting by the pool etc... same on the way home, it quickly dawned on her how tiring it can be...
Needles to say they are no longer together
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: UAE
Posts: 1,026
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
As Sciolisties (isn't that a skin disease?) says, it is perfectly possible to be rested before a night flight. It is the second and third night flights followed by a 6am pick up that are the problem. You don't get fatigued from one flight, you just get tired. "Tired" isn't the problem, "fatigued" is the problem and it is the elephant in the room that both the regulators and airlines are trying to ignore.
Night flights will always be with us- it is just too expensive to have aircraft sitting on the ground for 8 hours out of every 24. The challenge for the industry is how to reconcile that with the fact that millions of years of evolution have not prepared humans to function at their best in the middle of the night. The Middle East airlines are a long way from doing that.
Night flights will always be with us- it is just too expensive to have aircraft sitting on the ground for 8 hours out of every 24. The challenge for the industry is how to reconcile that with the fact that millions of years of evolution have not prepared humans to function at their best in the middle of the night. The Middle East airlines are a long way from doing that.
Join Date: May 2009
Location: By the sea
Posts: 50
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Well said BG!
A few years past we flew night flights as much the same as now however it's the fact we now don't get enough days off between night trips to recover. I am absolutely hanging.
With the increasingly (not decreasingly) poor roster planning that is going on on the airbus I can't see any joy coming our way for some time.
It's the poor man management that is going on that is causing our pain.
A 90 Boeing roster is not the same as a 90 classic airbus roster. With one ULR trip left and so many night turns on the bus it's hardly going to get better.
Nuff said.
A few years past we flew night flights as much the same as now however it's the fact we now don't get enough days off between night trips to recover. I am absolutely hanging.
With the increasingly (not decreasingly) poor roster planning that is going on on the airbus I can't see any joy coming our way for some time.
It's the poor man management that is going on that is causing our pain.
A 90 Boeing roster is not the same as a 90 classic airbus roster. With one ULR trip left and so many night turns on the bus it's hardly going to get better.
Nuff said.
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: uae
Posts: 2,777
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Its not Middle East Airlines its Middle Night Airlines, we used to get 15 + days off/m and you could recover from the Night turns not anymore . the long term sickness is on the rise and the company only cares about money not the guy up front, when one goes into the ground they are going to say it was legal and if pilots are tired they should not be flying in the first place ( blame on the pilots) look at the Mangalore crash, wont be any different here
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: somewhere else
Posts: 46
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I hope that the grieving families of the passengers and crew turn their anger at Air India Express and the Indian GCAA into a lawsuit that will place the blame for this crash where it belongs...on the shoulders of AIE and the Indian GCAA for allowing this type of rostering to be "Legal"
Send a message to the industry that it is no longer acceptable to sacrifice safety on the altar of money. Maybe other companies and regulators will take notice and proactively make changes before it too has its lesson written in blood.
Send a message to the industry that it is no longer acceptable to sacrifice safety on the altar of money. Maybe other companies and regulators will take notice and proactively make changes before it too has its lesson written in blood.
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: uk
Posts: 416
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I think we can agree that flying 90+ hours a month is quite possible, it's HOW those hours are made up that is the killer.
There has to be something wrong when your body thinks your should be "firing the morning gun" at 0200 rather than 1000! Without going into details it took the first 4 days of my leave before the gun would fire at the right time!!
It also appears that the rosterers actively roster into the 18-30 hrs rest which, as we all know from experience, is a nightmare for rest patterns. Why Why Why
Why can't they offer westbound or eastbound roster options,it would reduce the time zone changes dramatically. The result would be less guys falling over sick/fatigued/knackered so a win win.
There has to be something wrong when your body thinks your should be "firing the morning gun" at 0200 rather than 1000! Without going into details it took the first 4 days of my leave before the gun would fire at the right time!!
It also appears that the rosterers actively roster into the 18-30 hrs rest which, as we all know from experience, is a nightmare for rest patterns. Why Why Why
Why can't they offer westbound or eastbound roster options,it would reduce the time zone changes dramatically. The result would be less guys falling over sick/fatigued/knackered so a win win.
Guest
Posts: n/a
There most certainly is a reason why we don't use TOGA power on each takeoff..... because the engines would fail sooner.
So then why does EK essentially use it's pilots at "TOGA Power" each and every day.
I sadly think it's safe to say that one day, one of our crew is going to fail just like that engine will when used at full TOGA power all the time, and it will be disastrous!!
AAR just doesn't get it. Me thinks he is the single source for this problem at EK.
K
So then why does EK essentially use it's pilots at "TOGA Power" each and every day.
I sadly think it's safe to say that one day, one of our crew is going to fail just like that engine will when used at full TOGA power all the time, and it will be disastrous!!
AAR just doesn't get it. Me thinks he is the single source for this problem at EK.
K
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: UK
Posts: 18
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Because of mis-management, we all end up for paying for this. Personally I believe this will never change and you either leave, live with it or change the roster yourself so as to survive. That's what I use my sick days for , this may not be right in some eyes but is the option that I have chosen to extend my life a little longer.
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: 3rd Rock from the Sun
Posts: 303
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Sittingidly is bang on, i'd rather 3-5 nights in a row then the night flt 24hrs 'rest', take off in the morning. Cant rest at all with that stupid rostering.
At least with similar shift patterns rostered in a row my body clock can adjust. But im a single guy with no wife or kids....
At least with similar shift patterns rostered in a row my body clock can adjust. But im a single guy with no wife or kids....
Page 4 of 7days today (23 Nov 2010)
Page 4 of the 7days:
"Air chiefs keeping eyes open for sleepy pilots"
"The UAE GCAA has warned that pilot fatigue is a serious threat to flight safety, but has not received any complaints from airmen about being over worked....... The GCAA said it took the issue very seriously and that there are strict rules on rest periods,......."
Hmmmm - no complaints received by UAE airmen regarding fatigue..????? If you guys are filling in ASR's and pressing 2..... Then it proves the GCAA have something to hide... no?
"Air chiefs keeping eyes open for sleepy pilots"
"The UAE GCAA has warned that pilot fatigue is a serious threat to flight safety, but has not received any complaints from airmen about being over worked....... The GCAA said it took the issue very seriously and that there are strict rules on rest periods,......."
Hmmmm - no complaints received by UAE airmen regarding fatigue..????? If you guys are filling in ASR's and pressing 2..... Then it proves the GCAA have something to hide... no?
Join Date: May 2008
Location: pit
Posts: 314
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
"The UAE GCAA has warned that pilot fatigue is a serious threat to flight safety, but has not received any complaints from airmen about being over worked....... The GCAA said it took the issue very seriously and that there are strict rules on rest periods,......."
Either EK does not forward the ASRs, or the GCAA simply ignores that stuff. Anyway, this statement is nothing but a blunt, outrageous lie!
If I was a little less illiterate in IT matters I would send the last 6 weekly reports to 7days. Maybe some wizard soulmate can do that. The journos could then live up to their self proclaimed 'duty to unbiasedly report all relevant information'. But I guess the long arm of the lobby reaches even there and everything will be brushed under the same carpet as our ASRs.