Rex Kramer
Line Up and Wait
Work smart, not hard.
Work smart, not hard.
I have a friend who was a DAL 777 FO and lived near ATL. He flew one or two trips a month, all reserve and had plenty of free time. He said those days are gone though.Dad managed to get out of currency flying the 737. All of the instructors were amazed how he did it. Living in base on reserve is a beautiful thing!
Fire guys should know that . . . even if its not transferrable or useable - it burns in a crash!
I have a friend who was a DAL 777 FO and lived near ATL. He flew one or two trips a month, all reserve and had plenty of free time. He said those days are gone though.
So if you tell a fire fighter that you have 4.5 hours of fuel on board how does that change his reaction vs if you have one hour of fuel on board? In my Bonanza 4.5 hours of fuel is about 55 gallons. In the 767 it's about 6,700 gallons. I'm not sure where it is on the maddog, but it's somewhere in the middle. How would you calculate that? Max fuel burn, min fuel burn, current altitude and speed fuel burn?
Every emergency I've declared included a cursory glance at my total fuel and about .69 seconds of mental math to make a best guess. Nothing I've ever been in the cockpit of (including the MD) has a timer that tells you how long you have till you are out of fuel. It's a best guess, not a flight planning gotcha.
That's probably for the best. I'd imagine that you guys are far too busy trying to figure out the break schedule, anyway...The 777, being the lazy man's airplane, has a spot in the COMM area that gives the fuel in pounds and time.
That's probably for the best. I'd imagine that you guys are far too busy trying to figure out the break schedule, anyway...
That's probably for the best. I'd imagine that you guys are far too busy trying to figure out the break schedule, anyway...
That and counting their stacks of cash!
Never been told to tell them in pounds. Never done it on any emergency I've ever declared. ATC has never asked.In an emergency you tell ATC your fuel remaining in minutes and in pounds. ATC uses the minutes and passes the pounds on to CFR.
Never been told to tell them in pounds. Never done it on any emergency I've ever declared. ATC has never asked.
It's amazing how airlines come up with new ways to fly planes that have been around for decades, eh?
Dad managed to get out of currency flying the 737. All of the instructors were amazed how he did it. Living in base on reserve is a beautiful thing!
Don't get me started on the annual deicing procedures changes. They really have complicated what boils down to: If there's bad stuff on the airplane, spray some other stuff to remove it. If it's still getting bad stuff on it, remove it and spray different other stuff on it that will keep the bad stuff from accumulating long enough to take off. Now, it's like getting a new periodic table of the elements to ponder every year. They even come up with new and improved precip every so often!
If you fly an airplane that holds thousands of pounds of fuel, CFR will want to know your fuel in pounds to give them an idea of what they may be dealing with in the landing causes a spill or fire.Never been told to tell them in pounds. Never done it on any emergency I've ever declared. ATC has never asked.
If you fly an airplane that holds thousands of pounds of fuel, CFR will won't to know your fuel in pounds to give them an idea of what they may be dealing with in the landing causes a spill or fire.
I've also never heard any airliner declaring an emergency on LiveATC give lbs.That's new to me. Not saying you're wrong, I just personally have never been asked.
If you fly an airplane that holds thousands of pounds of fuel, CFR will won't to know your fuel in pounds to give them an idea of what they may be dealing with in the landing causes a spill or fire.
A lot of it just depends on whether you're fortunate enough to be in a base with equipment that is staffed well enough to pull it off. Our short call late RAP (reserve availability period) guys are notorious for not flying. The FOs on my plane commonly go two months without being called. That said, you're also tethered to a three hour leash for 18 days of the month, which many guys (including me) don't like. If I'm gonna bid reserve, I prefer long call (12 hours), which allows me the flexibility to drink when I want and go where I want, but the LC guys will get called more. On my airplane in my seat, it's usually 8 or 9 days of work.
I wish I had the personality for enjoying reserve more, but unfortunately I'm just too wound up when on call to genuinely relax. The trick is to get good at reading the open time tea leaves and knowing if you'll get called or not, with a healthy dose of just not giving a s*** if you get called for a trip you can't make. I envy the guys that are good at it. So my dumb ass ends up bidding a line and working more, but at least I can walk away from the jet and mentally turn the job completely off until I'm due to fly again.
ATC needs fuel in time. That's what 7110.65 says. CFR needs fuel quantity and will ask ATC to get it in pounds.Did you not read post #53, right from the controller handbook? I even highlighted it in red for you. Ghesh.
ATC needs fuel in time. That's what 7110.65 says. CFR needs fuel quantity and will ask ATC to get it in pounds.
I do fly airplanes that hold thousands of pounds of fuel (F-15, 757 & 767).If you fly an airplane that holds thousands of pounds of fuel, CFR will want to know your fuel in pounds to give them an idea of what they may be dealing with in the landing causes a spill or fire.
And, so do I (DC9, DC8, 767/757, 737).I do fly airplanes that hold thousands of pounds of fuel (F-15, 757 & 767).
"Alright guys... the emergency aircraft has 5000 pounds of fuel on board. Make sure we only load up with enough foam to deal with 5000 pounds + 30 minutes. Would hate to tanker too much out to the runway."
That's why they ask "number of souls onboard?"
If there are only gingers on board does that mean there are zero souls on board?
Quite the opposite. There are more souls on board than there are passengers if you take into consideration all those they've consumed.
I'm trying to find that picture...If there are only gingers on board does that mean there are zero souls on board?
Or it could be less if many sold their soul to the devil (or to Trump--I like Trump but he seems to be responsible for everything these days so why not this).Quite the opposite. There are more souls on board than there are passengers if you take into consideration all those they've consumed.
I would think the amount of resources brought to bear would be dependent on the aircraft type more than specific quantities of fuel on board. A 757 would probably dictate a significantly larger response than a GV, even if they both had 5000 pounds on board.
I don't think it does in my experience in the Air Force and their Fire Dept responding to emergencies. They position their trucks at various places on the airport (midfield, departure and approach ends for ex), and my experience flying 121 out of KATL for 24 years, the Hartsfield FD reacted similarly. Landed once in Ottawa or Toronto with a flap problem and they responded similarly. I think they'd rather be "overprepared" than not be.
I would assume that whatever resources are positioned on an airfield would roll out similarly for similar types of emergencies. I would think, however, that souls on board and size of the aircraft would take priority as far as terms of response than remaining fuel in lbs.