Popcorn1120
Filing Flight Plan
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- Jan 19, 2023
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Popcorn1120
I need to get a better understanding of tach and hobbs and when each is applied to aviation maintenance and how to determine the calculation.
To add, the most accurate method to track maintenance time is by time in service which is defined as the moment the aircraft leaves the ground till the moment it lands. A recording tach and hobbs are only approximations with a tach recording less time than a hobbs. So most use a tach for mx time and a hobbs for flight time.I need to get a better understanding of tach and hobbs and when each is applied to aviation maintenance and how to determine the calculation.
Not all tach timers work that way. Some start counting real time when a threshold is exceeded (e.g. 1300rpm) and stop counting below that threshold.Tach "time" is not really time, it is counting the number of revolutions of the engine but displaying it as "hours" for convenience. At some high rpm e.g. 2500 the tach "time" is fairly accurate.
...but technically, if you start the engine and sit with it running while messing with the avionics, that time does not count.
True. Per the regs, flight time is
...time that commences when an aircraft moves under its own power for the purpose of flight and ends when the aircraft comes to rest after landing.
Of course, a brake test would get that started, as long as its purpose is making sure the plane is in condition for the pending flight, and you do indeed go fly after messing with the avionics for half an hour.
Queue the pedantry!Even without a brake check the airplane is moving. The propeller is moving through the air and the whole plane is making tiny movements called vibrations from its own power. Sure this is probably not in line with the intent of the regs, but as soon as the engine starts part of the plane is moving.
Like mine. But then, us old guys know how to tell time on a wristwatch.In the good old days, at least some aircraft had neither a recording tach or a "Hobbs".
Excellent points flyingbrit, makes sense to me.Tach "time" is not really time, it is counting the number of revolutions of the engine but displaying it as "hours" for convenience. At some high rpm e.g. 2500 the tach "time" is fairly accurate. Especially during training, the average rpm is quite a bit lower than 2500 and so the tach under reports the time. Flight schools figured this out so they installed the Hobbs meters which generally indicate actual clock time whenever the engine is running. This way they can bill the student more! There is also a slight benefit to the student/pilot as they can log more hours than the tach would indicate.
For maintenance time it is especially if your aircraft has life-limited parts or other expensive time-based mx. However, this method will cheat you on tracking pilot time.I feel better that it’s probably a more accurate way to track time.
I worked for a part 135 operator that flew missions for the forest service here in AK. The forest service would only pay for flight hours, so they configured the hobbs meter to start working at 50mph. I think there was a pressure switch on the wing strut that closed and started the hobbsSome planes start the Hobbs meter when the electrical power is applied, others start it at engine start, so there’s some variation. But for maintenance purposes, go by tach time.
The military only counts take off to touchdown. But the times are logged by someone, no Hobbs.
Lol my late friend said when he was doing his solo long X country many years ago, when he went inside to get a signature at one of his airports the manager said he was going to sign 3 times because that’s how many landings he had. lolW
With some folks I flew with there were several touchdowns and one approach!
In my aircraft logs it was “TotalTime”…Tach time, shown next to it, said “Tach”.Is “TT” Total Time ( Time in Service) or Tach Time?
What do you tell it? Stay off of your lawn?Like mine. But then, us old guys know how to tell time on a wristwatch.
True. Per the regs, flight time is
...time that commences when an aircraft moves under its own power for the purpose of flight and ends when the aircraft comes to rest after landing.
Of course, a brake test would get that started, as long as its purpose is making sure the plane is in condition for the pending flight, and you do indeed go fly after messing with the avionics for half an hour.
How "MOVES under its own power" not clear?
That said, most people log engine run time as flight time.
I would argue that the intent of the rule is to count the time when the pilot is in control of the power for the purpose of flight. So the pilot using the brakes, elevator, rudder etc to maintain control during engine start does count as pilot time in my opinion.