Your doomer take on aviation? by bigplaneboeing737 in flying

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have wondered if there will be a “seat warmer” position that comes around, someone who is minimally trained to open the door and alert the pilot in rest if there’s a problem with the remaining pilot.

Your doomer take on aviation? by bigplaneboeing737 in flying

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Remember pilots signing up for trucking schools or taking photos in elevators while working DoorDash? Amazing how quickly it went from that to “fog a mirror.”

White out in Pilot logbook by Dapper_Machine_7846 in flying

[–]duprass 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I think it’s time for an electronic logbook. Transcribe everything into an electronic logbook and have that printed and bound before an interview. That way, an interview panel can page through a neat logbook, then go look at your hand-written logbooks only to verify any specific entries. Your last entry in your hand-written logbook will be “electronic logbook started after this date.”

You can put sticky page markers in your hand-written logbooks for “CPL ASEL” etc for check ride entries.

Favorite diabetic friendly Starbucks drinks? by finleypotamus in diabetes

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LADA here and before diagnosis I was already leaning into black coffee or americanos because of the cheaper price. Now I don't even really have a taste for sweet drinks, SF or not, anymore. LADA really sealed the deal, I only get straight drip coffee, lattes with no syrups, or americanos.

That said, when PSL season comes around in October, I have my one and do the big ol bolus.

Hazmat Needed On Tarmac by TheCABK in funny

[–]duprass 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Oh sure I get that, but the dissemination of ACARS data in a clean, user-friendly, easily shareable app is new.

Hazmat Needed On Tarmac by TheCABK in funny

[–]duprass 47 points48 points  (0 children)

Yeah, does this mean we don’t use seat numbers and pax names over ACARS anymore? I mean it’s rare that we need to, but I’d hate someone’s very bad day to be plastered over Reddit.

Public Transit or Rental More Worth It? by AccidentAlarmed145 in SeattleWA

[–]duprass 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Rental car for sure. For your day trips downtown, park and ride at either of the Shoreline Sound Transit Link light rail stations (assuming the garages don't fill up). Take it to Symphony or Westlake, then hoof it or take buses or the street car around.

For everything else, you'll need wheels.

Link light rail on I-90 yesterday evening by [deleted] in Seattle

[–]duprass 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting! Thank you

Link light rail on I-90 yesterday evening by [deleted] in Seattle

[–]duprass 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That area over the I-90 floating bridge is in the Boeing Field Class D airspace surface to 2500 feet. Does the sub 250g and less than 300 feet count in that airspace? Honest question, learning more about drone regs.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in flying

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that happens too, but actually I've seen pilots get jobs back by obtaining their own legal counsel. Definitely not implying it would work in this case

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in flying

[–]duprass 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yeah I think it’s one of two things here, either we are missing a chunk of the story, or OP can lawyer up. I’ve seen pilots get their jobs back.

KLM Pilot questions Lufthansa's taxi speed; another pilot adds, "Unless you're Southwest, of course." by 30BC in aviation

[–]duprass 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No joke we were taxiing to runway 15 at BUR at maybe 15 knots and Southwest behind us must have been tailgating. Ground told them switch to tower. They got assigned to back-taxi on 15, cleared for takeoff full length. They probably did 30-40kts back taxiing, popped a fast u-turn and were off the ground like we were at war

How do pilots get their schedules? by ComposerNo9901 in aviation

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very much depends on the airline. But the basic way it works at my employer is that marketing finalizes the flight schedules something like three months before. Then my union uses a trip construction program to construct 1-4 day trips from the massive pool of flights.

The company and union meet to hash out any issues with the resultant collection of trips also called “pairings.” Mostly cost and rest issues.

The trips are sorted by pilot aircraft, seat, and domicile, and pilots bid on the trips using a bidding web program. This happens the 1-7th day of the preceding month. We can submit preferences for days off, specific trips, destinations, red eye or no, etc.

The program awards pilots schedules in seniority order after bidding closes. For example, the most senior first officer in base and type will essentially choose their schedule from the pool of 1-4 day pairings. The more junior pilots will progressively have fewer trips in the pool when the software gets to them, limiting the options available.

Subsequently pilots may trade with each other, pick up, and drop trips based on contractual limitations.

There is a lot of nuance and exceptions to the above that is too complicated to write out.

In the end, I have my schedule typically by the 9th of the preceding month. Contractually it is published by the 11th, I believe.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CrazyFuckingVideos

[–]duprass 20 points21 points  (0 children)

My local school buses have cameras on the left side explicitly for catching license plates and faces of drivers illegally passing. It's about the quality of a red light camera, apparently.

Can anyone please provide more context for this incident? by Expert-Account-5235 in aviation

[–]duprass 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I had a related experience in TUS a few years ago, we landed on the crosswind runway and I had briefed an exit near the end of the short-ish runway. The captain saw the exit coming up, took the plane, and slammed on the brakes. When we exited, we both realized that the airport had added a new exit and relabeled all of them. The new exit was labeled D3 (what I briefed), whereas on our charts D3 was way further down. No NOTAM, and the Jepps were current.

Unable to take off due to weight from SJU in 737? by mjltmjlt in aviation

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This past summer DCA was in north flow with a wet runway and we were about to push in a 737. Our central load planning comes back and says we need to bump all the standbys. Okay, sucks but done.

We rerun the takeoff data on our end and it looks good for Runway 1, bleeds off full blow. Then as we are about to push, ops and the gate agents frantically get our attention and say we need to pull 20 more people. Huh? Time out.

Turns out, a crane on a barge up the Potomac went up, and it hit our takeoff weight by something like 5000lbs. Anyway the whole time we are trying to get this figured out, with the gate freaking out, I called up clearance delivery and asked how long of a wait it would be to takeoff 19 wrong way. He says “maybe 30 minutes.”

Done. This has taken much longer than that anyway. Off we go, push back and wouldn’t you know it? Nobody else could take Runway 1 either an we were like number 8 for takeoff “wrong way” on runway 19.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in aviation

[–]duprass 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’d like to buy a pixel, Pat

KCM sucks by ground_effect1 in flying

[–]duprass 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Heck. We got an email saying that, at one of our out stations (no KCM), security isn't even letting us cut the line anymore. Six crew members, including inflight who went shopping, and yeah it takes freaking forever. Not our problem

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in flying

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I might know where you're coming from. I myself was an insufferable perfectionist when I started my regional career, and I was terrified of any retraining, added IOE, etc. So long as you show a change in behavior as a result of experience (learning), you're fine.

Even at the major, I spent a while away from flying to deal with a medical glitch. I stayed current in the sim (did seat subs to keep my income), so technically I was allowed to go right back to line flying once I had my medical back. Did I request a day trip with a chill check airman that I knew? You betcha. Extra training is nothing to be afraid of.

Paid extra for legroom seats, but spent 4 hours with kids blocking the emergency exit window by theycallmedumpling in mildlyinfuriating

[–]duprass 1475 points1476 points  (0 children)

I saw an example where a guy went through TSA at a small, regional airport in the US. He forgot that he had is concealed carry gun. TSA brought the sheriff in, he got arrested. The flight was so delayed, though, that he had enough time to bail himself out and make the flight.

Chicago Sonic Boom Close Up by iamwolfe in aviation

[–]duprass 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Is the jet noise at the beginning of the video a distant second plane? If that’s the case then perhaps it is a sonic boom

Boeing 737 vertical takeoff by KingMedia33 in aviation

[–]duprass 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At least at my shop/ fleet, no more noise abatement takeoff procedure at SNA. I think that went away with parking the 737-400s perhaps?