SQ no longer need to fly the A340-500s to Jakarta. That route was operated only so that the A340 pilots could have enough takeoffs and landings. Since pilots are rated for both the A330 and A340, the pilots now operate enough shorter routes with the A330-300s that they get enough takeoffs and landings without needing to fly short A340 routes.
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Originally posted by mec View PostBut I guess it doesn't mean the same pilots from SQ have to be flying these 2 types of aircraft, though other airlines may do it ?
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Originally posted by zvezda View PostSQ could roster the pilots separately for the A330s and A340s, but why would they -- especially since doing so would require flying the A340s to Jakarta (or another similar destination which is a highly inefficient use of an A340)? That SQ stopped flying the A340-500s to Jakarta at about the same time they starting taking deliveries of A330-300s leaves me about 99.44% convinced that they are flown from one roster.
I seeGut feeling again?
No, AFAIK the pilots are 2 separate groups and do not operate as one fleet on SQ.
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Originally posted by mec View PostI seeGut feeling again?
No, AFAIK the pilots are 2 separate groups and do not operate as one fleet on SQ.
- Most airlines with both A330s and A340s operate with one roster, and
- Why did SQ need to operate to CGK to give their A340 pilots enough takeoffs and landings before arrival of the A330s but not after?
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Most airlines with both A330s and A340s operate with one roster
Why did SQ need to operate to CGK to give their A340 pilots enough takeoffs and landings before arrival of the A330s but not after?
Only a SQ pilot could answer this q correctly.
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Originally posted by boing View PostIt could be pure coincidence. Or SQ could have moved the majority of A345 pilots into the A330 group leaving only a small group to have sufficient logging of the flight hours.
Co-incidence is not relevant to the question. Why did the requirement to fly short A340 trips go away?
Your second sentence doesn't answer the question -- unless you mean that SQ are moving pilots back and forth between A330 and A340 rosters (perhaps quarterly), so that they get enough takeoffs/landings while on the A330 roster.
The problem was that pilots operating A340s only to LAX and EWR don't get enough takeoffs/landings to maintain their rating (because there are five pilots onboard and only one can log a takeoff and landing per flight and because they only get about four flights (two trips) per month, so the average pilots gets an insufficient 0.8 takeoffs and landings per month). SQ can solve that problem either by flying short A340 trips (such as to Jakarta) or by jointly rostering the A330s and A340s. Clearly, SQ are not now flying A340s on any short trips. Perhaps there is some other way for SQ's A340 pilots to get enough takeoffs/landings, but I can't think of one unless the authorities reduced the number required. It is incumbent on anyone asserting separate rosters to then explain how the A340 pilots are getting enough takeoffs/landings. It is not enough to say they are getting them by coincidence.
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Just got word from a SQ pilot that SQ does not practice multi fleet flying, which means that A345 are flown by a separate pool of pilots from the A330.
As to why the A345 went away the same time as the A330 intro, it could be:
The all J class config didn't have sufficient demand to be flown to CGK.
Majority of the A345 pilots moved to A330 fleet leaving only a small amount to clock sufficient landings on the A345. Or they could be inter transfered within a certain period of time.
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