Page 1 of 1
loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 15, 2007 7:27 pm
by 757200ba
Hello how do you log your flight hours.I know that you use hobs times, and that tenths are used, but how all that is done, and how to know how many hour you have.
Many Thanks. :-?
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 15, 2007 9:04 pm
by Mobius
The Hobbs meter measures either the time the engine has been running, or the master has been on, or something like that, but it wouldn't really make much of a difference. Anyways, the Hobbs will read total time, so I double check the time on the Hobbs as one of my first preflight items, then I check the Hobbs again after I've landed, parked and shut-down, and then I find the difference between the two times to get the total time (duration of the flight). The Hobbs meter reads every tenth of an hour, so your reading off the Hobbs will be accurate down to each tenth of an hour, and the time I read off the Hobbs is the time I use in my logbook. Is that what you were wondering?
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 15, 2007 9:48 pm
by 757200ba
Thats it!!SO correct me if im wrong.
tenth of an hour=6 mins
so wen you see on the hubs (the flight duration after making the diference) 1.3 means 1 hour (3*6) =1hour and 18 mins?
Many Thanks for your help this always confused me, and now that im solo i have to log my hours, but i had some questions.
Many thanks
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 15, 2007 10:53 pm
by RitterKreuz
Hobbs meters generally have an oil pressure switch... that way if you leave your master on overnight you dont have 18 hours on the plane when you open shop the next day... you just have a dead battery.
The hobbs will start turning the moment you see an oil pressure indication.
6 minutes = one tenth of an hour since there are 60 minutes in an hour, so if you fly for 42 minutes you log 0.7 hours since thats what the hobbs meter would say.
if your hobbs meter says 1.3 then you flew for one hour and 18 minutes.
the decimal place on the hobs meter is always multiplied times 6 ;-)
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 15, 2007 11:16 pm
by Mobius
Yep, also, whenever I log my time, I do it in tenths of an hour instead of hours and minutes.
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Wed May 16, 2007 2:44 am
by beaky
Thats it!!SO correct me if im wrong.
tenth of an hour=6 mins
so wen you see on the hubs (the flight duration after making the diference) 1.3 means 1 hour (3*6) =1hour and 18 mins?
Many Thanks for your help this always confused me, and now that im solo i have to log my hours, but i had some questions.
Many thanks
How was the time noted in your log book prior to solo? I've never heard of anything other than tenths being used.
As for knowing what your total time is, when bragging to friends: round it up to the nearest 1/2 hour.

;D
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Wed May 16, 2007 11:28 am
by 757200ba
After doing all this (*6 ) thing the time before my solo was 13 h and 40 +/- min)
But now all this is much more easy.
Thank you very much for your help guys.
PS-Keep the blue up (but some times put it down -GREAT FUN!!!!)
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Sun May 20, 2007 8:27 pm
by Boss_BlueAngels
I too have never heard of anyone refering to hours and minutes. And also, always use the Hobbs, even if it is more expensive.
Plus, if you have questions regarding how to log time, it is spelled out pretty simply in the FARs.
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Sun May 20, 2007 11:16 pm
by RitterKreuz
plane and simple just log the hobbs meter...
if your start hobbs was 0517.0
and the end hobbs was 0518.3
log 1.3 as that is the difference - (but yes that is equivalent to 1 hour 18 minutes)
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Mon May 21, 2007 9:09 pm
by Jared
also good to know is if the hour meter is a total time or tach time type of meter
as I learned about in school the total time meter is running anytime the engine is running as stated in previous responses.
The tach time type of meter on the other hand will start running when the engine rpm is above normal idle speed.
correct me if I'm wrong, but that's what I was taught..

Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Tue May 22, 2007 9:30 pm
by RitterKreuz
yeah you're pretty much right... i forget the percentage that i was told but a mechanic told me that the tach time only runs on "real time" when you're pretty much at full power... it will run when at idle, but only at about 70% real time. (or some percentage around 70)
Re: loging flying hours.Help!!!

Posted:
Wed May 23, 2007 6:46 am
by beaky
For purposes of logging flight hours, the Hobbs is used. Anyone who's ever learned to taxi even the most forgiving airplane knows that they deserve to log that time towards their total flight experience, so it doesn't matter that the engine is near idle and you're still on the ground...

The tach meter, as you might suspect, is meant for logging engine hours... although I do know that sometimes (in a flying club situation, for example), the tach hours are used for billing for hourly use of the plane.