by Saratoga » Mon Mar 14, 2005 6:43 pm
Well I don't sleep on the flights...want to sometimes, but hey!
For the long long flights (say Sydney to LAX) the 747 has two crews, one takes off, flys for a while, the pilots alternating duties from radios and flying, then about halfway through or so, they get up, the backup crew sits down, and the first crew goes and sleeps or eats or just chills or sits in the cockpit or whatever.
I don't know what my truly longest flight was, but I've been on several trans-Pacific flights including some from New York direct. My longest pilot where I was the one flying is probably the US-Europe routes I fly sometimes right now.
And yes, airline pilots frequently switch duties during flights. I let my copilot fly a lot, but I take over sometimes, sometimes we cooperate to get a task done. It's always one person flying one on the radios with ATC. During low approaches, ones where the weather truly sucks, I will almost always take over, as will pretty much any airline captain. Just some things require experience and if we encounter wind shear, I don't want someone flying who doesn't know how to recover.
Pilot for a major US airline certified in the: EMB-120, CRJ, 727, 737, 757, 767, and A-320 and military, T-38, C-130, C-141, and C-5 along with misc. other small airplanes. Any questions, I'm here for you.