I’d actually be interested in seeing that flight plan decipheredThe plan shows waypoints of the flight's route, each one has unique alpha codes.. that's why it probably does not make a lot of sense, but av geeks would know. eg: MOLLY is located in the Philippines. while TARAAL is at Greenwich Park, on the North Shore of Sydney.
There's other data such as planned flight levels and so on, but hopefully that explains it in very much layman's terms (stop laughing, jb! )
Thanks, I get your drift…The plan shows waypoints of the flight's route, each one has unique alpha codes.. that's why it probably does not make a lot of sense, but av geeks would know. eg: MOLLY is located in the Philippines. while TARAAL is at Greenwich Park, on the North Shore of Sydney.
There's other data such as planned flight levels and so on, but hopefully that explains it in very much layman's terms (stop laughing, jb! )
I went here;Thanks, I get your drift…
Bugger. I am also on my balcony hoping it was arriving from the north.Damn it! wasn't lucky enough to see it land at Syd.
Looks like it's coming in from the West
It just didn't a West to East fly by..Bugger. I am also on my balcony hoping it was arriving from the north.
Yep I can see him nowIt just didn't a West to East fly by..
Not sure if it will go north or south. Hopefully NORTH.
Maybe it's going to swing around the city.. and the harbour and land from the north
Thanks , appreciate that...Re the flight plan… DCT means direct, so not on an airway. Basically you go to a waypoint, then track along an airway to another waypoint. So, for example NERIG Y343 ASKOR, means that you joined the Y343 airway at NERIG, and you’ll get off at ASKOR. F330 etc is the planned altitude. The last number 1839 is the planned flight time.
This is only a small part of the complete plan as given to the pilots, and is only related to the route as given to ATC. Manually loading it into an FMC would give you the complete route, but would also include dozens of other waypoints which are on the complete plan. The nav plan also includes fuel burn by leg, safety heights, etc, and then there is a fuel and weight planning section. So, no, you won’t find 250 tonnes in this section, simply because ATC don’t care how many tonnes you have.
The plan shows waypoints of the flight's route, each one has unique alpha codes.. that's why it probably does not make a lot of sense, but av geeks would know. eg: MOLLY is located in the Philippines. while TARAL is at Greenwich Park, on the North Shore of Sydney.
There's other data such as planned flight levels and so on, but hopefully that explains it in very much layman's terms (stop laughing, jb! )
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If you type a waypoint in to the FMC, it offers the choices, sorting them by distance. 999 times out of a thousand, the closest is the one you want. There was an accident in the early days of electric jets (a 767 I think), in which they chose the wrong one, and found a large hill in the way.Waypoints are actually not unique so there's more than one MOLLY (eg, there's another near El Paso, Texas) and more than one TARAL (another near New Delhi, India).