- Joined
- Mar 29, 2015
- Posts
- 2,317
Scratching out the time in the boarding pass is a bit odd, but I guess they do what the majority is used to?I just found it really weird.
That would be the twenty hundred flight!Scratching out the time in the boarding pass is a bit odd, but I guess they do what the majority is used to?
But in general I don’t mind the 12hr clock for departures. When i tell people what flight i’m on I say the ‘8pm’, not the ‘2000’.
Got a Qantas flight from LAX to SYD within the last month. This did not occur for me.Just a random query. Caught a flight home on Friday from LAX to Sydney and the Qantas staff member crossed out the printed time 21.45 to a handwritten time of 9.45.
Any rationale behind them doing that ?. She did it almost as an auto action
QF18?Got a Qantas flight from LAX to SYD within the last month. This did not occur for me.
QF12.QF18?
Yep gave me a laugh the last time I was in the USA when someone saw the clock on my phone screen and commented "wow your phone is in military time"In the US they refer to it as military time. It's not used widely at all.
Also a term used elsewhere but 24 hr has taken over.In the US they refer to it as military time.
That would be “Zulu time” - sticking with the military theme.Otherwise, go the full hog and use UTC.
Being a former Navy man, I'm all for the 24 hour times...Also a term used elsewhere but 24 hr has taken over.
That would be “Zulu time” - sticking with the military theme.
Ditto. Absolutely no excuse for rocking up 12 hrs early/late for a plane/train/automobile….Being a former Navy man, I'm all for the 24 hour times...
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For the vast majority it’s useless/confusingZulu is useful