Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 29,677
It seems that mechanical IME is higher as the day goes on mainly things that occur in subsequent earlier flights like a sensor, etc. More instances for us have occurred on later day flights. My husband almost always flies the earliest flight in the day and the latest flight in the evening for business. This is generally our pattern for leisure travel too. Majority of mechanical are those late evening flightsMy anecdotal experience says there is actually a higher chance of a mechanical issue in the morning.
On multiple occasions I have
All of which delayed the first flight of the day for that plane.
- Been scheduled on planes that were late coming out of overnight maintenance
- Came out of overnight maintenance with a new or the same problem that required the overnight maintenance
- Maintenance having forgotten to run some required check after the maintenance that now needs to be run.
However, it doesn't mean mechanical doesn't occur in the morning. Our Athens, Greece flight on the 25th was an hour late leaving due to two things: Mandatory flight crew rest time and then when they turned on the plane to do technical checks a sensor went off requiring the engines to run for at least 5 mins before repeated technical checks.
One thing to note is that the early morning flights have a higher chance of another plane being available to swap out. In some of those cases you may have zero idea a mechanical issue occurred on the assigned plane if they were able to swap it out for another one quickly enough.