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Can someone please explain to me what trip and Duty Rigs are and what additional $$$ value they can add to you pay check??? Also which airline's offer trip rigs and which ones do not?
In simplest terms, there are generally four "types" of time your employer will keep track of:
Block (generally, brake release to brake set, although for pay purposes it may vary)
Duty (from the time you report for your day to the time you are released to rest)
Time Away From Base (TAFB, or trip time: round-the-clock time from when you report at the beginning of a trip to the time you are released at the end of the trip)
Credit (the hours for which you are paid; although you will get a min guarantee that you generally cannot credit below unless you drop flying.)
Block time typically credits 1:1, including any ramp and enroute delays (called block or better), but some airlines have fixed average block times for city pairs, meaning you don't get credited for block time above the average or established block.
A 2:1 (as an example) "duty rig" simply means you receive one hour of credit for each hour of duty.
A 4:1 (as an example) "trip rig" simply means you receive one hour of credit for every four hours time away from base.
If your company paid with these rigs, at the end of your trip, you will be credited the greater of block, duty rig, or trip rig. So if your trips are "soft" (have lots of down-time) you'd still get 6 hours of credit for each 24 hours away, even if you only block a couple of hours of flying.
Rigs theoretically force crew planners to plan efficient trips by making inefficient trips at least no less expensive to the airline than efficient ones.
I'll let others take a stab at the rest of your question.
Subtract all of the above and you pretty much have Mesa's contract.
Does skywest really have a 2:1 adn 4:1 duty and trip rigs??? If so that would make a huge difference on teh paycheck. I used to be gratefull for the 4 hr min day at my old airline so that when I got done sitting around in the terminal for 16 hours to fly three legs I could still get paid for the full 4 hrs. The trip rig would have doubled my pay.
Not including block or better, how many regoinals actually have trip or duty rigs like they have been explained above? My guess is not many. -Bean
Comair:
2:1 duty
3.75:1 trip
4 hr min day
Block or better per leg
....what additional $$$ value they can add to you pay check??? ...
But CMR is on a month lookback basis, not per trip. IOW, you could have many days of under 4 hours, but as long as you averaged over 4/day for the month the rig doesn't kick in. Same with the other rigs. Don't know about Skywest.
AWAC has this as posted on our website.
2:1 duty rig
4:1 trip rig
3 hr. min day
Greater of scheduled block or actual block time