| Abridge |
Bridge linking passenger terminal
or pier to aircraft door. |
| Accident (ICAO) |
An incident associated with the
operation of an aircraft in which the aircraft sustains
damage or structural failure which adversely affects
the structural strength, performance or flight characteristics
of the aircraft and would normally require major
repair or replacement of the a affected component.
This does not include engine failure or damage,
its cowlings or accessories, damage limited to propellers,
wing tips, antennas, tires, brakes, fairings, small
ducts or punctures in the aircraft skin. It also
occurs when an aircraft is missing or completely
inaccessible. |
| ACI - Airport Council
International |
Geneva-based international body
representing the interests of some 1,200-member
airports. |
| ACMI |
Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance and
Insurance. A type of lease normally, but not always,
between two airlines, where the leaser provides
the aircraft, one or more complete crews including
their salaries, all maintenance for the aircraft,
and hull insurance for the aircraft itself. Sometimes
he will provide third-party liability cover. ACMI
charges will be by the hour, but with a minimum
number of hours per month guaranteed. |
| ACMI Lease |
See Lease, ACMI. |
| ACMI wet rate |
Charge, normally in US$ per block
hour, for an ACMI lease. |
| Ad hoc cargo charter |
A non-scheduled non-common carrier
cargo service hired to move a shipment. See Scheduled
freight service. |
| Ad hoc carrier |
Cargo carrier offering aircraft
for ad hoc charters. |
| Ad hoc charter |
See Charter, Ad hoc. |
| ADS-B |
Automatic Dependent Surveillance
Broadcast, a navigation and collision-avoidance
system. |
| AF |
All-Freight. |
| Aircraft certificate |
A certificate issued by a relevant
aviation authority in relation to a particular aircraft
used to indicate compliance with the appropriate
requirements concerning aircraft type, airworthiness,
etc. |
| Air Cargo |
Any property carried on an aircraft
other than stores, COMAT and baggage. This includes
freight, mail or express items. Also known as aircargo
and airfreight. |
| Aircraft, combi |
An aircraft intended for the movement
of passengers and cargo sharing main-deck accommodation
during the flight. |
| Aircraft, freighter |
An aircraft, either constructed,
permanently converted or temporarily converted from
passenger service, which is carrying or capable
of carrying goods or property with no passenger
complement. |
| Aircraft, green |
Aircraft flyable but unpainted,
unfurnished and basically equipped. |
| Aircraft hangar |
Building constructed or converted
to allow the maintenance or storage of aircraft. |
| Aircraft movements
per hour |
This is the amount of traffic that
the Air Traffic Control, runways and taxiways can
support in any given hour. |
| Aircraft On Ground
(AOG) |
A situation in which mechanical
failure prevents an aircraft from moving or taking
off. This is not normally at its regular maintenance
base. |
| Aircraft pallet |
A platform of standard dimensions
on which goods are assembled and secured before
being loaded as a complete unit on to an aircraft. |
| Aircraft, passenger |
An aircraft intended primarily
for the movement of passengers. Any cargo will be
secured in lower deck holds. |
| Aircraft prepared for
service |
Fully equipped and serviced aircraft
without useable fuel and payload. |
| Aircraft range |
See Range. |
| Aircraft stand |
A designated area on an apron intended
to be used for aircraft parking. |
| Aircraft tow tractor |
Vehicle used maneuver aircraft
on ground by towing and pushing when the aircraft
is not powering movement with its own engines. |
| Aircraft towbarless
tractor |
Aircraft tow tractor, which does
not utilize a tow bar. |
| Aircraft weights |
A series of weights, taken with
or without various loads, of an aircraft during
various stages of its operation. See AUW, MLW, MRW,
MTOW, MZFW, OEW, Ramp Weight. |
| Airframe |
An aircraft's structure without
power plants or aircraft systems. |
| Airlift |
The carriage of personnel or supplies
by air. |
| Airline |
A private or state company operating
owned or hired aircraft for paying passengers or
cargo on a scheduled or charter basis. |
| Airplane drain plugs |
White or brown fittings located
in the lower fuselage skin to drain fluid from the
aircraft's bilges. |
| Airport |
An area of land that is used, or
intended to be used, for the landing and take-off
aircraft including associated buildings and infrastructure.
See Terminal. |
| Airport, all cargo |
An airport solely for the use of
scheduled or ad hoc cargo aircraft operations. Can
be a common carrier airport or non-common for the
use of one company. |
| Airport, alternate |
An airport at which an aircraft
may land if a landing at the intended airport becomes
inadvisable. If an aircraft must turn around in
flight, this may be the original departure airport. |
| Airport approach lights |
Lights indicating the desired approach
to a runway, usually of sodium or high intensity
type, laid in a precise pattern of a lead-in line
with crossbars at set distances from the runway
threshold. Types of approach lighting systems are:
I) Approach lighting system with sequenced flashing
lights
II) PAPI-Precision Approach Path indicator system
III) Runway alignment indicator lights
IV) Sequenced flashing lead-in lights |
| Airport capacity |
Capacity is measured from the combined
results of the performance of two or more of the
following measures-terminal, apron and aircraft
movements. |
| Airport, charter |
An airport predominantly used for
charter flight services with little, if any, scheduled
services. |
| Airport charges |
Charges levied by airport owners
or operators to airlines for landing an aircraft.
These charges can include landing fees, take-off
fees, airside charges and landside charges. These
are the traditional sources of revenue for airports.
However, within the last 20 years, rental revenues
from airport concessions and tenants have almost
become as important a source of revenue. |
| Airport, domestic |
An airport solely for the use of
aircraft arriving from, or departing to, another
airport in the same country. |
| Airport elevation |
Highest point of an airport's usable
runways, measured in feet from mean sea level. See
Touch down zone elevation. |
| Airport, free |
An international airport at which,
provided they remain within a designated area until
removal by air to a point outside the territory
of the country, crew, passenger, baggage, cargo,
mail and stores may be disembarked or unloaded,
may remain and may be trans-shipped, without being
subject to any Customs charges or dues or, except
in special circumstances, be searched. See Bonded
Stores, Free Trade Zone. |
| Airport, gateway |
An airport serving the role of
being the airport that passengers and cargo use
to first enter a country. |
| Airport, international
|
An airport designated by the contracting
country in whose territory it is situated as an
airport of entry and departure for international
transport, where formalities required by Customs,
immigration, public health, animal and plant quarantine
etc are carried out. |
| Airport markers |
Partly-colored board defining on
airfields;
I) Boundary markers-limits of landing areas
II) Taxi-channel markers-limits of taxi tracks.
See Taxiway lighting
III) Obstruction markers-limits of ground hazards
IV) Runway visual markers – situated at equal distance
by which visibility is gauged in bad weather. |
| Airport meteorological
minima |
The minimum cloud base and visibility
in which landings and take-off at an airport are
permitted. |
| Airport operator |
A private company or government,
regional or local authority department in charge
of an airport operation. |
| Airport owner |
A private company or government,
regional or local authority department that owns
an airport. |
| Airport scheduling
|
Co-ordination of arrivals and departures
of planned flight operations at a given airport
or group of airports. |
| Airport surface detection
equipment |
Radar equipment designed to detect
all principal features on the surface of an airport,
including aircraft and vehicles. |
| Airside |
The movement area of an airport,
adjacent terrain, buildings or apron area, access
to which is regulated and controlled. Normally restricted
to airport personnel, aircraft crew and departing
and transiting passengers. See Landside. |
| Air stairs |
A short stairway built into or
added to an aircraft, for use in embarkation or
disembarkation. Folded up as part of a door or folded
on board after use. |
| Airstrip |
Unidirectional landing area, usually
of grass or of a makeshift nature. |
| Airwaybill |
A document made out by shipper
as evidence of the contract between shipper and
carrier. Not a deed of title to the consignment.
Sometimes Air Waybill. |
| Airworthy |
Describes an aircraft which meets
all relevant statutory requirements of the registering
country and any other required to give authority
to its operation. See certificate of Airworthiness.
|
| All-cargo airport |
An airport solely for the use of
scheduled or ad hoc cargo aircraft operations. Can
be a common carrier airport or solely for the use
of one company. |
| Alternate airport |
See Airport, alternate. |
| Approach lights |
See approach lights. |
| Apron |
A defined area on an airport intended
to accommodate aircraft for the purpose of loading
or unloading passengers or cargo, re-fueling, parking
or maintenance. |
| Apron bus |
Airside bus especially utilized
to move passengers and crew from airport building
to/from aircraft. See Shuttle bus. |
| Apron capacity |
The number of aircraft handled
per hour, which depends on the number of parking
stands and the capacity of ground handling agencies
to service the aircraft. |
| Apron taxiway |
Portion of a taxiway system located
on an apron and intended to provide a through taxi
route across an apron. See Taxiway. |
| ATC-Air Traffic Control |
A service operated by an appropriate
authority to promote the safe, orderly and expeditious
flow of air traffic. |
| AUW-All up Weight |
Total weight of aircraft under
defined conditions or at a specific time during
flight. Not to be confused with MTOW. |
| Auxiliary power unit |
Item carried on an aircraft for
tasks such as main engine starting, ground air-conditioning
etc. |
| |
 |
| Back track |
Taxiing along a runway in the opposite
direction to take-off and landing. |
| Baggage |
Personal property belonging to
passengers or crew carried on an aircraft in connection
with a journey. Can be checked or unchecked baggage.
Also known as luggage. |
| Baggage carousel |
Equipment used in passenger terminal
to bring passengers' baggage for collection from
apron. |
| Baggage cart |
A towed vehicle used for ramp transport
of baggage. |
| Baggage, mishandled |
Baggage involuntarily or inadvertently
separated from passengers and crew. |
| Bare Hull Charter |
Another name for a dry lease. See
lease, dry. |
| Base |
Bottom of container or pallet,
which comes into contact with the floor. |
| Basic operating weight |
MTOW minus payload. |
| Belt loader |
Equipment using a belt to load
bulk freight, baggage and mail into the aircraft.
Can be self-propelled or trailer-mounted. |
| Bilges |
Tanks in an aircraft designed to
trap non-cargo liquids such as condensation in flight
and on the ground. Emptied by means of airplane
drain plugs. |
| Birdstrike |
Collision between an aircraft and
birds. |
| Birdstrike precautions |
Measures taken at an airport to
avoid bird strikes. |
| Blast fence |
A physical barrier used to direct
or dissipate jet or propeller blast at an airport. |
| Block hour |
Chargeable hour for which an aircraft
is leased to a lessee during a wet lease (sixty
minutes of block time). |
| Block time |
Time elapsed from the moment an
aircraft starts to leave its loading point to the
moment it comes to rest at its destination. Also
known as block-to-block, chock-to-chock. |
| Boarding |
Crew and passengers entering an
aircraft prior to flight. |
| Boarding Card |
Card issued at check-in giving
authority to board. |
| Boarding gate |
See Gate. |
| Bonded fuel |
Aviation fuel imported into a country
for use only in international services on which
no tax is paid. |
| Bonded stores |
Warehousing under the direct or
indirect control of Customs authorities where dutiable
goods are stored prior to export after transshipment
or entry into the country, upon which the duty will
be paid. |
| Border controls |
Checks made on passengers and cargo
attempting to enter a country. Normally include
visa examination, passport control and immigration
formalities for passengers and import and export
licenses for air cargo. |
| Boundary lights |
Lights defining the boundary of
the landing area. Can also mean the lights marking
the perimeter of the airport's land area. |
| Braking action |
A report on conditions on the airport
movement area providing a pilot with a degree/quality
of braking expected: braking action is reported
in terms of good, medium, fair, poor or nil. |
| Broker |
An individual or company who, for
a fee, locates and arranges the hire of a cargo
aircraft, with or without crew, for a client. |
| Bulk cargo |
All cargo not packed in containers
or on a pallet. |
| Bulk loader |
Self-drive belt conveyor vehicle
for loading bulk cargo into an aircraft. |
| |
 |
| Cabin crew |
See Crew, cabin. |
| Cabotage |
The right, rarely given, to a foreign
air carrier to move passengers, mail or cargo within
the territory of a country between domestic locations
.See liberalization. |
| Capacity |
General term given to cargo space
and available lift from a given aircraft. |
| Cargo |
See Air Cargo. |
| Cargo conversion |
Passenger or other non-cargo aircraft
permanently converted to carry cargo. |
| Cargo dock |
Loading bay of a cargo terminal. |
| Cargo door |
Door in aircraft designed to take
freight, vehicles or containers. |
| Cargo door, nose |
Cargo door in nose of aircraft
hinged to swing upwards or to one side, to allow
easier access to general cargo or access for cargo
too large to pass through side cargo door. |
| Cargo door, rear |
Cargo door in rear of aircraft
often hinged to become ramp for access. Some aircraft
types open at the rear by swinging the tail housing
to one side. |
| Cargo door, side |
Cargo door in portside of aircraft
(generally). |
| Cargo ground handling |
Function of moving cargo from terminal
to aircraft side and vice versa and at all times
the cargo is on the airport's premises. Can be performed
by the air carrier second-party airline providing
such services, the airport authority or an independent
ground handling company. |
| Cargo hold |
General term for the area of an
aircraft where cargo is stowed for a journey. Can
be entire inside space on a freighter that space
not used by passengers on a Combi, or lower deck
area in a passenger aircraft. |
| Cargo insurance |
See insurance. |
| Cargo loader |
Mobile equipment with elevating
platforms and powered rollers for loading and unloading
ULDs on aircraft. |
| Cargo ramp |
Airside area upon which freighter
aircraft are parked for loading or unloading of
cargo. |
| Cargo Village |
Term sometimes used to group air
cargo operations at an airport, especially newly
constructed warehousing developments. |
| Carnet |
Customs document allowing the temporary
importation of goods without duty, conditional on
the goods being re-exported in the same state as
when they entered the country. These goods cannot
be altered, used in manufacture, or disposed of
without the duty being paid ad if they had been
imported normally. |
| Certificate of Airworthiness |
Certificate that an individual
aircraft meets all relevant legal and safety standards.
|
| CF |
Convertible Freighter. |
| Chapter III |
FAA regulations producing stringent
limits on aircraft noise and emission. Failure to
comply with the standards will prevent an aircraft
landing at an airport where the regulations are
in force. |
| Charter, ad hoc |
A non-scheduled non-common carrier
cargo service hired to move a single shipment. See
scheduled freight service. |
| Charter airport |
See Airport, charter. |
| Charter passenger |
See passenger charter. |
| Charter service |
See Ad hoc cargo charter, passenger
charter, scheduled freight service, passenger, scheduled
service. |
| Charter, split |
Where an intermediary such as a
freight forwarder charters an aircraft and re-sells
capacity to third parties. |
| Check-in |
Airline function where intending
travelers present tickets for seat reservations
and obtain boarding authority. |
| Cockpit |
A compartment to accommodate pilots
and other crewmembers. Now known as a flight deck.
|
| COMAT-Company owned
material |
An airline's own property such
as spare-parts, station supplies, ticket stock,
etc, carried in the airline's own aircraft. |
| Consignment |
One or more pieces of cargo accepted
by a carrier at one time and one time and one address,
moving as one lot under an AWB to one destination.
|
| Crew, cabin |
Personnel required to attend to
the needs of passengers on a flight. Also known
as flight attendants. |
| Crew, flight |
Personnel required for the immediate
safe handling in flight of an aircraft. |
| Crew, ground |
Personnel required for the handling
of an airport on the ground. |
| Cross wind component |
Surface wind component at right
angles to runway centerline. |
| Cube utilization |
Maximum use of available space
in an aircraft. |
| Customs |
A government organization fulfilling
four main functions:
i) Levying and collecting taxes, duties and charges
against imported and exported items with no duty-free
allowance;
ii) Levying and collecting taxes, duties and charges
against imported and exported items exceeding a
duty-free allowance;
iii) Preventing the importation of banned, prohibited
and illegal material in air cargo shipments and
passengers' luggage;
iv) Collection and collating of statistical information
from point of exit or entry. |
| Cwt |
Weight equal to 112lbs or 50.80kgs;
(US) Weight equal to 100lbs or 45.36kgs. |
| |
 |
| Dangerous goods |
Articles or substances, which are
capable of posing a significant risk to health,
safety or property. Significant and strict local,
national and international laws and regulatory rules
govern the handling, storage and movement of such
substances to and at airports. |
| Dangerous goods accident |
An occurrence associated with and
related to the transport of dangerous goods by air,
which results in fatal or serious injury to person
or major property damage. |
| Dangerous goods classes |
Nine international classes, which
highlight the categories of different types of articles:
Class1-Explosives
Class2-Gases
2.1 Flammable gases
2.2 Non-Flammable gases
2.3 Toxic gases
Class3-Flammable liquids
Class4-Flammable solids
4.1 Flammable solids
4.2 Spontaneously combustible substances
4.3 Water reactive substances
Class5-Oxidizing substances
5.1 Oxidizing substances
5.2 Organic peroxides
Class6- Toxic substances
6.1 Poisonous substances
6.2 Infectious substances
Class7-Radioactive materials
Class8-Corrosives
Class9-Miscellaneous material, including that which
can only be flown on a cargo aircraft. |
| Deck, lower |
Term for cargo hold under the main
deck. |
| Deck, main |
Main floor of aircraft forming
base of upper hold in freighter aircraft or where
passengers and cargo are placed in a Combi. |
| De-icing |
Removal of ice accretion on an
aircraft at an airport – can be done by use of fluids,
heating systems and expanding rubber membranes.
|
| Demurrage |
Charge for storage in an airline
warehouse or other warehouse, which accrues after
a given time, for consignments not collected. Also
applies to delay caused to an aircraft (eg by charterer). |
| Departure lounge |
See Passenger departure lounge. |
| Departure procedure |
ATC procedures established for
an aircraft departing from an airport. |
| Departure time |
Exact time at which an aircraft
becomes airborne, an important factor in air traffic
control. Can also be time when an aircraft moves
away from the terminal at the commencement of taxiing
prior to take-off. Colloquially known as 'off chocks'. |
| De-regulation |
Removal of domestic laws, which
liberalizes the business environment concerning
airports and airline operations. Associated with
activities in the United States in the 1980s. See
Privatization. |
| Disembarkation |
The leaving of an aircraft after
a landing, except by crew or passengers continuing
on the next stage of the same through flight. See
embarkation. |
| Diversion |
Act of proceeding to an airport
other than one at which landing was intended. |
| Domestic airport |
See Airport, domestic. |
| Doorsill height |
Height from ground to aircraft
doorsill. |
| Down time |
The time an aircraft is on the
ground at an airport, except for when it is undergoing
turnaround. Also colloquially a term for the time
of landing. |
| Dry lease |
See lease, dry. |
| Dry rate |
Cost, normally per month, of a
dry lease. See lease, dry. |
| Duty Free |
Regime of goods available only
to passengers on airside where goods are priced
without a country's duty on condition they are exported
with the passenger. |
| Duty-free allowance |
Traditionally this is the amount
in monetary value or actual quantity available to
individual qualifying international passengers.
These goods are only available airside or, increasing,
in flight. |
| Dwell-time |
Time spent at an airport by would-be
passengers between check-in and departure. |
| |
 |
| E-GPWS |
Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning
System. |
| Embarkation |
The entry of an aircraft by crew
or passengers. |
| Emergency power unit |
Power-producing part of aircraft
not used for propulsion. |
| ER |
Extended Range. |
| EROPS |
See Extended Range Twin (engine)
Operations. |
| ETOPS |
See Extended Twin Over-water Passenger
Preparations. |
| Extended Range Twin
(engine) Operations |
Sometimes referred to as EROPS,
this is a routing not more than given flight time
of 120 or 180 minutes from a useable alternative
airport. |
| Extended Twin Over-water
Passenger Operations |
The ability of an aircraft to operate
over large stretches of water, such as the Pacific.
Also known blackly by pilots as Engines Turning
or Passengers Swimming. |
| |
 |
| Ferry range |
See Range, ferry. |
| First responders-Awareness |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| First responders-Operations |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| Flight crew |
See Crew, flight. |
| Floor bearing |
Maximum weight the aircraft floor
can bear. |
| Floor load |
Static and dynamic loads imposed
by the payload. |
| FOD |
Foreign object damage. |
| FRA |
See Hazmat emergency response. |
| Free airport |
See Airport, free. |
| Freedoms |
There are ten international aviation
freedoms:
i) First freedom: To over-fly one country en-route
to another.
ii) Second freedom: To make a technical stop in
another country.
iii) Third freedom: To carry passengers/cargo from
the home country to another.
iv) Fourth freedom: To carry passengers/cargo to
the home country from another.
v) Fifth freedom: To carry passengers/cargo between
two countries by an airline of a third on a route
with origin/destination in its home country
vi) Sixth freedom: To carry passengers/cargo between
two countries by an airline of a third on two routes
connecting in its home country.
vii) Seventh freedom: To carry passengers/cargo
between two countries by an airline of a third on
a route outside its home country.
viii) Eighth freedom or Cabotage: To carry passengers/cargo
within a country by an airline of another country
on a route with origin/destination in its home country.
ix) Ninth freedom or Stand-Alone Cabotage: To carry
passengers/cargo within a country by an airline
of another country.
x) True Domestic: To carry passengers/cargo by an
airline within its home country. |
| Freeport |
See FTZ-Free Trade Zone. |
| Freight door |
See Cargo door. |
| Freight hub |
See Hub, freight. |
| Freighter aircraft |
See Aircraft, freighter. |
| FRO |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| FTZ-Free Trade Zone |
An industrial area in which manufactures
are permitted to import raw materials or semi-assemblies
for manufacturing purposes which, provides they
leave the zone by air to a point outside the territory
of the country, do not incur import duties. |
| Fuel burn |
Rate at which fuel is burnt during
a flight, normally given in tones per hour. This
is a vital element in the cost of chartering or
operating a freighter aircraft. |
| Fuel capacity |
Fuel available for propulsion.
|
| Fuel consumption |
See specific fuel consumption.
|
| Fuel farm |
Term used to describe location
of tanks holding aviation fuel at an airport. |
| |
 |
| Gate |
A point of access to the apron
from the terminal at an airport. |
| Gate hold procedure |
A procedure to hold aircraft at
the gate or other ground location whenever departures
are expected to be delayed by more than five minutes. |
| Gateway airport |
See Airport, gateway. |
| GPU-Ground Power Unit |
Equipment used to power an aircraft
to run vital services while stationary on the ground. |
| Green Aircraft |
See Aircraft, green. |
| Greeters and Weepers |
Colloquial name for people waiting
landside for incoming passengers and seeing off
passengers. |
| Ground crew |
See Crew, ground. |
| Ground support equipment |
All the handling facilities employed
to service an aircraft at an airport-such as tractors,
steps, fuelling tanks, food and cleaning supplies. |
| Ground visibility |
Prevailing horizontal visibility
near the earth's surface as reported by an accredited
observer. |
| |
 |
| Hangar |
See aircraft hangar. |
| Hazardous goods |
Another term for dangerous goods.
Also known as Hazardous material. See dangerous
goods. |
| Hazardous Materials
On-scene Incident Commander |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| Hazardous Materials
Specialist |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| Hazardous Materials
Technician |
See Hazmat emergency response team.
|
| Hazchem |
International warning panel designed
to alert as to the dangers, characteristics and
appropriate accident response to hazardous chemicals
and liquids. |
| Hazmat |
Another term for hazardous material.
|
| Hazmat emergency response |
There are five levels of response
to a Hazmat incident recognized by the FAA;
i) First Responders-Awareness (FRA)- Trained individuals
able to recognize when a Hazmat incident has occurred
or could potentially occur and alert the appropriate
authorities. They do not deal with an incident.
ii) First Responders-Operations (FRO)- Trained individuals
able to contain a Hazmat spillage or incident, to
prevent it spreading and prevent exposure. They
do not deal with an incident.
iii) Hazardous Materials Technician (HMT)- Trained
individuals able to aggressively respond to a spillage
or potential spillage in order to stop it. They
will approach the point of release in order to plug,
patch or otherwise close it. They receive an extra
24 hours of training beyond an FRO.
iv) Hazardous Materials Specialist (HMS)- Trained
individuals also able to respond aggressively to
a spillage or potential spillage, but with a specialization
training in particular aspects of responses, such
as chlorine releases. They receive an extra 24 hours
of training beyond an FRO.
v) Hazardous Materials on-scene incident commander
(HMOIC)- Person in overall command of all activities
during an emergency response. Can also co-ordinate
resources outside the airline.
vi) Hazmat emergency response team- Personnel trained
in the proper procedures to deal with an incident,
an accident or potential accident, involving hazardous
material. |
| High density rule |
US government regulation which
caps operations at Washington National, New York's
LaGuardia and JFK and Chicago O'Hare airports. |
| HMOIC |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| HMS |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| HMT |
See Hazmat emergency response.
|
| Hub-and-spoke |
An airline's operation, which utilizes
major services to connect key hub airports, with
minor services then connecting with minor destinations
unable to support major services themselves in terms
of traffic. |
| Hub, freight |
An airport used, normally by an
integrator or scheduled freight airline, to sort
and disperse goods through its network from incoming
flights. Can also be accessed by road services operated
by the airline or its agents. A hub can be an exclusive
freight-only airport or a facility at a general
airport. |
| Hub, passenger |
An airport used to permit passengers
to transfer to a second flight to reach a final
destination. See Hub-and-Spoke. |
| Hull insurance |
See insurance. |
| Hush-kit |
Device to limit noise levels produced
by aircraft engines. See chapter III. |
| Hush kitting |
To fit a hush-kit on an existing
engine. |
| |
 |
| IAPA International
Airline Passenger Association Organization |
With the aim of promoting safety
in airline travel, improving passenger handling
and comfort
|
| IATA International
Air Transport Association Organization |
Whose aims are to promote safe,
regular and economical air transport as well as
providing means of collaboration among international
air transport companies. Its specialist publication
function established published standards for the
handling of dangerous goods and livestock by air.
|
| ICAO International
Civil Aviation Organization |
A UN agency charged with the objective
to develop the principles and techniques of international
air navigation and to foster planning and development
of international civil air transport. |
| Igloo |
Bottomless shell made of fiberglass,
metal etc, conforming to aircraft dimensions, produced
to cover the maximum useable area of a pallet to
which it is secured in flight. |
| ILS Instrument Landing
Systems |
Aids for an instrument approach
to an airport. |
| Insurance |
There are four main types of insurance
involved with most common air freighter operations
matters.
i) Hull insurance- This is taken out by the owner
of the aircraft in order to protect his investment
against damage to, or loss of, the aircraft itself.
A charterer should never be involved with this as
it is usually the responsibility of the owner, and
its premiums should be already included in any charter
or lease price.
ii) Third party liability- This is to protect the
owner or operator against claims that may be made
by other people, for example if the undercarriage
damaged the roof of a house when the aircraft was
landing, or if the wingtip hit another aircraft
while maneuvering on the ground. Once again, it
is the owner's responsibility to provide this cover
all the time his crews are flying the aircraft.
However, on dry leases the owner may not want to
be responsible for events, which take place, while
the aircraft is under someone else's control, so
in that case the third party may be required to
provide cover. Amounts of liability that third party
insurance covers can be substantial.
iii) War Risk insurance- This is applied by insurance
companies and underwriters if the aircraft intends
to operate into countries or areas considered by
them to be dangerous. If the aircraft operates to
these areas without the additional war-risk cover,
then the Hull and Third-party cover may become invalid.
And thus the whole operation becomes illegal. The
cover can be taken out for a specific period, or
on a per flight basis.
iv) Cargo insurance- International regulations demand
that an airline will provide insurance cover for
all cargo carried on its aircraft, up to a specified
limit. This limit is set by the Warsaw convention,
and the cargo liability currently stands at US$20
per kilogram of cargo carried it applies throughout
the entire period during which the cargo is in the
care of that airline and covers theft, damage, loss
or total destruction in the event of an accident.
If a customer feels its cargo deserves a higher
rate of cover than US$20 per kilo, then it is their
responsibility to take out that additional insurance.
|
| Integrator |
A non-common-carrier freight service
controlled by a published timetable and operating
to a network of stations exclusively to its own
benefit and providing liveried vehicles and staff
to manage the entire transport of the consignment.
|
| International airport |
See Airport, international. |
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| Landside |
Those parts of an airport not considered
airside. Access is open to all persons legally entitled
to be at an airport, subject to local and national
laws. |
| Large aircraft (US) |
Aircraft over 12,500lbs maximum
certificated take-off weight. |
| Lease, ACMI |
Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance and
insurance lease. |
| Lease, dry |
Lease of an aircraft without flight
crew. Sometimes called a Bare Hull Charter. It is
the lease of the aircraft only, without crew. In
this case, the lessee has to supply his own crew
(with all the associated costs), provide all his
own maintenance, and obtain own insurance coverage.
It is normally charged at a fixed rate per month,
plus an hourly charge for engine overhauls or replacements,
and major checks. |
| Lease, wet |
Hire of aircraft from another carrier
or leaser complete with flight crew, where major
servicing is carried out by the owner but with hirer's
logo and insignia temporarily applied. |
| LEL |
See Lower Explosive Limit. |
| Liberalization |
Political and economic trend to
remove regulatory and legal barriers to any given
airport or airline operation. Common examples include
'Open Skies' agreements, breaking of monopolies
in service provision, authority to start airlines
in competition to established carriers, allowing
foreign carriers to provide cabotage between on
routes between domestic airports. See Privatization. |
| Load classification
number |
A number defining the load-carrying
capacity of the paved areas of an airport without
cracking or permanent deflection. |
| Load factor |
Revenue ton-miles (RTM) preformed
as a percentage of RTM available. |
| Load factor (SI) |
Revenue tonne-kms (RTK) performed
as a percent age of RTK available. |
| Load manifest |
Detailed inventory of load on the
aircraft. |
| Load range |
See Range, load. |
| Loading chart |
Chart displaying correct locations
of cargo in transport aircraft. |
| Loading contour |
Maximum aircraft envelope for the
purposes of stowage inside the aircraft, having
taken into account the required clearance between
the aircraft wall and the load. See Maximum aircraft
envelope. |
| Loading diagram |
Detailed plan of cargo floor and
under-floor holds on which responsible officer marks
position and masses of all cargo and final center
of gravity position. |
| Local time |
The time at any airport using the
time zone appropriate to the location of the airport.
|
| Lounge |
See Passenger departure lounge. |
| Lower deck |
See deck, lower. |
| Lower Explosive Limit
(LEL) |
This is the lowest point at which
enough vapors have been released from a given hazardous
liquid to cause a fire when in contact with an ignition
source. |
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| Main deck |
See deck, main. |
| Main runway |
Runway most used for take-off and
landings. |
| Maximum aircraft envelope |
Maximum space available in the
interior of the aircraft, less a given tolerance,
from the manufacturer's specifications. |
| MLW |
Maximum landing weight. |
| Movement area |
Runways, taxiways and other areas
of an airport outlined for taxiing, take-off and
landing of aircraft, exclusive of loading ramps
and parking areas. |
| MRW |
Maximum ramp weight. |
| MTOW |
Maximum take of weight (MRW minus
taxi and run-up fuel). |
| Multi-Airport System |
An airport operator /authority
managing more than one airport within the same metropolitan
area. |
| MZFW |
Maximum Zero Fuel Weight (MTOW
minus useable fuel and other consumables). |
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| NAFTA |
See North American free trade association.
|
| Navaid |
Navigational aids, especially electronic,
situated at airports. Typical examples include Airport
Rotating Beacon; DME Distance Measuring equipment;
SDF Simplified Directional Facility; LDA Location
Distance Available; LOC ILS Localizer; PAPI Precision
Approach Path Indicator system; REIL Runway End
Identification Light; SID Standard Instrument Departure;
TACAN Tactical Air Navigation; VASI Visual Approach
Slope Indicator; VOR VHF Omni Range; VORTAC, where
VOR and TACAN aids are located together at an airport
Navaid classes VOR, TACAN and VORTAC aids are classed
according to operational use of airports – t=terminal,
l=low altitude; h=high altitude. |
| Nocturnal |
Operations between hours of sunset
and sunrise. |
| Noise abatement climb |
Means of flying an aircraft from
an airport so as to climb rapidly until the built-up
area is reached and thereafter reducing power to
maintain climb until the area is over-flown or 5,000
ft is reached. |
| Noise footprint |
The contour beneath an aircraft
of constant noise level measured in decibels. |
| Noise restrictions |
Laws concerning permitted noise
levels at airports aimed at preventing disturbance
to local residents, most widely felt by aircraft
operators who must reduce noise levels from aircraft
and airports which are restricting the type of aircraft
able to land. Some airports are actively marketing
the lack of noise restrictions as a user benefit.
See chapter III. |
| Noise restrictions
local |
National and international laws
concerning permitted noise levels at airports. |
| North American Free
Trade Association |
Association of USA, Canada and
Mexico to promote a free trade area between the
three countries similar to the EU. |
| NOTAM |
Notice containing information essential
to airport personnel connected with flight operations. |
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| OEW |
Operating Empty Weight. |
| Out-of-gauge |
Description of cargo exceeding
standard dimensions. |
| Out-station |
See station. |
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| Pallet |
See Aircraft pallet. |
| Parallel runways |
See Runways, parallel. |
| Passenger |
A person, other than a crew member,
destined to fly from an airport, either fare-paying
or non-fare-paying. |
| Passenger charter |
Aircraft hired to fly (normally)
non-IATA regulated seasonal or ad hoc services.
These services are closely associated with high
volume, low yield passenger business to holiday
destinations. See Airport, charter. |
| Passenger, charter |
Passenger flying on a non-scheduled
ticket. |
| Passenger check-in |
The location where a passenger
presents a valid air ticket and is booked as flying. |
| Passenger departure
lounge |
Area of an airport airside where
passengers are held prior to boarding a scheduled
or charter aircraft before commencing their journey.
Can also be an area exclusive to ticket holders
of a specific airline or class of travel. |
| Passenger handling
agent |
An agent appointed by an airline
to provide check-in, baggage handling, specialist
passenger assistance and flight information at an
airport. See Self-handling. |
| Passenger hub |
See Hub, passenger. |
| Passenger loading bridges |
Equipment connecting terminal building
to aircraft doors to allow passengers to board and
leave aircraft. |
| Passenger, scheduled
service |
Service operated by airline conforming
to a published schedule. |
| Passenger, transit |
Passengers arriving from a first
country who remain airside at an airport prior to
an international flight to a third country. Not
subject to passport or immigration procedures. |
| Payload |
Disposable load generating revenue.
Also known as cargo payload. |
| Port |
On left hand side of an aircraft
looking towards the front. |
| Privatization |
Disposal of state assets such as
airports to the private sector. Airport privatizations
are limited but growing in popularity. Examples
include some British and recent Australian airport
operations. |
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| QC |
Designation used to indicate the
ability of an aircraft to be changed quickly from
passenger to cargo use and vice versa. |
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| Ramp |
Area where servicing and boarding
of aircraft is possible. |
| Ramp equipment operations |
Operations responsible for providing
ground support equipment to aircraft, such as supply
of drinking water and cleaning services. |
| Ramp weight |
Maximum weight of aircraft at start
of flight (MTOW plus taxi and run-up fuel). |
| Range |
Distance an aircraft can fly or
is permitted to fly with a specified load and (usually)
after making allowances for specified maneuvers
such as diversions, stand-off, go-around. Etc. |
| Range, ferry |
Range an aircraft can fly empty
between one point and another. |
| Range, load |
Range an aircraft can fly while
carrying payload. |
| Rapid exit taxiway |
Taxiway connected to a runway at
an acute angle are achieved on other taxiways, thereby
minimizing runway occupancy times. See Taxiway. |
| Rear cargo door |
See cargo door, rear. |
| RFS |
See road feeder service. |
| Road feeder service |
A service offered by a scheduled
cargo operator to move goods to and from the aircraft
and/or terminal by road service. Allows a carrier
to offer services to a city to which they do not
fly aircraft. Some such devices are allocated an
airline flight number. |
| RIV-Rapid Intervention
Vehicle |
An emergency vehicle intended to
provide an effective means of fire suppression pending
the arrival of major fire accident units. |
| RTK |
Revenue tonne-kms. See load factor. |
| RTM |
Revenue tone-miles. See load factor.
|
| Runway |
A defined rectangular area on a
land airport prepared for the landing and take-off
run of aircraft along its length. Normally numbered
in relation to their magnetic direction, rounded
off to the nearest 10 degree; for example, runway
18 would be referred to as runway 20. |
| Runway crossing procedure |
Procedures to be followed by aircraft
and ground vehicles required to cross active runways
following instructions issued by the ground movement
controller. |
| Runway end safety area |
An area symmetrical about the extended
runway centerline and adjacent to the end of the
strip meant to reduce damage to an aircraft in the
event of that aircraft in the event of that aircraft
undershooting or over-running the runway. |
| Runway in use |
Any runway or runways being used
for take-offs or landing. When multiple runways
are used, they are all considered active runways. |
| Runway lighting |
Typical runway lighting systems
are:
I) Center lightning - flush centerline lights spaced
at intervals;
II) Edge limits - lights having a prescribed angle
used to define the lateral limits of a runway;
III) Guard lights - provided at taxiways on access
points to prevent inadvertent incursion by aircraft
and vehicles. |
| Runway, main |
See Main runway. |
| Runway markings |
All-weather markings on runways
served by non-visual precision approach aids and
on runways having special operational requirements. |
| Runway markings, basic |
Markings used for operations when
visual flight rules consist of centerline marking
and runway direction numbers. |
| Runway markings, instrument |
Markings on runways served by non-visual
navigation aids, intended for landing under instrument
weather conditions. |
| Runway threshold |
The usable limit of a runaway. |
| Runway visibility by
observer |
Horizontal distance at which light
of about 25 candle power at night or a dark object
against the horizon in the daytime can be seen by
an observer near the end of the runway. |
| Runways, parallel |
Two or more runways at the same
airport whose centerlines are parallel. In addition
to numbers, such runways are designated L (Left),
R (Right); for three runways. L(Left); R (Right)
and C (Centre). |
| RVR - Runway Visual
Range |
In bad weather the horizontal distance
at which black and white markers of standard size
are visible, the figure being transmitted by ATC
to pilots. |
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| SCD |
See cargo door, side. |
| Scheduled freight carrier |
A common-carrier freight service
controlled by a published timetable and operating
to a network of stations. |
| Scheduled freight service |
A common-carrier freight service
controlled by a published timetable and operating
to a network of stations. |
| Scheduled service,
passenger |
See Passenger, scheduled service. |
| Schevengen agreement |
European Union agreement where
certain EU countries allow travelers to move between
their countries with absolutely no border controls.
Not all EU countries are signatories. See Border
controls. |
| Scissor lift |
Platform for loading cargo, containers,
etc by means of cross arms jointed in the middle
to take the appearance of scissors. |
| Security |
Combination of measures and human
and material resources intended to safeguard civil
aviation against acts of unlawful interference. |
| Self-handling |
When an airline performs a task,
such as check-in and ground handling, for which
service providers make an alternative available. |
| Serious injury |
Sustained by a person at an airport
in an accident which requires hospitalization for
more than 48 hours within seven days of injury;
results in fractures of any bone, except simple
fracture; involves lacerations; involves injury
to internal organs; involves second or third degree
burns; involves exposure to infectious substances
or injurious radiation. |
| Short take off and
landing |
See STOL. |
| Shuttle bus |
Landside bus connecting outlying
terminals in a multi-terminal airport, car parks
to terminal buildings or operating between terminals
and hotels. |
| Skin |
External covering of an aircraft's
structure. |
| Small aircraft (UK) |
Aircraft between 17,000 kgs and
40,000 kgs. |
| Small aircraft (US) |
Aircraft tare-weight 12,500 lbs
or less, maximum certificated take-off weight. |
| Specific fuel consumption |
Rate at which fuel is consumed
divided by power and thrust developed-this becomes
a measure of engine efficiency. It is also used
as a basis for the hiring charge for the aircraft. |
| Split charter |
See charter, split. |
| Stand alone cabotage |
See freedoms. |
| Starboard |
On the right hand side of an aircraft
looking towards the front. |
| Station |
An airport in an airline's network
other than main network airport. Can also be known
as an out-station. |
| STOL |
Short take off and landing characteristic
aircraft requiring shorter than normal runway lengths.
|
| Stop and go |
Procedure where an aircraft will
land make a complete stop on the runway and commence
take-off from that point. |
| Stop for non-traffic
purposes |
A landing for any purpose other
than taking on or discharging passengers, cargo
or mail. |
| Stop, technical |
A planned landing for the re-fueling
of an aircraft. |
| Stopway |
Defined rectangular area at the
end of the take-off run available, prepared and
designated as a suitable area in which an aircraft
can be stopped in the event of a discontinued take-off
or overrun landing procedure. |
| Stores |
Articles loaded on to an aircraft
at an airport of a readily consumable nature for
use or sale during flight, including commissary
supplies. |
| Strip |
An area of specified dimensions
enclosing a runway and taxiway to provide for the
safety of aircraft operations. |
| Supplemental capacity |
Capacity hired by an airline from
a supplemental carrier or other aviation source.
|
| Supplemental carrier |
A carrier offering capacity which
a scheduled carrier can hire to supplement its capacity
during peak periods. |
| Surface movement guidance
and control systems |
For use under low visibility conditions
at larger airports. Pilot self-interpreted system
may consist of selectively operated taxiway lights
and warning and stop signs. |
| Surface Movement Radar |
SMR's role in Europe not yet covered
by IACO provisions. |
| Surface visibility
(US) |
Visibility observed from eye-level
above the ground. |
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| Taxi |
Movement of an aircraft under its
own power at an airport. |
| Taxiway |
Defined path established for taxiing
of aircraft, providing a link between parts of an
airport. See Apron Taxiway, Rapid Exit taxi-way.
|
| Taxiway lighting |
Typical taxiway lighting systems
are:
i) Taxi-holding position lights;
ii) Taxiway stop bars. |
| TBO |
Time between overhauls. |
| TCAS II |
The most advanced version of Traffic
Alert and collision Avoidance system. |
| Technical stop |
see stop, technical. |
| Terminal |
A building on an airport which
links airside and landside, through which passengers
embarking and disembarking pass, and appropriate
airports services are available. Also a building
on an airport where air cargo being flown or received
is stored, customs examination is possible, consolidations
built up or broken down and/or cargo is transshipped
to another destination. |
| Terminal capacity |
The number of passengers per hour,
which is influenced by movement rates through various
junctions such as security, customs, immigration.
|
| Tie-down diagram |
Diagram showing the planned method
of securing particular types and items of cargo
in flight. |
| Tie-down point |
Mechanism designed to secure pallets
or containers in flight. |
| Time slot |
A period of time allocated to an
aircraft to take off. |
| TOGW |
Take off gross weight. |
| Touch and go |
When an aircraft land and departs
on a runway without stopping exiting the runway.
|
| Touchdown |
The point at which an aircraft
first makes contact with the landing surface. |
| Touchdown Zone |
The first 3,000ft of the runway
beginning at the threshold. |
| Touchdown Zone elevation |
The highest elevation in the first
3,000ft of the landing surface. |
| Tow tractor |
See aircraft tow tractor. |
| Traffic pattern |
Traffic flow prescribed for aircraft
landing at, taxiing on or taking off from an airport.
|
| Transit passenger |
See Passenger, transit. |
| Transit Zone |
Area where cargo arriving from
a first country which remains airside at an airport
prior to an international flight to a third country.
Not subject to customs. |
| Transporter |
A self-propelled vehicle equipped
with a powered roller platform for hauling ULDs
between the cargo terminal and the loader at the
aircraft and vice versa. |
| Truck mounted stairs |
Stairs mounted on a truck capable
of being moved to an aircraft's side to facilitate
passenger boarding or leaving. |
| Turnaround |
Time between the moment aircraft
engines are stopped at the terminal or ramp, ground
support operations completed and next load of passengers
and/or cargo is loaded and engines started for next
flight. |
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| ULD-Unit load device |
A standard-sized aircraft container
unit used to facilitate rapid loading and unloading
of aircraft having compatible handling and restraint
systems. |
| UN Number |
Four-digit number assigned to dangerous
substances or group of substances by the United
Nations to facilitate safer handling. See Dangerous
goods. |
| Unit load |
A number of items of cargo in a
single box or container or loading on a pallet. |
| Usability factor |
Percentage of time during which
use of a runway or system of runway is not restricted
by cross wind component. See Cross wind component.
|
| Useable fuel |
Total mass of fuel consumable in
flight; usually some 95%-98% of total capacity.
|
| Useful load |
Payload plus useable fuel. |
| Utility tug |
A vehicle used for towing baggage
carts or trailers between passenger or cargo terminals
and the aircraft. |
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| Water equivalent |
Depth of surface water the would
result from the melting of ice and snow at an airport.
|
| Wet lease |
See lease, wet. |
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| Zero fuel weight |
See aircraft weight. |
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