Ozone RA tool on flight plan release

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Anyone familiar with an ozone risk assessment tool for various flight levels that can be annotated on the flight release?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4444275/
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Quote: Anyone familiar with an ozone risk assessment tool for various flight levels that can be annotated on the flight release?

Impact of Cabin Ozone Concentrations on Passenger Reported Symptoms in Commercial Aircraft
Not sure if this is what you're referring too, but when I was at Republic flying the 175, our company was too cheap to buy the ozone scrubbers for the cabin. We had two sets of charts we would have to look at. Its been awhile, but if I recall correctly, along the top was your time of the year by month, and going down the side was your latitude in degrees. You would just enter the chart at the appropriate latitude/month. I believe the value on the chart was the highest FL you can be at for no more than 2 hours. Then there was another chart which would tell us the highest FL we could be at for the duration of the flight.

Example- April was usually the worst time of the year for us. I remember doing a flight from Montreal-Houston. We would start at FL320, stay there for 2 hours, then drop down to FL260 for the remainder of the flight for Ozone.

Since we carried the charts in our manuals on board, all we had annotated on the release on the top was something along the lines of "This flight has been planned in accordance with ozone risk management/exposure procedures. Reference ozone chart..."
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Thanks! Obviously, the cargo carriers don't give a rats a$$ if we get lung or brain cancer!
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Alaska was big on the ozone tool, especially in the winter flying up north on the -400.
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Quote: Thanks! Obviously, the cargo carriers don't give a rats a$$ if we get lung or brain cancer!
Decades of flying on the back side of the clock will get you waaaaay before the ozone will.
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Quote: Decades of flying on the back side of the clock will get you waaaaay before the ozone will.
Crazy schedules come with the job both in cargo and passenger flying! Whereas, ozone scrubbers, preventive flight planning, UV protective windows, etc., are proactive measures that reduce the risks of aviation related health issues! It comes down to ignorance, laziness and profits.
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Contaminated cabin air is another issue ............. Strangely enough , OSHA has nothing to do with the quality of the air you breathe inside the jet
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Quote: Contaminated cabin air is another issue ............. Strangely enough , OSHA has nothing to do with the quality of the air you breathe inside the jet
Hmm... Wonder what political lobby group paid for that.
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One of our first carve outs.

Sec. 121.578 — Cabin ozone concentration.

(e) A certificate holder need not comply with the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section for an aircraft—

(1) When the only persons carried are flight crewmembers and persons listed in §121.583;

(2) If the aircraft is scheduled for retirement before January 1, 1985; or




Sec. 121.583 — Carriage of persons without compliance with the passenger-carrying requirements of this part.

(a) When authorized by the certificate holder, the following persons, but no others, may be carried aboard an airplane without complying with the passenger-carrying airplane requirements in §§121.309(f), 121.310, 121.391, 121.571, and 121.587; the passenger-carrying operation requirements in §§121.157(c) and 121.291; and the requirements pertaining to passengers in §§121.285, 121.313(f), 121.317, 121.547, and 121.573:
(1) A crewmember.

(2) A company employee.

(3) An FAA air carrier inspector, a DOD commercial air carrier evaluator, or an authorized representative of the National Transportation Safety Board, who is performing official duties.

(4) A person necessary for—

(i) The safety of the flight;

(ii) The safe handling of animals;

(iii) The safe handling of hazardous materials whose carriage is governed by regulations in 49 CFR part 175;

(iv) The security of valuable or confidential cargo;

(v) The preservation of fragile or perishable cargo;

(vi) Experiments on, or testing of, cargo containers or cargo handling devices;

(vii) The operation of special equipment for loading or unloading cargo; and

(viii) The loading or unloading of outsize cargo.

(5) A person described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section, when traveling to or from his assignment.

(6) A person performing duty as an honor guard accompanying a shipment made by or under the authority of the United States.

(7) A military courier, military route supervisor, military cargo contract coordinator, or a flight crewmember of another military cargo contract air carrier or commercial operator, carried by a military cargo contract air carrier or commercial operator in operations under a military cargo contract, if that carriage is specifically authorized by the appropriate armed forces.

(8) A dependent of an employee of the certificate holder when traveling with the employee on company business to or from outlying stations not served by adequate regular passenger flights.

(b) No certificate holder may operate an airplane carrying a person covered by paragraph (a) of this section unless—

(1) Each person has unobstructed access from his seat to the pilot compartment or to a regular or emergency exit;

(2) The pilot in command has a means of notifying each person when smoking is prohibited and when safety belts must be fastened; and

(3) The airplane has an approved seat with an approved safety belt for each person. The seat must be located so that the occupant is not in any position to interfere with the flight crewmembers performing their duties.

(c) Before each takeoff, each certificate holder operating an airplane carrying persons covered by paragraph (a) of this section shall ensure that all such persons have been orally briefed by the appropriate crewmember on—

(1) Smoking;

(2) The use of seat belts;

(3) The location and operation of emergency exits;

(4) The use of oxygen and emergency oxygen equipment; and

(5) For extended overwater operations, the location of life rafts, and the location and operation of life preservers including a demonstration of the method of donning and inflating a life preserver.

(d) Each certificate holder operating an airplane carrying persons covered by paragraph (a) of this section shall incorporate procedures for the safe carriage of such persons into the certificate holder's operations manual.

(e) The pilot in command may authorize a person covered by paragraph (a) of this section to be admitted to the crew compartment of the airplane.

[Doc. No. 10580, 35 FR 14612, Sept. 18, 1970, as amended by Amdt. 121–96, 37 FR 19608, Sept. 21, 1972; Amdt. 121–159, 45 FR 41594, June 19, 1980; Amdt. 121–232, 57 FR 48663, Oct. 27, 1992; Amdt. 121–251, 60 FR 65935, Dec. 20, 1995; Amdt. 121–253, 61 FR 2614, Jan. 26, 1996; Amdt. 121–298, 68 FR 41217, July 10, 2003]
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Ozone, really?
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