Tim

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Tim

Tim is the owner and editor-in-chief of AeroCorner, where he has spent the last seven years overseeing aviation content covering aircraft, airlines, airports, and the broader aviation industry. Through years of researching, editing, and publishing aviation-focused content, he has developed extensive practical knowledge of commercial aviation and air travel. Based in Asia and a frequent traveler himself, Tim also brings firsthand passenger experience to AeroCorner’s coverage. Outside of publishing, he has also explored aviation firsthand through hands-on flight training in New Zealand.

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Blog posts by Tim

A row of Boeing 737 MAX aircraft parked in a remote storage area

Boeing 737 MAX: How 346 Deaths and a Grounded Fleet Remade Aircraft Certification

The Boeing 737 MAX 8 operated as Lion Air Flight JT610 departed Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta International Airport at 06:20 local time on October 29, 2018, with 181 passengers and 8 crew members on board. Twelve minutes later, it struck the Java Sea at high speed. There were no survivors. The Indonesian accident investigation authority, KNKT, found...

emergency response at a rural midwestern US airport, circa 1989

United Airlines Flight 232: The Sioux City Crash That Rewrote Crew Training

United Airlines Flight 232 departed Denver Stapleton International Airport at 2:09 PM on July 19, 1989, bound for Philadelphia with a scheduled stop in Chicago. There were 285 passengers and 11 crew on board. Captain Al Haynes, 57, had been flying for United for 33 years. First Officer William Records and Second Officer Dudley Dvorak...

Air Route Traffic Control Center with controllers at radar workstations in a dimly lit operations room

Behind the Radio: How Air Traffic Control Actually Works

Somewhere in the background of every flight you have ever taken, a set of voices you never heard was coordinating everything. The phrase “cleared for takeoff” that crackles through the cabin speaker represents the end of a chain of decisions made by people you will never meet, working in buildings you will never see, managing...

Two commercial aircraft at high cruising altitude with contrails, showing the relative proximity that TCAS is designed to prevent becoming a collision

The System That Prevents Mid-Air Collisions: How TCAS Works

If you have watched enough aviation documentaries, you have probably heard it: a sharp, synthetic voice cutting through cockpit audio saying “TCAS, climb, climb now.” It sounds alarming because it is. The Traffic Collision Avoidance System, known universally as TCAS, is the last automated safety net between two aircraft that are on a collision course....

Oceanic air traffic control operations centre with controllers at glowing workstations monitoring transatlantic traffic

No Radar, No Problem: How Air Traffic Control Works Over the Ocean

There is a moment on most transatlantic flights when the moving map on your seatback screen stops showing familiar airways and city names. The aircraft is somewhere over the North Atlantic, it is probably the middle of the night, the cabin is dark, and the ocean below contains no airports, no landmarks, and no ground-based...

Commercial pilot in cockpit during emergency procedures, focused on instruments and controls with runway visible through windscreen

Squawk 7700: What Happens When a Pilot Declares an Emergency

Somewhere between the chime of the seat belt sign and the calm voice on the PA saying “ladies and gentlemen, we are diverting to an alternate airport,” a set of events has already been set in motion that most passengers will never see. A four-digit code has been dialed into a transponder. A radar target...

Air traffic controller training facility with rows of simulated radar workstations and students learning alongside instructors

The Staffing Crisis in the Sky: Why ATC Can’t Fill Its Positions

When an airline announces a delay blamed on “ATC,” most passengers picture some abstract congestion, a queue in the sky, the routine friction of a busy system. What they less often picture is a controller working their sixth consecutive day, on a ten-hour shift, in a facility running at 60 percent of the staffing level...

Passengers waiting at gate during long delay

ATC Delay: Why Your Flight Is Delayed Before It Even Leaves the Gate

You are sitting at the gate, door closed, ready to go. The captain comes on the PA and says something like: “Folks, we’ve been issued an ATC ground delay. Our expect-departure clearance time is in about 40 minutes. We’ll keep you updated.” You look out the window. The sky above you is clear. The aircraft...

Air traffic controller at a TRACON radar workstation focused on a glowing radar display

The People Watching Every Flight: Inside Air Traffic Control

Somewhere in the last few seconds before your aircraft begins its takeoff roll, a voice comes through the flight deck speakers: “Cleared for takeoff.” Three words. They sound routine. But behind them is a human being sitting in a darkened room or a glass-walled tower, holding responsibility for a patch of sky that may currently...

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