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

Aircraft navigation display in a commercial cockpit showing route line and waypoints during cruise flight

How Your Flight Gets Its Route (And Why It Changes)

You are settled into cruise, seatback screen showing a little aircraft crawling along a dotted line toward your destination. Then the line bends. The aircraft makes a turn that was not on the map, tracks sideways for a few minutes, and resumes its general direction a different way. Nobody announces anything. The flight attendants are...

Behind Every Flight How Airlines Actually Work

Behind Every Flight: How Airlines Actually Work

You arrive at the gate, find your seat, and a few hours later you land somewhere else. The whole experience is so routine for frequent flyers that it can feel almost automatic. But the flight you just took was the product of hundreds of coordinated decisions made by people you never saw, governed by regulations...

Passenger in Economy class

Why the Seat Next to You Cost Twice What You Paid

You booked your ticket three months ago for $280 and felt pleased about it. The person in the seat next to you, you discover mid-flight, paid $490 for theirs last week. Behind you, someone booked six weeks ago for $195. The row in front has two people who each paid $340 on the same day....

cancelled flight announcement

Why a Crew Issue Can Cancel Your Flight: Rest Rules Explained

The gate agent picks up the microphone and delivers the phrase every passenger dreads: “Ladies and gentlemen, we’re sorry to inform you that this flight has been cancelled due to a crew issue.” No further explanation. A hundred people reach for their phones simultaneously. Some are confused. Some are furious. Most are wondering the same...

Jet bridge with stream of passengers boarding

The Boarding Problem: Why Getting On a Plane Takes Forever

The gate agent announces Group 4. A crowd of about 50 people rises from their seats, shuffles toward the desk, and forms a loose, anxious mass by the door. This is Group 4 of 8. The plane seats 180 people. Somewhere inside it, two people are trying to fit a rolling suitcase into a bin...

captain and copilot

Your Flight Just Diverted: Here’s What’s Actually Happening

The captain’s announcement comes without much warning. “Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve decided to divert to Shannon.” Or Reykjavik. Or Kansas City. Somewhere that is definitely not where you were going. Within seconds, the cabin fills with the sound of people checking their phones, calculating connections, and wondering how long this is going to take. What...

Airline operations control centre during disruption

Why Flights Get Delayed, and Why One Delay Creates More

The notification comes through about an hour before the scheduled departure. The flight is now showing a new time, twenty minutes later than the original. At the gate, the screen has been updated but no one is sure what changed. The aircraft is not there yet. The crew is not there yet either. Forty minutes...

Turnaround coordinator on the ramp

The 45-Minute Miracle: How Airlines Turn an Aircraft Around

The aircraft pulls onto the stand, the jet bridge swings out, and the seatbelt sign clicks off. Within a few seconds, half a dozen vehicles converge on the gate from different directions. A baggage tug curves in under the cargo hold. A catering truck reverses up to the forward galley door. A fuel truck rolls...

airplane and fuel truck

More Than Enough: Why Planes Carry More Fuel Than They Need

At some point before every flight, a fuel truck pulls up to the aircraft, connects a hose to the wing, and pumps in tens of thousands of pounds of jet fuel. The process takes anywhere from fifteen minutes to over an hour. Passengers barely notice. But the quantity of fuel going into that aircraft is...

Aircraft in maintenance hangar at night

What Happens to Your Aircraft the Night Before You Fly

Your 6am flight boards at 5:40. The aircraft has been sitting at the gate since just after 11pm, when the inbound crew shut down the engines and handed over the paperwork. Seven hours have passed. In that time, the cabin lights have been off, the jet bridge has been retracted, and the ramp outside has...

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