SIC Time Tracker
Isolate your second-in-command time: log only qualifying flights and keep lifetime, 12-month and 90-day second-in-command totals audit-ready.
Why a separate second-in-command record: SIC legitimacy depends on the aircraft or operation REQUIRING two crew โ a record proving that context is the difference between counted and discounted time.
No entries yet โ add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.
โ ๏ธ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only โ not certified avionics, not a source of regulatory truth. Always verify against official sources (FAA/EASA/DGCA) and your operator's approved documents before flying.
Free second-in-command time tracker: a clean, single-purpose record of every qualifying flight with lifetime, 12-month and 90-day totals โ the exact numbers ATP total-time credit and similar gates ask for.
About SIC Time Tracker
Ask what gates ATP total-time credit โ and the answer is never 'total time'; it's second-in-command time specifically. Yet SIC legitimacy depends on the aircraft or operation REQUIRING two crew โ a record proving that context is the difference between counted and discounted time, which is why this number is so painful to extract from a mixed logbook on demand. Run it as its own ledger instead: qualifying flights only, each carrying the context that makes it count, with lifetime and rolling 12-month/90-day sums maintained automatically. The figure employers and underwriters want becomes a tile you read, not a weekend you spend.
How to use SIC Time Tracker
- 1Log each qualifying flight with its second-in-command time and the context that qualifies it.
- 2Read totals off the tiles: lifetime, 12-month and 90-day.
- 3Export the CSV when applications, insurers or interviews want evidence.
Why use SIC Time Tracker?
- โSingle-purpose record: only second-in-command time, never diluted
- โLifetime + rolling 12-month + rolling 90-day totals, always current
- โQualifying-context field keeps every entry defensible under audit
- โFeeds the real gates: ATP total-time credit
- โBrowser-private with one-click CSV export
Frequently asked questions
What counts as second-in-command time?+
Time as a required second pilot: the aircraft's type certificate demands two crew, or the operation does (135 IFR pax rules, an approved SIC program, international ops). SIC in an aircraft that needed only one pilot is the classic discounted entry, so this tracker's context field exists to record WHY each flight required you โ the single detail that determines whether recruiters count the column or strike it.
Doesn't my electronic logbook already total this column?+
Most can filter for it, but the result is only as good as years of tagging discipline โ and SIC legitimacy depends on the aircraft or operation REQUIRING two crew โ a record proving that context is the difference between counted and discounted time. A dedicated ledger flips the burden: entry here means qualifying, with the justification recorded alongside. It's a verification layer as much as a convenience: when this total and your logbook filter agree, you quote the number with confidence.
How do the rolling windows help?+
The 90-day and 12-month tiles answer the recency questions that pair with every total: underwriters ask for 'second-in-command hours in the last 12 months' nearly as often as lifetime totals, and ATP total-time credit style gates frequently include recency riders. Rolling sums recomputed at page load mean the figure you quote is correct on the day you quote it.
Is this tool private โ who can see my entries?+
Only you. Entries live in your browser's local storage and never leave your device, so there is no account, no cloud sync and no one else with access. Because the data is device-local, remember to export a CSV backup before clearing browser data or switching computers.
How do I back up or print these records?+
Use the Export CSV button below the table: it downloads your full second-in-command record as a spreadsheet-ready file. From there you can print a clean copy, archive it with your training folder, or import it into any electronic logbook program. Exporting monthly is a good habit since the working data lives only in your browser.
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