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Turboprop Time Tracker

Dedicated turboprop flight log — totals, 90-day recency and landing counts computed live, private in your browser.

Turbine PIC is the headline number for insurance and Part 135 minimums; logging starts/cycles alongside hours also mirrors how the airframe itself is tracked.

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Total hours
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Hours, last 90 days
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Night hours
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Flights logged

No entries yet — add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.

⚠️ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only — 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.

Disclaimer: This tool is for general informational and estimation purposes only and is not professional financial, tax, accounting or legal advice. All figures are estimates — verify with a qualified professional before making decisions. Read the full disclaimer.

A free turboprop time tracker that lives in your browser: log every flight in seconds, keep cycles and PT6/turbine starts visible, and watch class-specific totals and 90-day recency update live. CSV export included, no account needed.

About Turboprop Time Tracker

A mixed logbook hides the numbers that matter to turboprop pilots. Turbine PIC is the headline number for insurance and Part 135 minimums; logging starts/cycles alongside hours also mirrors how the airframe itself is tracked. Here every entry is class-specific, so totals, landings and the 90-day recency window reflect only this kind of flying — and details like cycles and PT6/turbine starts live in structured fields rather than the remarks column. Data stays in your browser, totals recompute on every keystroke, and the CSV export drops straight into your training or insurance file.

How to use Turboprop Time Tracker

  1. 1Add each flight with date, aircraft, route, time, landings and role.
  2. 2Check the live tiles: lifetime hours, last-90-day hours and night time.
  3. 3Export the CSV when a rating application, insurer or examiner asks for evidence.

Why use Turboprop Time Tracker?

  • Class-specific totals — only your turboprop time feeds the numbers
  • Structured fields for cycles and PT6/turbine starts
  • Rolling 90-day recency window recomputed on every entry
  • Private by design: localStorage only, one-click CSV export
  • Instant, offline-friendly — nothing to install

Frequently asked questions

What counts as turbine time and why track cycles?+

Time in an aircraft powered by a turbine engine — turboprop or jet — counts as turbine time, and turboprop PIC is often quoted separately from jet time in job minimums and insurance quotes. Cycles (engine starts) matter because hot-section exposure follows cycles, and single-pilot turboprop insurers frequently ask for both recent hours and recent cycles on type.

How does the 90-day recency tile work?+

It sums the time of every logged flight dated within the preceding 90 calendar days and refreshes each time you open the tool. Pair it with the landing counts in your entries and you can see at a glance whether your class-specific passenger-carrying recency is comfortably alive or about to lapse — before you promise anyone a ride.

Where is my logbook data stored?+

Everything you enter is saved in your browser's local storage on your own device — nothing is uploaded to any server. That means your flight records stay completely private, work offline, and load instantly. Use the CSV export regularly to keep an off-device backup copy of your records.

How do I back up or print these records?+

Use the Export CSV button below the table: it downloads your full turboprop log 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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