Chapter 2: General Operations and Policies
Knowledge and Competency
Generally speaking, joining a virtual airline is not a recommended first step for people new to the world of flight simulation and commercial aviation. The purpose of a virtual airline is to add a layer of structure and “gamification” to the open ended, open world nature of at home flight simulators.
We do not expect our members to know everything and we do not expect our members to come to us with the knowledge and skill set of a fully trained real world airline pilot. However, we do expect a certain baseline of knowledge as to how a commercial airline flight is legally operated as well as a willingness to learn and pursue self-study.
In time, we hope to offer some kind of training program for our members once our structure is more robust. We cannot offer that at this time, but we are always happy to field questions, and we hope all members will ensure that they have read and understand this document before they begin booking flights and filing PIREPs.
We want to strike a happy medium. If all you want is a flight tracker that has no restrictions, then something like Volanta, SimToolKitPro, etc. is more of what you’re looking for. We strive to not be stifling with our requirements; we want to be realistic where it matters and relaxed everywhere else. PIREPs will be rejected or invalidated if we see things that do not follow the requirements found here in the FOM, but we will also offer feedback and invite people to seek advice if they are struggling with some aspect of procedure or technique.
As always, if in doubt please ask questions prior to booking a flight and filing a PIREP, it’s much easier to prevent PIREPs being rejected or invalidated that way. Our Discord is the best place for this (invite link on your vAMSYS dashboard) but you can also reach us at nks@fusionvaa.com.
Welcome!
Activity Requirements
At vspirit we ask all pilots to file 1 PIREP over a rolling 90-day period.
After 90 days without a PIREP have passed and the activity rule has been triggered, pilots will have a grace period of 10 additional days to bring their account active. The activity period can be reset if requested prior to deactivation.
In addition, we ask all new pilots to file 1 PIREP, which has status of 'Complete' or 'Accepted', within 10 days of registration.
PIREPs must be filed via Pegasus to count towards the activity requirement.
Rejected and Invalidated PIREPs do not count towards the activity requirement.
If a pilot’s account is removed due to inactivity, their PIREP history will not be lost, and the account can be reactivated under the same Pilot ID. Pilots should contact the admins via email (nks@fusionvaa.com) or Discord to request activation. Do not try to create a new account; request the old one to be reactivated.
Holidays
vAMSYS includes a holiday function which allows pilots a period of time during which the Activity Requirements no longer apply. FDXvirtual gives pilots an allotment of 180 days per year of holiday time.
To be eligible, the pilot’s account must be older than 10 days – thus, they must have met the New Hire Activity Requirements.
Holidays can be requested by opening the "My Profile" menu on the left hand navigation menu in vAMSYS and selecting "Preferences" from the dropdown box. On the screen that subsequently opens, you will find the Holidays section in the middle of the page, where the amount of time available to you will be listed above the "Book Holiday" button. Clicking "Book Holiday" will open up a prompt where you can select the start and end dates for the holiday period.
Once submitted, your holiday time will appear in the "Your Holidays" section immediately below, where you can see the start and end dates, status, and a "Delete" button where you can remove/cancel the holiday period.
While on holiday, flights cannot be booked. The holiday period can be cancelled at any time and unused days will be returned to the holiday allotment.
Ranks
The functionality discussed in this section will change in appearance with the new version of vAMSYS releasing in late September 2024. This section will be updated with a new screenshot and corrected instructions (if applicable) as soon as possible.
To provide a sense of career progression, vspirit has several tiers of ranks which pilots will progress through as they accrue hours, points, and bonus points from their PIREPs.
At this time, vAMSYS does not allow routes or aircraft types to be rank limited; thus, pilots can fly any aircraft and route (providing all livery and aircraft type requirements are followed) regardless of their rank.
There are Honorary/Staff ranks which will be disbursed at the sole discretion of the admin team for certain purposes. These cannot be qualified for independently or requested.
Transfer Hours
No transfer hours from other virtual airlines or from VATSIM, PilotEdge, IVAO, POSCON, etc. will be accepted. All new pilots start at 0 hours and 0 points and will progress from there.
Group Flights and Online Networks
We encourage, but do not require, pilots to utilize VATSIM and other online networks, and from time to time we may organize group flights which will usually be online and sometimes may be done along with a YouTube/Twitch streamer.
In all scenarios we require pilots to firstly comply entirely with the policies of the platform(s) in use as they are representing vspirit. Any pilots who are found to have violated any of these policies will be subject to disciplinary action up to and including permanent removal of their account.
Secondly, we require pilots to follow our own Code of Conduct and Bylaws as we do in any offline vspirit activity. Any pilots who are found to have violated any of these policies will be subject to disciplinary action up to and including permanent removal of their account.
Finally, we require pilots to follow the procedures found in this document and any future checklists, AOM/FCOMs, etc. that may be released, while flying with others or online. In representing vspirit you represent the abilities and qualities we wish to be known for, and your example is what others will judge us by. For that reason, we ask that pilots wait to fly online until they are confident in their ability to correctly operate their aircraft and to follow ATC instructions. We encourage anyone to seek guidance and tutoring if they need assistance. Repeated instances of immature or incompetent behavior online will be subject to disciplinary action up to and including permanent removal of their account.
Flight Tracking
Time Acceleration
Time Acceleration during a flight is prohibited without exception; PIREPs flagged for time acceleration will be invalidated.
Slewing
Slewing during a flight is prohibited without exception; PIREPs where slewing is seen after pushback will be invalidated.
Pausing
Pausing is allowed during a flight.
PIREPs that have over sixty (60) minutes of cumulative time paused will be sent for manual review by staff – please leave a comment explaining the reason for the long pause time. We will almost certainly approve the PIREP.
However, we do ask pilots to not pause excessively. This is a policy we are still trying to develop, so for the time being it is a judgment call by the staff as to whether or not someone is abusing pausing during flights.
Generally speaking, we ask that a flight be completed during one “sitting” — essentially during the same day. Spirit does not operate flights of sufficient length to require relief pilots, so we ask our pilots to not let flights run overnight with a pause at top of descent to be completed the next day.
We understand that plans can change after a flight has been started, so we are flexible on this point, but if something changes after you’ve started a flight to where you will have to leave the simulator paused for a long time before you can complete the flight, we recommend you instead abandon the flight and restart it later when you can complete it in a more appropriate amount of time.
The reasoning behind our caution around pausing is twofold: One, we have seen cases where a flight being paused can corrupt Pegasus's tracking, garbling or interrupting the PIREP log or causing it to never come out of the paused state to track the rest of the flight, and there is no way for us to fix this on our side. The longer a flight remains paused, the more likely a problem like this is to occur. The vAMSYS team keeps Pegasus in active development to identify and correct bugs, so this is not an inherent problem in Pegasus that will never be addressed, we are being proactive in helping you avoid frustration in the relatively unlikely case this happens.
Two, particularly with MSFS, active pause can cause the aircraft to freeze in position while the flight time clock continues to run, incorrectly and unfairly inflating the flight time for that PIREP, which creates an opportunity to abuse the system to quickly accrue unearned hours. Active pause doesn’t always do this, but we do see it fairly regularly and when we see PIREPs where this happened they are invalidated. Staying paused in MSFS, depending on the add-on and the type of pause used, can also continue burning fuel while paused, causing the aircraft to refuel itself when unpaused, or alternatively cause a complete failure of both engines and the aircraft's systems. This creates an unrealistic and messy scenario to recover from that is not appropriate for an approved PIREP.
Starting and Ending Locations
A flight must begin and end at either a gate or a remote stand in a cold and dark or turnaround power state. Please do not start a flight on a runway or taxiway or with the aircraft powered up with engines on.
We understand that it is possible to sometimes forget to start Pegasus tracking at the gate, so within reason we are fine with tracking being started before takeoff. If we notice a trend of this happening we will inquire and PIREPs may be rejected or invalidated as a result.
PIREPs
Requirements for Approval
To be approved, a PIREP must meet the following criteria:
- You must book the same type of aircraft that you will fly.
- You must use an appropriate livery for the aircraft type.
- Your landing rate must be under -500 fpm to receive points and log hours, or under -600 fpm to log hours.
- You must have taken off and landed with an appropriate fuel load for the flight with no fuel added in flight/after pushback.
- You must not have used used slew mode after pushback or used time acceleration during the flight.
- You must have used an appropriate route for the flight and completed the flight in an appropriate amount of logged flight time without extensive detours or obvious departures from the route due to being lost or negligent managing the autopilot, etc.
- You must depart from and arrive at the booked origin and departure airports. In-flight diversions are allowed with a valid reason.
- Staff reserve the right to reject or invalidate PIREPs for any departures from controlled flight or good airmanship not specifically outlined above, but those situations are rare.
Processing Statuses
All PIREPs are processed automatically when submitted and may take up to ten (10) minutes to be processed by the system. In certain circumstances, which will be discussed in more detail later, a PIREP will fail automatic scoring and will require a manual review by the admin and staff team. A manual review can take longer, up to a week in some circumstances, but every attempt is made to go through the manual review queue several times per week.
Once processed by the automatic scorer, the PIREP will receive one of six statuses. These are:
- Accepted: PIREP has passed automated scoring and is now complete.
- Awaiting Review: PIREP has failed automated scoring and requires manual review.
- Rejected: PIREP will grant hours to the pilot but no points.
- Invalidated: PIREP will grant neither hours nor points.
- Processing: PIREP is undergoing processing.
- Reply Needed: PIREP needs your input prior to review by the staff team.
It is important to understand that having PIREPs sitting in the review queue does not prevent you from booking and flying additional flights. The system may require a reply on a PIREP — see the following section — before it lets you book a flight, but once all PIREPs that require it have been replied to, you can book a new flight and continue flying. Our team will review PIREPs that are sent for manual review as soon as possible, but keep in mind that review times are dependent on staff availability.
Reply Needed
The functionality discussed in this section will change in appearance with the new version of vAMSYS releasing in late September 2024. This section will be updated with a new screenshot and corrected instructions (if applicable) as soon as possible.
PIREPs with the status of Reply Needed require prompt attention by the pilot, who will not be able to book or start a new flight until they leave a response on the PIREP. No notification will be sent via email; the next time the pilot tries to book a flight they will be prevented from doing so and instead will see the following:
Clicking the Reply Needed button will take the user to the View PIREP screen, where they will need to scroll to the bottom to see the PIREP Comments section and click the Add Comment button to leave a reply.
Leaving a comment on a PIREP via Pegasus or within vAMSYS will automatically result in the PIREP being sent for manual review. This should not be done unless a comment has been requested as outlined above, or if the pilot knows in advance that the PIREP will fail auto processing and the pilot wishes to account for the circumstances in advance.
Please note that rejections or invalidations of PIREPs due to landing rates are not up for negotiation. We apply these rules universally, regardless of alleged circumstances. Leaving a comment claiming a gust of wind, low frame rates, or some other extenuating circumstances caused the hard landing only risks a PIREP's review being further delayed as it will move the PIREP into the manual review queue. It is best to just accept the situation, learn from it, and seek to further refine your landing technique.
We are not able to modify, remove, or delete the landing rate recorded by Pegasus.
Common Causes of Failure
Name | Condition | Action |
---|---|---|
Livery flagged for review. No reply needed unless contacted. See FOM for more information. | See next section | Sent for manual staff review. Reply not needed unless we ask. |
Livery automatically rejected. Contact staff with questions or see FOM. | See next section | Sent for manual staff review. Reply not needed unless we ask. |
Longer than anticipated flight length. Please leave a comment if anything unusual delayed the flight. | Flight took longer than average or scheduled time by more than 25% or 30 extra minutes. | Sent for manual staff review. Reply not needed unless we ask. |
Time acceleration detected. PIREP may be invalidated, please leave a comment. | - | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Likely invaldiation. |
Fuel increase detected during flight. PIREP may be invalidated, please leave a comment. | - | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Likely invaldiation. |
Flight paused over 60 cumulative minutes, please leave a comment stating the reason. | - | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Likely approval. |
Landing rate over -500 fpm, PIREP rejected (hours granted, no points). | Landing rate greater than -500fpm. | Rejected (hours kept, no points granted) with no exceptions. |
Landing rate over -600 fpm, PIREP invalidated (no hours or points granted). | Landing rate greater than -600fpm. | Invalidated (neither hours nor points granted) with no exceptions. |
Diversion detected, please state reason for diversion. | Flight landed at an airport other than the booked destination. | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Approval contingent on scenario/appropriateness of diversion. |
Multiple landings or large bounce detected, please describe the cause. | - | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Likely approval. |
Negative points, please review PIREP and leave any information relevant to cause(s). | - | Sent for manual staff review. Pilot reply required. Likely invaldiation. |
Claims
Due to the great potential of abuse, you may only submit one (1) Claim per calendar month.
Please note that abuse of this system may result in rejection of subsequent Claims and/or PIREPs filed with Pegasus and may result in permanent removal from vspirit.
Because it might not always be possible to file PIREPs via Pegasus, vAMSYS provides the ability to file a PIREP Claim. However, we do not allow the Claims system to be used as a manual PIREP system or in lieu of using Pegasus. All PIREPs should be tracked and submitted via Pegasus, the Claims system is a fallback option only.
You may file a claim by clicking the blue active booking tile on the vAMSYS Dashboard and then from the booking screen selecting the "Manual PIREP / File a Claim" option under Booking Actions. You will be required to include proof that your flight took place, information on accepted forms of proof is below.
You should only use this function if Pegasus crashed during your flight or if you cannot otherwise file a PIREP via Pegasus for a flight you began tracking with Pegasus. You may also file a Claim if you fail to track your flight in Pegasus, provided you can provide proof that the flight took place.
In the event of a simulator crash during the flight, please try to recover the flight should you use a tool -- such as Volanta Premium -- or add-on that allows you to recover a saved flight. If that is not possible, a claim can be filed if:
- The flight crashed after 80% of the flight had been completed (measured against the scheduled flight time);
- Some kind of proof of flight can be included showing the progress of the flight up to the point of the simulator crash.
Proof of Flight
You are requried to attach proof that the flight occurred to your claim. This can either be an image or a link.
Acceptable forms of proof:- A screenshot of Pegasus showing the ACARS page with the flight time and log.
- A screenshot of Volanta, STKP, etc. showing the flight's statistics including the aircraft type, flight time, landing rate, etc.
- A link to the flight's history on https://stats.vatsim.net/
- A link to the flight's history on Volanta, STKP, etc.
- A screenshot of or link to the flight's history captured by any other 3rd party platform similar to the tools discussed above.
- A screenshot of the cockpit.
- A screenshot of a 3rd party tracking tool that includes no information about the flight other than the flight path.
- A screenshot of another VA's ACARS client.
- No proof at all.
- Any screenshot or link to any kind of tool or evidence that does not display enough information to validate flight time, aircraft type, etc.
Landing Rates
It has become fashionable in the flight simulation community to pursue landing rates as low as possible. While a smooth landing is satisfying to pilots both real and virtual, it is not advantageous or safe to pursue a landing with a low vertical speed as the top priority.
To discourage this behavior, we have made our landing rate scorer binary – your landing was safe (less than 500 fpm), or it wasn’t (greater than 600 fpm). Between 500 and 600 fpm your PIREP will be rejected (hours granted but no points) while PIREPs greater than 600 fpm will be invalidated (no hours or points granted).
We recommend you target a consistent landing rate between -150 and -300 fpm.
Schedules
Updates
We are fortunate to have access to high quality airline schedule data. Our goal is to keep our schedules up to date each month. Generally, these updates are done silently in the background and pilots should not experience any disruptions from schedule updates. A tagging system in vAMSYS is used to denote which schedule set a flight is from; these tags are visible when booking a flight.
Historic Routes
The functionality discussed in this section will change in appearance with the new version of vAMSYS releasing in late September 2024. This section will be updated with a new screenshot and corrected instructions (if applicable) as soon as possible.
Some historic flights from past eras of Spirit Airlines will be included in our schedules for pilots who may be interested in exploring older aircraft. These flights are subject to all the same PIREP scoring, points, and operational requirements outlined in this document for regular flights and are not restricted to any rank levels.
When booking a flight, you will see a text box appear on the booking screen after a flight number is selected with a remark describing the route. Modern/current flights will not have this text box.
Liveries
Automated and Manual Reviews
Every time a PIREP is submitted, Pegasus and vAMSYS logs the livery used on the flight and compares the logged livery against a database of previously flown liveries.
When it flags a livery as having been seen for the first time, it is placed into a manual review queue for the admin/staff team to check. This allows us to ensure you have flown the correct aircraft type and used an appropriate livery.
Having the PIREP held for livery review is not necessarily an indication that there is a problem with your livery and/or PIREP. If you used an appropriate livery and your PIREP was marked by the system as Awaiting Review, please feel free to continue flying and the member of staff reviewing the PIREP will approve the livery and it will be added to the approved livery list.
It is important to understand that as far as vAMSYS is concerned, a "livery" is more than the paint job on the airplane -- vAMSYS considers a livery to be the paint job on the outside of the airplane plus the aircraft type you booked plus the aircraft type you flew. Each time a livery is used it is reviewed as a combined entity and if it doesn't match in any category, the livery is rejected.
It is also important to understand that a previously approved livery may be flagged for review again in the future. An update to the addon that was used, a change to the livery’s folder name, changes to the aircraft’s name in its configuration files – things of this nature may prompt a re-review. It is not necessary for you to tell us that you’ve used a livery before, or that it came off of the Recommended Livery list, etc., as it will not speed up your PIREP’s review, nor will it prevent additional reviews in the future.
Requirements for PIREP Approval
We ask, but do not require, pilots to use a period correct livery for the flight they’re operating. As of early 2024, there are still "skittles" liveries in service. Blue/grey pixel liveries are acceptable on the Airbus fleet so long as they are saved for types that wore them.
We do not allow pilots to use a fictional livery. This includes variants such as the "black tail" liveries that circulate for the Fenix and FlyByWire aircraft. It also includes liveries like the blue and grey pixel liveries when applied to an aircraft that never wore them. The blue pixel livery was only worn by the MD-80 and A321. The grey pixel livery was only ever worn by the A319 and A321. As such, neither livery is appropriate for an A320 or A20N.
For reference images of these liveries, please see the Livery QRH, Appendix.
Types and Substitutions
As of 2024, the fleet that Spirit Airlines operates shares a common type rating: the A320 family. As such, we allow our pilots the freedom to substitute any Airbus for another. We have done the work for you regarding substitutions: each vspirit flight from the modern/current schedule is uploaded with the A319, A320, A20N, A321, and A21N as bookable options. Thus, we do still require that you book the same aircraft type that you fly on the PIREP.
Given this policy of flexibility where we put every variant of the A320 family on every route, we've also undone the work done by Spirit's dispatchers and network planners in ensuring the aircraft on each route is capable of completeing the assigned route. Spirit does not operate long, overwater flights such as flights from the west coast of the United States to Hawaii, but there are longer trips to South America and trips that operate in and out of "hot and high" airports. It is up to each pilot to ensure that the aircraft type being booked is suitable to the mission in terms of capacity, range, and performance. If you have any concerns about prior to a flight, the best place to seek help is on our Discord.
For historic flights, the MD-80 is listed as the sole bookable type. This includes both the MD-82 and MD-83. No other MD-80 subvariant is approved for historic Spirit flights.
As we require you to book the same aircraft type you intend to fly and since the MD-80 is not bookable on current/modern flights, you should never assume the MD-80 can be used on current/modern flights. It cannot be substituted for any variant of the Airbus family.
Be on guard against the following common aircraft type mismatches:
- The Fenix A319, A320, and A321 are all CEOs and and must be booked as A319s, A320s, and A321s. If the A320 and A321 are booked as an A20N or A21N, respectively, the PIREP will be invalidated.
- The FlyByWire is an A320neo (A20N) and is not an A320ceo (A320). You must book it as an A20N or the PIREP will be invalidated.
- The iniBuilds is also an A320neo (A20N) and not an A320ceo (A320). You must book it as an A20N or the PIREP will be invalidated.
- The ToLiss A320 is also an A320neo (A20N) and not an A320ceo (A320). You must book it as an A20N or the PIREP will be invalidated.
- The Toliss A321 has both a CEO and a NEO variant available and share a lot of common files. The A321neo must be booked as an A321neo (A21N) and not an A321ceo (A321) and it is important that you make sure your livery folder name does not reflect a CEO livery (engine types are the biggest giveaway here).
Aircraft
Approved Add-ons
If there is an add-on that you don’t see in one of the tables below, please double check with us before you use it for a PIREP. Contact us via Discord or email. There may be something we’ve overlooked, or there may be a reason why we’ve excluded it. Please do not assume.
Mainline
Aircraft | MSFS | P3D | XP11/12 |
---|---|---|---|
Airbus A319 - IAE | Fenix A319 | FSLabs A319 Aerosoft A319 | Toliss A319 |
Airbus A320 - IAE | Fenix A320 | FSLabs A320 Aerosoft A320 | FlightFactor A320 |
Airbus A320neo - PW | FBW A20N iniBuilds A20N | FSLabs A320 Aerosoft A320 | Toliss A320neo |
Airbus A321 - IAE | Fenix A321 | FSLabs A321 Aerosoft A321 | Toliss A321 |
Airbus A321neo - PW | - | - | Toliss A321neo |
Historic
Aircraft | MSFS | P3D | XP11/12 |
---|---|---|---|
Douglas DC-9 | - | Coolsky DC-9 | - |
McDonnell Douglas MD-82/83 | Leonardo MaddogX | Leonardo MaddogX | Rotate MD-80 |
Prohibited Add-ons
We understand that by prohibiting certain add-ons, we may disappoint some users. We also understand that these prohibitions can entirely exclude an aircraft type from one simulator or another. An aircraft being included in the schedules does not mean that any add-on representing that model is approved for PIREPs.
The vspirit team want all aircraft types to be represented in each simulator as badly, if not more so, than our users do. We have a certain standard of realism and quality that we want to promote, and so for add-ons that we feel fall outside of these standards, or add-ons that we think take advantage of the flight simulation community, we choose to exclude them so that we are able to deliver on one of our goals: maximizing realism where it counts.
The following aircraft are prohibited from use; any PIREP filed with them will be invalidated.
- The LatinVFR Airbus product line, both with and without the Horizon mods installed.
- Visual only modifications to the ToLiss A320neo attempting to turn it into an A320ceo.
- Visual only modifications to the FlightFactor A320ceo attempting to turn it into an A320neo.
Scoring Rules
Most US-based A320 operators start engine #1 first and vspirit is no different.
Each aircraft has a unique set of scoring criteria which determines what items grant or remove points from a PIREP total when processed. The example set of aircraft scoring rules which follows is for the A320 and is mostly the same for all other aircraft types in the vspirit fleet.
There are some instances where a new or rare addon may flag events such as flap extensions with different values from what vAMSYS and Pegasus are currently configured to recognize and as a result may result in PIREPs being flagged with inaccurate violations. The admin and staff will catch as many of these as possible during review and will update the scorers to reflect these new variables whenever possible.
Pilots should view any positive points values as bonus points and any negative points as a required procedure. For example, Single-Engine Taxi should be done whenever it is practicable to do so, but it is more important to ensure the minimum engine warm-up or cooling time is met should the departure or arrival gate be too close to the runway to taxi on one engine and warm-up/cool down.