What flight has the highest ratio of timezone difference to flight time?





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31















Inspired by crossing four time zones in six hours today: what commercially operated scheduled flight has the largest time difference per flight time?



For example, if there's a 2-hour flight that has 4 hours time difference between the two ends, this has a ratio of 2:1 (2.0), while a 4-hr flight across two time zones would be 1:2 (0.5).



Also note that I'm interested in absolute (modulo 24) time difference: crossing the date line creates big differences on paper, but doesn't really matter from a physiological perspective. In other words, -18 hours feels the same as +6.










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  • 24





    Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

    – krubo
    Mar 29 at 12:35











  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – JonathanReez
    Apr 1 at 5:10


















31















Inspired by crossing four time zones in six hours today: what commercially operated scheduled flight has the largest time difference per flight time?



For example, if there's a 2-hour flight that has 4 hours time difference between the two ends, this has a ratio of 2:1 (2.0), while a 4-hr flight across two time zones would be 1:2 (0.5).



Also note that I'm interested in absolute (modulo 24) time difference: crossing the date line creates big differences on paper, but doesn't really matter from a physiological perspective. In other words, -18 hours feels the same as +6.










share|improve this question




















  • 24





    Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

    – krubo
    Mar 29 at 12:35











  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – JonathanReez
    Apr 1 at 5:10














31












31








31


4






Inspired by crossing four time zones in six hours today: what commercially operated scheduled flight has the largest time difference per flight time?



For example, if there's a 2-hour flight that has 4 hours time difference between the two ends, this has a ratio of 2:1 (2.0), while a 4-hr flight across two time zones would be 1:2 (0.5).



Also note that I'm interested in absolute (modulo 24) time difference: crossing the date line creates big differences on paper, but doesn't really matter from a physiological perspective. In other words, -18 hours feels the same as +6.










share|improve this question
















Inspired by crossing four time zones in six hours today: what commercially operated scheduled flight has the largest time difference per flight time?



For example, if there's a 2-hour flight that has 4 hours time difference between the two ends, this has a ratio of 2:1 (2.0), while a 4-hr flight across two time zones would be 1:2 (0.5).



Also note that I'm interested in absolute (modulo 24) time difference: crossing the date line creates big differences on paper, but doesn't really matter from a physiological perspective. In other words, -18 hours feels the same as +6.







air-travel factoids timezones






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edited Mar 31 at 8:34







jpatokal

















asked Mar 29 at 6:28









jpatokaljpatokal

118k18376536




118k18376536








  • 24





    Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

    – krubo
    Mar 29 at 12:35











  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – JonathanReez
    Apr 1 at 5:10














  • 24





    Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

    – krubo
    Mar 29 at 12:35











  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – JonathanReez
    Apr 1 at 5:10








24




24





Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

– krubo
Mar 29 at 12:35





Long ago, Concorde used to arrive New York more than 2 hours before it left Paris...

– krubo
Mar 29 at 12:35













Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– JonathanReez
Apr 1 at 5:10





Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– JonathanReez
Apr 1 at 5:10










8 Answers
8






active

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24














Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (UUS) to Sapporo-Chitose (CTS):




  • 1h30 flight time

  • 2 hours time difference


  • 1.33 ratio.


You actually arrive before you left, without any of the international date line trickery:



enter image description here



(from Google Flights)



I'm pretty sure there must be lots of short 30-minutes-or-so hops across a timezone boundary which would result in a ratio of 2, so I'm not sure the ratio is really the best basis for comparison, though.



Edit



It turns out it's not as easy as I thought to find short flights crossing timezone boundaries, but I found one:




  • Mariehamn (MHQ) - Stockholm (ARN)

  • 35 minutes flight time

  • 1 hour time difference

  • 1.71 ratio


enter image description here



There's also Gibraltar (GIB) - Tangier (TNG), same characteristics.



Also Warsaw-Minsk, 2h hours time difference, 1h10 flight, same 1.71 ratio.



Note that the answers vary according to the time of the year, as:




  • some areas switch to daylight savings time in the summer, but not all, and not necessarily at the same time

  • some flights are seasonal


Additional edit



So this one is not a regularly scheduled flight, but it’s a commercial flight nonetheless: Bering Air flight 8E120 on 09/07/17:




  • Nome, Alaska (OME) to Anadyr, Russia (DYR)

  • Departure: 12:44 UTC-8

  • Arrival: 10:31 UTC+12 (the next day, but that’s due to crossing the date line)

  • Time difference: 4 hours

  • Flight duration: 1h47

  • Ratio: 2.24

  • They arrived 2h13 before they left


I hope I got the DST and time zone math right :-)






share|improve this answer

































    18














    You can also go forward in time with good results, see Almaty to Urumqi:



    ALA - URC



    45 minutes flight which propels you 3:45 forward for a ratio of 5!



    Maybe there is some trickery with flight time since the reverse flight is timed 2:50. Still they're 900 km away which should not translate to more than 1:30 in air.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 8





      I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

      – krubo
      Mar 29 at 12:09











    • @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

      – alamar
      Mar 29 at 13:16













    • @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

      – jcaron
      Mar 29 at 21:48













    • @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

      – jcaron
      Mar 29 at 21:54






    • 1





      You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

      – Doc
      Mar 30 at 4:05



















    10














    For short flights, Vladivostok to Changchun gains as much as 1 hour depending on the airline:



    Ural Airlines 881   Friday, May 17, 2019
    Leave Vladivostok (VVO) 9:10am UTC+10
    Arrive Changchun (CGQ) 8:10am UTC+8 (elapsed time 1h, ratio 2)





    share|improve this answer
























    • Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

      – jcaron
      Mar 29 at 12:37



















    8














    The time difference is closely related to how many lines of longitude you cross. So you're looking for as many crossed as possible, in the shortest time.



    The time of a flight is closely related to its distance (for any given groundspeed), and is reduced if the prevailing air movement is from behind it (because airspeed is related to groundspeed plus speed of air movement/currents).



    So you want to cross as many lines of longitude as possible, in the shortest possible distance, with the wind coming from behind. That immediately suggests you want to be travelling as close as possible to the north or south poles, and in a west-to-east direction for northern extremes, or east-to-west for southern extremes.



    You are limited because too close to the poles,you lose time zones - nobody bothers with time zones being 12 hours different if you and a friend both start at the north pole and walk a mile in opposite directions. But the Arctic is almost certainly better for this than the Antarctic, because many countries are closer, with more interest in asserting territory (hence time zones), and longer explored/less isolated.



    Your air flights at high latitudes are likely to be from ad hoc runways. You wont find big towns there. But even small communities may have local runways, and your question doesn't exclude those.



    Putting this all together, I think your answer won't be found by looking at major airline schedules.



    You need to find where in the arctic you could find the most northerly territories which have time zones. Then look for the most northernly settlements in those areas. Then, with a map centred on the true or magnetic north pole (whichever longitude originates at), figure out the shortest distance between settlements as far around the "clock face" as you can.



    You'll have to do this manually, because there are unlikely to be scheduled flights, but that's how you'd do it. I suspect your answer would involve Arctic airbases or exploratory stations belonging to Russia and the US.



    If you flew the path you found, you'd get maximum time zones per flying hour.






    share|improve this answer


























    • I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

      – badjohn
      Mar 30 at 11:55











    • Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

      – alamar
      Mar 30 at 13:13











    • Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

      – Stilez
      Mar 30 at 19:04








    • 1





      This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

      – llama
      Mar 31 at 22:20











    • @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

      – Stilez
      Apr 1 at 6:42



















    7














    Going domestic here. Perm-Kazan leaves at 22:45 and arrives at 21:55 same day.




    • 1h10 flight time (in reality less than hour spent in the air)

    • 2 hours difference

    • 1.7 ratio.


    PEE - KZN






    share|improve this answer































      7














      For a relatively short flight spanning a multi-hour time difference, it may be hard to beat Kusuluk–Reykjavik:



      enter image description here



      These two airports currently have a three-hour time difference, and the flight is 1h50m, for a ratio of 1.636. However, Greenland will go onto daylight savings time tomorrow, reducing this ratio substantially.






      share|improve this answer































        6














        Long-haul flights can't compete on ratio, but on absolute time-gain for a commercially available long-haul flight, I nominate Reykjavik-to-Anchorage, which gains 50 minutes. (It would gain 110 minutes if it flew in the winter, but it doesn't.)



        IcelandAir 679   Sunday, May 12, 2019
        Leave Reykjavik (KEF) 5:10pm UTC+0
        Arrive Anchorage (ANC) 4:20pm UTC-8 (elapsed time 7h 10m)





        share|improve this answer































          5














          Clearly there are multiple short flights that will meet this criteria. In fact, I can easily get a ratio of over 100:1 by flying my drone across a timezone boundary. (30 seconds to do, 60 minute difference, ratio of 120:1!)



          Once you exclude the flight of less than a few hours things get closer to parity, however there is at least a few long flights that still beat the 1:1 ratio, even if they don't run all year.



          Icelandair flies a seasonal Reykjavik to Anchorage flight that takes 7h 10m, with a time difference of 8 hours, giving a ratio of 1.12:1



          Icelandair 679



          Condor flies a similar route, Frankfurt to Anchorage which takes 9 hours 50 mins for a 10 hour time difference, just squeezing in above even at 1.02:1



          Condor 2050



          Many cargo flights also fly into and out of Anchorage and likely give even higher ratios, especially to places like Moscow (11 hours time difference, 4,385 miles direct flight distance)



          Historically the record likely went to the Concorde, which flew between New York and Paris with a block time of about 4 hours, giving a ratio of 1.5:1 most of the year (6 hours time difference, daylight savings time dependent)






          share|improve this answer
























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            8 Answers
            8






            active

            oldest

            votes








            8 Answers
            8






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            24














            Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (UUS) to Sapporo-Chitose (CTS):




            • 1h30 flight time

            • 2 hours time difference


            • 1.33 ratio.


            You actually arrive before you left, without any of the international date line trickery:



            enter image description here



            (from Google Flights)



            I'm pretty sure there must be lots of short 30-minutes-or-so hops across a timezone boundary which would result in a ratio of 2, so I'm not sure the ratio is really the best basis for comparison, though.



            Edit



            It turns out it's not as easy as I thought to find short flights crossing timezone boundaries, but I found one:




            • Mariehamn (MHQ) - Stockholm (ARN)

            • 35 minutes flight time

            • 1 hour time difference

            • 1.71 ratio


            enter image description here



            There's also Gibraltar (GIB) - Tangier (TNG), same characteristics.



            Also Warsaw-Minsk, 2h hours time difference, 1h10 flight, same 1.71 ratio.



            Note that the answers vary according to the time of the year, as:




            • some areas switch to daylight savings time in the summer, but not all, and not necessarily at the same time

            • some flights are seasonal


            Additional edit



            So this one is not a regularly scheduled flight, but it’s a commercial flight nonetheless: Bering Air flight 8E120 on 09/07/17:




            • Nome, Alaska (OME) to Anadyr, Russia (DYR)

            • Departure: 12:44 UTC-8

            • Arrival: 10:31 UTC+12 (the next day, but that’s due to crossing the date line)

            • Time difference: 4 hours

            • Flight duration: 1h47

            • Ratio: 2.24

            • They arrived 2h13 before they left


            I hope I got the DST and time zone math right :-)






            share|improve this answer






























              24














              Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (UUS) to Sapporo-Chitose (CTS):




              • 1h30 flight time

              • 2 hours time difference


              • 1.33 ratio.


              You actually arrive before you left, without any of the international date line trickery:



              enter image description here



              (from Google Flights)



              I'm pretty sure there must be lots of short 30-minutes-or-so hops across a timezone boundary which would result in a ratio of 2, so I'm not sure the ratio is really the best basis for comparison, though.



              Edit



              It turns out it's not as easy as I thought to find short flights crossing timezone boundaries, but I found one:




              • Mariehamn (MHQ) - Stockholm (ARN)

              • 35 minutes flight time

              • 1 hour time difference

              • 1.71 ratio


              enter image description here



              There's also Gibraltar (GIB) - Tangier (TNG), same characteristics.



              Also Warsaw-Minsk, 2h hours time difference, 1h10 flight, same 1.71 ratio.



              Note that the answers vary according to the time of the year, as:




              • some areas switch to daylight savings time in the summer, but not all, and not necessarily at the same time

              • some flights are seasonal


              Additional edit



              So this one is not a regularly scheduled flight, but it’s a commercial flight nonetheless: Bering Air flight 8E120 on 09/07/17:




              • Nome, Alaska (OME) to Anadyr, Russia (DYR)

              • Departure: 12:44 UTC-8

              • Arrival: 10:31 UTC+12 (the next day, but that’s due to crossing the date line)

              • Time difference: 4 hours

              • Flight duration: 1h47

              • Ratio: 2.24

              • They arrived 2h13 before they left


              I hope I got the DST and time zone math right :-)






              share|improve this answer




























                24












                24








                24







                Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (UUS) to Sapporo-Chitose (CTS):




                • 1h30 flight time

                • 2 hours time difference


                • 1.33 ratio.


                You actually arrive before you left, without any of the international date line trickery:



                enter image description here



                (from Google Flights)



                I'm pretty sure there must be lots of short 30-minutes-or-so hops across a timezone boundary which would result in a ratio of 2, so I'm not sure the ratio is really the best basis for comparison, though.



                Edit



                It turns out it's not as easy as I thought to find short flights crossing timezone boundaries, but I found one:




                • Mariehamn (MHQ) - Stockholm (ARN)

                • 35 minutes flight time

                • 1 hour time difference

                • 1.71 ratio


                enter image description here



                There's also Gibraltar (GIB) - Tangier (TNG), same characteristics.



                Also Warsaw-Minsk, 2h hours time difference, 1h10 flight, same 1.71 ratio.



                Note that the answers vary according to the time of the year, as:




                • some areas switch to daylight savings time in the summer, but not all, and not necessarily at the same time

                • some flights are seasonal


                Additional edit



                So this one is not a regularly scheduled flight, but it’s a commercial flight nonetheless: Bering Air flight 8E120 on 09/07/17:




                • Nome, Alaska (OME) to Anadyr, Russia (DYR)

                • Departure: 12:44 UTC-8

                • Arrival: 10:31 UTC+12 (the next day, but that’s due to crossing the date line)

                • Time difference: 4 hours

                • Flight duration: 1h47

                • Ratio: 2.24

                • They arrived 2h13 before they left


                I hope I got the DST and time zone math right :-)






                share|improve this answer















                Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (UUS) to Sapporo-Chitose (CTS):




                • 1h30 flight time

                • 2 hours time difference


                • 1.33 ratio.


                You actually arrive before you left, without any of the international date line trickery:



                enter image description here



                (from Google Flights)



                I'm pretty sure there must be lots of short 30-minutes-or-so hops across a timezone boundary which would result in a ratio of 2, so I'm not sure the ratio is really the best basis for comparison, though.



                Edit



                It turns out it's not as easy as I thought to find short flights crossing timezone boundaries, but I found one:




                • Mariehamn (MHQ) - Stockholm (ARN)

                • 35 minutes flight time

                • 1 hour time difference

                • 1.71 ratio


                enter image description here



                There's also Gibraltar (GIB) - Tangier (TNG), same characteristics.



                Also Warsaw-Minsk, 2h hours time difference, 1h10 flight, same 1.71 ratio.



                Note that the answers vary according to the time of the year, as:




                • some areas switch to daylight savings time in the summer, but not all, and not necessarily at the same time

                • some flights are seasonal


                Additional edit



                So this one is not a regularly scheduled flight, but it’s a commercial flight nonetheless: Bering Air flight 8E120 on 09/07/17:




                • Nome, Alaska (OME) to Anadyr, Russia (DYR)

                • Departure: 12:44 UTC-8

                • Arrival: 10:31 UTC+12 (the next day, but that’s due to crossing the date line)

                • Time difference: 4 hours

                • Flight duration: 1h47

                • Ratio: 2.24

                • They arrived 2h13 before they left


                I hope I got the DST and time zone math right :-)







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Mar 31 at 13:50

























                answered Mar 29 at 10:50









                jcaronjcaron

                12.5k12261




                12.5k12261

























                    18














                    You can also go forward in time with good results, see Almaty to Urumqi:



                    ALA - URC



                    45 minutes flight which propels you 3:45 forward for a ratio of 5!



                    Maybe there is some trickery with flight time since the reverse flight is timed 2:50. Still they're 900 km away which should not translate to more than 1:30 in air.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 8





                      I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                      – krubo
                      Mar 29 at 12:09











                    • @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 29 at 13:16













                    • @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:48













                    • @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:54






                    • 1





                      You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                      – Doc
                      Mar 30 at 4:05
















                    18














                    You can also go forward in time with good results, see Almaty to Urumqi:



                    ALA - URC



                    45 minutes flight which propels you 3:45 forward for a ratio of 5!



                    Maybe there is some trickery with flight time since the reverse flight is timed 2:50. Still they're 900 km away which should not translate to more than 1:30 in air.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 8





                      I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                      – krubo
                      Mar 29 at 12:09











                    • @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 29 at 13:16













                    • @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:48













                    • @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:54






                    • 1





                      You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                      – Doc
                      Mar 30 at 4:05














                    18












                    18








                    18







                    You can also go forward in time with good results, see Almaty to Urumqi:



                    ALA - URC



                    45 minutes flight which propels you 3:45 forward for a ratio of 5!



                    Maybe there is some trickery with flight time since the reverse flight is timed 2:50. Still they're 900 km away which should not translate to more than 1:30 in air.






                    share|improve this answer













                    You can also go forward in time with good results, see Almaty to Urumqi:



                    ALA - URC



                    45 minutes flight which propels you 3:45 forward for a ratio of 5!



                    Maybe there is some trickery with flight time since the reverse flight is timed 2:50. Still they're 900 km away which should not translate to more than 1:30 in air.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Mar 29 at 12:04









                    alamaralamar

                    5,68321129




                    5,68321129








                    • 8





                      I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                      – krubo
                      Mar 29 at 12:09











                    • @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 29 at 13:16













                    • @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:48













                    • @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:54






                    • 1





                      You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                      – Doc
                      Mar 30 at 4:05














                    • 8





                      I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                      – krubo
                      Mar 29 at 12:09











                    • @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 29 at 13:16













                    • @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:48













                    • @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 21:54






                    • 1





                      You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                      – Doc
                      Mar 30 at 4:05








                    8




                    8





                    I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                    – krubo
                    Mar 29 at 12:09





                    I'm seeing a lot of websites calculating the wrong time zone for Urumqi. Looks like this flight is actually 1 hour 45 minutes there and 1 hour 50 minutes back.

                    – krubo
                    Mar 29 at 12:09













                    @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                    – alamar
                    Mar 29 at 13:16







                    @Which will still give it >2 ratio. You could probably get even better ratio if you start with Tashkent, which is one more hour apart.

                    – alamar
                    Mar 29 at 13:16















                    @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 21:48







                    @alamar, no, there’s only a 2 hours time difference for a 1h45 flight time, which results in a 1.14 ratio. I haven’t checked if the time difference changes with DST, but even if the time difference went up to 3 hours, it would still only be a 1.71 ratio.

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 21:48















                    @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 21:54





                    @alamar Tashkent (TAS)-Urumqi (URC) is 2h30 flight time for a 3h time difference, a ratio of 1.2.

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 21:54




                    1




                    1





                    You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                    – Doc
                    Mar 30 at 4:05





                    You've completely misunderstood the question. This is a ~1h40m flight, and a 2 hour time difference, giving a ratio of just over 1 - not at all good

                    – Doc
                    Mar 30 at 4:05











                    10














                    For short flights, Vladivostok to Changchun gains as much as 1 hour depending on the airline:



                    Ural Airlines 881   Friday, May 17, 2019
                    Leave Vladivostok (VVO) 9:10am UTC+10
                    Arrive Changchun (CGQ) 8:10am UTC+8 (elapsed time 1h, ratio 2)





                    share|improve this answer
























                    • Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 12:37
















                    10














                    For short flights, Vladivostok to Changchun gains as much as 1 hour depending on the airline:



                    Ural Airlines 881   Friday, May 17, 2019
                    Leave Vladivostok (VVO) 9:10am UTC+10
                    Arrive Changchun (CGQ) 8:10am UTC+8 (elapsed time 1h, ratio 2)





                    share|improve this answer
























                    • Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 12:37














                    10












                    10








                    10







                    For short flights, Vladivostok to Changchun gains as much as 1 hour depending on the airline:



                    Ural Airlines 881   Friday, May 17, 2019
                    Leave Vladivostok (VVO) 9:10am UTC+10
                    Arrive Changchun (CGQ) 8:10am UTC+8 (elapsed time 1h, ratio 2)





                    share|improve this answer













                    For short flights, Vladivostok to Changchun gains as much as 1 hour depending on the airline:



                    Ural Airlines 881   Friday, May 17, 2019
                    Leave Vladivostok (VVO) 9:10am UTC+10
                    Arrive Changchun (CGQ) 8:10am UTC+8 (elapsed time 1h, ratio 2)






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Mar 29 at 11:51









                    krubokrubo

                    3,030524




                    3,030524













                    • Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 12:37



















                    • Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                      – jcaron
                      Mar 29 at 12:37

















                    Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 12:37





                    Ah, tried that one but didn't see that Google Flights had hidden the direct flight at the bottom of the results because of "unavailable price".

                    – jcaron
                    Mar 29 at 12:37











                    8














                    The time difference is closely related to how many lines of longitude you cross. So you're looking for as many crossed as possible, in the shortest time.



                    The time of a flight is closely related to its distance (for any given groundspeed), and is reduced if the prevailing air movement is from behind it (because airspeed is related to groundspeed plus speed of air movement/currents).



                    So you want to cross as many lines of longitude as possible, in the shortest possible distance, with the wind coming from behind. That immediately suggests you want to be travelling as close as possible to the north or south poles, and in a west-to-east direction for northern extremes, or east-to-west for southern extremes.



                    You are limited because too close to the poles,you lose time zones - nobody bothers with time zones being 12 hours different if you and a friend both start at the north pole and walk a mile in opposite directions. But the Arctic is almost certainly better for this than the Antarctic, because many countries are closer, with more interest in asserting territory (hence time zones), and longer explored/less isolated.



                    Your air flights at high latitudes are likely to be from ad hoc runways. You wont find big towns there. But even small communities may have local runways, and your question doesn't exclude those.



                    Putting this all together, I think your answer won't be found by looking at major airline schedules.



                    You need to find where in the arctic you could find the most northerly territories which have time zones. Then look for the most northernly settlements in those areas. Then, with a map centred on the true or magnetic north pole (whichever longitude originates at), figure out the shortest distance between settlements as far around the "clock face" as you can.



                    You'll have to do this manually, because there are unlikely to be scheduled flights, but that's how you'd do it. I suspect your answer would involve Arctic airbases or exploratory stations belonging to Russia and the US.



                    If you flew the path you found, you'd get maximum time zones per flying hour.






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                      – badjohn
                      Mar 30 at 11:55











                    • Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 30 at 13:13











                    • Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                      – Stilez
                      Mar 30 at 19:04








                    • 1





                      This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                      – llama
                      Mar 31 at 22:20











                    • @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                      – Stilez
                      Apr 1 at 6:42
















                    8














                    The time difference is closely related to how many lines of longitude you cross. So you're looking for as many crossed as possible, in the shortest time.



                    The time of a flight is closely related to its distance (for any given groundspeed), and is reduced if the prevailing air movement is from behind it (because airspeed is related to groundspeed plus speed of air movement/currents).



                    So you want to cross as many lines of longitude as possible, in the shortest possible distance, with the wind coming from behind. That immediately suggests you want to be travelling as close as possible to the north or south poles, and in a west-to-east direction for northern extremes, or east-to-west for southern extremes.



                    You are limited because too close to the poles,you lose time zones - nobody bothers with time zones being 12 hours different if you and a friend both start at the north pole and walk a mile in opposite directions. But the Arctic is almost certainly better for this than the Antarctic, because many countries are closer, with more interest in asserting territory (hence time zones), and longer explored/less isolated.



                    Your air flights at high latitudes are likely to be from ad hoc runways. You wont find big towns there. But even small communities may have local runways, and your question doesn't exclude those.



                    Putting this all together, I think your answer won't be found by looking at major airline schedules.



                    You need to find where in the arctic you could find the most northerly territories which have time zones. Then look for the most northernly settlements in those areas. Then, with a map centred on the true or magnetic north pole (whichever longitude originates at), figure out the shortest distance between settlements as far around the "clock face" as you can.



                    You'll have to do this manually, because there are unlikely to be scheduled flights, but that's how you'd do it. I suspect your answer would involve Arctic airbases or exploratory stations belonging to Russia and the US.



                    If you flew the path you found, you'd get maximum time zones per flying hour.






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                      – badjohn
                      Mar 30 at 11:55











                    • Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 30 at 13:13











                    • Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                      – Stilez
                      Mar 30 at 19:04








                    • 1





                      This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                      – llama
                      Mar 31 at 22:20











                    • @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                      – Stilez
                      Apr 1 at 6:42














                    8












                    8








                    8







                    The time difference is closely related to how many lines of longitude you cross. So you're looking for as many crossed as possible, in the shortest time.



                    The time of a flight is closely related to its distance (for any given groundspeed), and is reduced if the prevailing air movement is from behind it (because airspeed is related to groundspeed plus speed of air movement/currents).



                    So you want to cross as many lines of longitude as possible, in the shortest possible distance, with the wind coming from behind. That immediately suggests you want to be travelling as close as possible to the north or south poles, and in a west-to-east direction for northern extremes, or east-to-west for southern extremes.



                    You are limited because too close to the poles,you lose time zones - nobody bothers with time zones being 12 hours different if you and a friend both start at the north pole and walk a mile in opposite directions. But the Arctic is almost certainly better for this than the Antarctic, because many countries are closer, with more interest in asserting territory (hence time zones), and longer explored/less isolated.



                    Your air flights at high latitudes are likely to be from ad hoc runways. You wont find big towns there. But even small communities may have local runways, and your question doesn't exclude those.



                    Putting this all together, I think your answer won't be found by looking at major airline schedules.



                    You need to find where in the arctic you could find the most northerly territories which have time zones. Then look for the most northernly settlements in those areas. Then, with a map centred on the true or magnetic north pole (whichever longitude originates at), figure out the shortest distance between settlements as far around the "clock face" as you can.



                    You'll have to do this manually, because there are unlikely to be scheduled flights, but that's how you'd do it. I suspect your answer would involve Arctic airbases or exploratory stations belonging to Russia and the US.



                    If you flew the path you found, you'd get maximum time zones per flying hour.






                    share|improve this answer















                    The time difference is closely related to how many lines of longitude you cross. So you're looking for as many crossed as possible, in the shortest time.



                    The time of a flight is closely related to its distance (for any given groundspeed), and is reduced if the prevailing air movement is from behind it (because airspeed is related to groundspeed plus speed of air movement/currents).



                    So you want to cross as many lines of longitude as possible, in the shortest possible distance, with the wind coming from behind. That immediately suggests you want to be travelling as close as possible to the north or south poles, and in a west-to-east direction for northern extremes, or east-to-west for southern extremes.



                    You are limited because too close to the poles,you lose time zones - nobody bothers with time zones being 12 hours different if you and a friend both start at the north pole and walk a mile in opposite directions. But the Arctic is almost certainly better for this than the Antarctic, because many countries are closer, with more interest in asserting territory (hence time zones), and longer explored/less isolated.



                    Your air flights at high latitudes are likely to be from ad hoc runways. You wont find big towns there. But even small communities may have local runways, and your question doesn't exclude those.



                    Putting this all together, I think your answer won't be found by looking at major airline schedules.



                    You need to find where in the arctic you could find the most northerly territories which have time zones. Then look for the most northernly settlements in those areas. Then, with a map centred on the true or magnetic north pole (whichever longitude originates at), figure out the shortest distance between settlements as far around the "clock face" as you can.



                    You'll have to do this manually, because there are unlikely to be scheduled flights, but that's how you'd do it. I suspect your answer would involve Arctic airbases or exploratory stations belonging to Russia and the US.



                    If you flew the path you found, you'd get maximum time zones per flying hour.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Mar 30 at 2:42

























                    answered Mar 30 at 2:35









                    StilezStilez

                    1,22348




                    1,22348













                    • I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                      – badjohn
                      Mar 30 at 11:55











                    • Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 30 at 13:13











                    • Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                      – Stilez
                      Mar 30 at 19:04








                    • 1





                      This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                      – llama
                      Mar 31 at 22:20











                    • @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                      – Stilez
                      Apr 1 at 6:42



















                    • I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                      – badjohn
                      Mar 30 at 11:55











                    • Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                      – alamar
                      Mar 30 at 13:13











                    • Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                      – Stilez
                      Mar 30 at 19:04








                    • 1





                      This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                      – llama
                      Mar 31 at 22:20











                    • @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                      – Stilez
                      Apr 1 at 6:42

















                    I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                    – badjohn
                    Mar 30 at 11:55





                    I think that this the best answer. The OP rules out apparent large differences due to crossing the date line. Some of the other answers use equally artificial tricks such as countries with time zones that don't match their longitude or quirks due to Summertime / DST rules. For physiological effects, it is probably the sundial time rather than clock time that matters hence, as this answer says, you want to maximize your rate of change of longitude. This answer addresses this issue well.

                    – badjohn
                    Mar 30 at 11:55













                    Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                    – alamar
                    Mar 30 at 13:13





                    Note that in polar areas, winters are universally dark while summers are universally lit. So you won't get any physialogical effects by going through a few time zones.

                    – alamar
                    Mar 30 at 13:13













                    Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                    – Stilez
                    Mar 30 at 19:04







                    Alamar - they may well still have time zones even with 24/7 day or night seasons - US/Russian airbases will surely keep US/Russia time, Finnish settlements will keep Finnish time, even if there's no diurnal (24h) cycle. The question asked about time changes not light dark, so I think that's fine. But in any case if they don't do time zones in some area, and the 24h cycle is needed, you might have to, go a bit south until they do.

                    – Stilez
                    Mar 30 at 19:04






                    1




                    1





                    This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                    – llama
                    Mar 31 at 22:20





                    This is all physically accurate, but somewhat ignores the political aspect of time zones. For instance, the PRC is all (officially) the same time zone, based on Beijing (UTC+8), but shares a (disputed) border with Afghanistan (UTC+4.5). Finding a scheduled commercial flight here is probably pretty tough however.

                    – llama
                    Mar 31 at 22:20













                    @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                    – Stilez
                    Apr 1 at 6:42





                    @llama - the words "commercially operated" weren't in the original question. They were edited in long after this answer and above comments. When answered the question was simply "what flight has the largest time difference per flight time".(travel.stackexchange.com/posts/134726/revisions)

                    – Stilez
                    Apr 1 at 6:42











                    7














                    Going domestic here. Perm-Kazan leaves at 22:45 and arrives at 21:55 same day.




                    • 1h10 flight time (in reality less than hour spent in the air)

                    • 2 hours difference

                    • 1.7 ratio.


                    PEE - KZN






                    share|improve this answer




























                      7














                      Going domestic here. Perm-Kazan leaves at 22:45 and arrives at 21:55 same day.




                      • 1h10 flight time (in reality less than hour spent in the air)

                      • 2 hours difference

                      • 1.7 ratio.


                      PEE - KZN






                      share|improve this answer


























                        7












                        7








                        7







                        Going domestic here. Perm-Kazan leaves at 22:45 and arrives at 21:55 same day.




                        • 1h10 flight time (in reality less than hour spent in the air)

                        • 2 hours difference

                        • 1.7 ratio.


                        PEE - KZN






                        share|improve this answer













                        Going domestic here. Perm-Kazan leaves at 22:45 and arrives at 21:55 same day.




                        • 1h10 flight time (in reality less than hour spent in the air)

                        • 2 hours difference

                        • 1.7 ratio.


                        PEE - KZN







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Mar 29 at 11:47









                        alamaralamar

                        5,68321129




                        5,68321129























                            7














                            For a relatively short flight spanning a multi-hour time difference, it may be hard to beat Kusuluk–Reykjavik:



                            enter image description here



                            These two airports currently have a three-hour time difference, and the flight is 1h50m, for a ratio of 1.636. However, Greenland will go onto daylight savings time tomorrow, reducing this ratio substantially.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              7














                              For a relatively short flight spanning a multi-hour time difference, it may be hard to beat Kusuluk–Reykjavik:



                              enter image description here



                              These two airports currently have a three-hour time difference, and the flight is 1h50m, for a ratio of 1.636. However, Greenland will go onto daylight savings time tomorrow, reducing this ratio substantially.






                              share|improve this answer


























                                7












                                7








                                7







                                For a relatively short flight spanning a multi-hour time difference, it may be hard to beat Kusuluk–Reykjavik:



                                enter image description here



                                These two airports currently have a three-hour time difference, and the flight is 1h50m, for a ratio of 1.636. However, Greenland will go onto daylight savings time tomorrow, reducing this ratio substantially.






                                share|improve this answer













                                For a relatively short flight spanning a multi-hour time difference, it may be hard to beat Kusuluk–Reykjavik:



                                enter image description here



                                These two airports currently have a three-hour time difference, and the flight is 1h50m, for a ratio of 1.636. However, Greenland will go onto daylight savings time tomorrow, reducing this ratio substantially.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Mar 29 at 12:13









                                Michael SeifertMichael Seifert

                                8,4832449




                                8,4832449























                                    6














                                    Long-haul flights can't compete on ratio, but on absolute time-gain for a commercially available long-haul flight, I nominate Reykjavik-to-Anchorage, which gains 50 minutes. (It would gain 110 minutes if it flew in the winter, but it doesn't.)



                                    IcelandAir 679   Sunday, May 12, 2019
                                    Leave Reykjavik (KEF) 5:10pm UTC+0
                                    Arrive Anchorage (ANC) 4:20pm UTC-8 (elapsed time 7h 10m)





                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      6














                                      Long-haul flights can't compete on ratio, but on absolute time-gain for a commercially available long-haul flight, I nominate Reykjavik-to-Anchorage, which gains 50 minutes. (It would gain 110 minutes if it flew in the winter, but it doesn't.)



                                      IcelandAir 679   Sunday, May 12, 2019
                                      Leave Reykjavik (KEF) 5:10pm UTC+0
                                      Arrive Anchorage (ANC) 4:20pm UTC-8 (elapsed time 7h 10m)





                                      share|improve this answer


























                                        6












                                        6








                                        6







                                        Long-haul flights can't compete on ratio, but on absolute time-gain for a commercially available long-haul flight, I nominate Reykjavik-to-Anchorage, which gains 50 minutes. (It would gain 110 minutes if it flew in the winter, but it doesn't.)



                                        IcelandAir 679   Sunday, May 12, 2019
                                        Leave Reykjavik (KEF) 5:10pm UTC+0
                                        Arrive Anchorage (ANC) 4:20pm UTC-8 (elapsed time 7h 10m)





                                        share|improve this answer













                                        Long-haul flights can't compete on ratio, but on absolute time-gain for a commercially available long-haul flight, I nominate Reykjavik-to-Anchorage, which gains 50 minutes. (It would gain 110 minutes if it flew in the winter, but it doesn't.)



                                        IcelandAir 679   Sunday, May 12, 2019
                                        Leave Reykjavik (KEF) 5:10pm UTC+0
                                        Arrive Anchorage (ANC) 4:20pm UTC-8 (elapsed time 7h 10m)






                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Mar 29 at 11:46









                                        krubokrubo

                                        3,030524




                                        3,030524























                                            5














                                            Clearly there are multiple short flights that will meet this criteria. In fact, I can easily get a ratio of over 100:1 by flying my drone across a timezone boundary. (30 seconds to do, 60 minute difference, ratio of 120:1!)



                                            Once you exclude the flight of less than a few hours things get closer to parity, however there is at least a few long flights that still beat the 1:1 ratio, even if they don't run all year.



                                            Icelandair flies a seasonal Reykjavik to Anchorage flight that takes 7h 10m, with a time difference of 8 hours, giving a ratio of 1.12:1



                                            Icelandair 679



                                            Condor flies a similar route, Frankfurt to Anchorage which takes 9 hours 50 mins for a 10 hour time difference, just squeezing in above even at 1.02:1



                                            Condor 2050



                                            Many cargo flights also fly into and out of Anchorage and likely give even higher ratios, especially to places like Moscow (11 hours time difference, 4,385 miles direct flight distance)



                                            Historically the record likely went to the Concorde, which flew between New York and Paris with a block time of about 4 hours, giving a ratio of 1.5:1 most of the year (6 hours time difference, daylight savings time dependent)






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              5














                                              Clearly there are multiple short flights that will meet this criteria. In fact, I can easily get a ratio of over 100:1 by flying my drone across a timezone boundary. (30 seconds to do, 60 minute difference, ratio of 120:1!)



                                              Once you exclude the flight of less than a few hours things get closer to parity, however there is at least a few long flights that still beat the 1:1 ratio, even if they don't run all year.



                                              Icelandair flies a seasonal Reykjavik to Anchorage flight that takes 7h 10m, with a time difference of 8 hours, giving a ratio of 1.12:1



                                              Icelandair 679



                                              Condor flies a similar route, Frankfurt to Anchorage which takes 9 hours 50 mins for a 10 hour time difference, just squeezing in above even at 1.02:1



                                              Condor 2050



                                              Many cargo flights also fly into and out of Anchorage and likely give even higher ratios, especially to places like Moscow (11 hours time difference, 4,385 miles direct flight distance)



                                              Historically the record likely went to the Concorde, which flew between New York and Paris with a block time of about 4 hours, giving a ratio of 1.5:1 most of the year (6 hours time difference, daylight savings time dependent)






                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                5












                                                5








                                                5







                                                Clearly there are multiple short flights that will meet this criteria. In fact, I can easily get a ratio of over 100:1 by flying my drone across a timezone boundary. (30 seconds to do, 60 minute difference, ratio of 120:1!)



                                                Once you exclude the flight of less than a few hours things get closer to parity, however there is at least a few long flights that still beat the 1:1 ratio, even if they don't run all year.



                                                Icelandair flies a seasonal Reykjavik to Anchorage flight that takes 7h 10m, with a time difference of 8 hours, giving a ratio of 1.12:1



                                                Icelandair 679



                                                Condor flies a similar route, Frankfurt to Anchorage which takes 9 hours 50 mins for a 10 hour time difference, just squeezing in above even at 1.02:1



                                                Condor 2050



                                                Many cargo flights also fly into and out of Anchorage and likely give even higher ratios, especially to places like Moscow (11 hours time difference, 4,385 miles direct flight distance)



                                                Historically the record likely went to the Concorde, which flew between New York and Paris with a block time of about 4 hours, giving a ratio of 1.5:1 most of the year (6 hours time difference, daylight savings time dependent)






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                Clearly there are multiple short flights that will meet this criteria. In fact, I can easily get a ratio of over 100:1 by flying my drone across a timezone boundary. (30 seconds to do, 60 minute difference, ratio of 120:1!)



                                                Once you exclude the flight of less than a few hours things get closer to parity, however there is at least a few long flights that still beat the 1:1 ratio, even if they don't run all year.



                                                Icelandair flies a seasonal Reykjavik to Anchorage flight that takes 7h 10m, with a time difference of 8 hours, giving a ratio of 1.12:1



                                                Icelandair 679



                                                Condor flies a similar route, Frankfurt to Anchorage which takes 9 hours 50 mins for a 10 hour time difference, just squeezing in above even at 1.02:1



                                                Condor 2050



                                                Many cargo flights also fly into and out of Anchorage and likely give even higher ratios, especially to places like Moscow (11 hours time difference, 4,385 miles direct flight distance)



                                                Historically the record likely went to the Concorde, which flew between New York and Paris with a block time of about 4 hours, giving a ratio of 1.5:1 most of the year (6 hours time difference, daylight savings time dependent)







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Mar 30 at 4:53









                                                DocDoc

                                                77k5177284




                                                77k5177284






























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