Definition 1 of 2
Definition
The amount of time a pilot has, after a loss of adequate oxygen at altitude, to recognize the problem and take corrective action before mental and physical performance degrade to the point where useful tasks can no longer be performed. It shortens dramatically with increasing altitude and with rapid decompression.
Plain English
The window of time you have at altitude, after your oxygen supply fails, to still think clearly enough to fix the problem before hypoxia takes over.
Context Anchor
Seen in high-altitude flying, oxygen-use training, and discussions of hypoxia in the Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge.
Derivation
Each word is ordinary English, but the phrase is a precise technical measure. 'Useful' here means 'able to perform required tasks' — not just being awake, but being capable of flying the aircraft and making decisions.
Why Pilots Care
This window determines whether a pilot can don oxygen or descend before losing the ability to act.
Grounding Statement
At very high altitude, a pilot may still be awake for a short time, but the time available for clear thinking and correct action can be measured in seconds.
Intuition Check
Do not read this as “time until unconscious.” It means time until the pilot can no longer act effectively, even if they are still awake.
Example Sentence 1
At FL350, time of useful consciousness after a rapid decompression may be only 15 to 20 seconds, so the crew must don oxygen masks immediately.
Example Sentence 2
Charts show that time of useful consciousness shortens rapidly as altitude increases without supplemental oxygen.