airplane wizard
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- Joined
- Mar 30, 2006
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If I'm at FL330 and get cross TWINS at 110 and 250 you get this: (6 to 1)
330 - 290 = 4000 .. 4 * 6 = 24 miles. ; (3 to 1) 290 - 110 = 18000 ... 18 * 3 = 54 miles . ; 24 + 54 + 4 (for slow from 300 to 250) - 10 (for avg 50kt headwind for example) equals 72 .... So start descent 72 miles from twins.. (some guys may use 2 to 1 but I think 3 works better for the diamond elite HVC happiness)
Oh .. And do that every few thousand feet on the way down to check progress
Edit: oh and if you are in icing conditions or anticipate it, that changes things too
Thanks...Does icing increase or decrease the distance?
We don't have any actual ground-speed readout.
3:1 doesn't work on the -9. To hold pressurization while descending aboving FL290, you can't go to flt idle. Only flt idle below FL290, and then it's 2:1.
I thought the same thing when checking out on it, but 3:1 really doesn't work...on -9.
Used rule of 3's in the Lear. Amount of altitude to lose, drop the 0's, then multiplied by 3. 33000 to 11000, 22x3 = 66 miles from the fix at a 3000 fpm descent. Rinse and repeat a few times on the way down to verify combined with the TLAR method. Add in 7-10 miles if you have to slow to 250 at the end of the descent.
Would this work in the -9 as well? (thread got my curiosity)
If you've got a DME and a clock you just count how many 1/10's of a mile you fly in 36 seconds and add a zero!
Fly it like a -200 baby!
Gup