Climb Gradient (%) to Climb Rate (fpm)
gordon24 said:
Looks like most fracs ask a climb gradient question or two at the interview. Anyone care to expand on what they might ask? I'm part 121, so, I'm little rusty at this stuff. My buddy told me he was asked to covert a climb gradient % to feet per minute. Anyone know a quick way to solve that?
Thanks,
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FORMULA:
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Climb Rate (fpm) = Climb Gradient (%) X 60.8 ((ft/NM)/%) X Groundspeed (knots or NM/hr) X 1/60 (hr/min)
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Climb Rate (fpm) = 1.013 (Climb Gradient X Groundspeed)
Example:
Climb Gradient = 3%
Groundspeed = 120 knots
Climb Rate = 1.013 ( 3 X 120 ) = 364.68 FT per minute
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"RULE OF THUMB":
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Climb Rate (fpm) = Climb Gradient (%) X Airspeed (knots)
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(This "Rule of Thumb"
ASSUMES 60.8 = 60 and groundspeed = airspeed.)
Example:
Climb Gradient = 4.5%
Airspeed = 150 knots
Climb Rate = 4.5 X 150 = 675 ft per minute
If the winds are negligible, use airpseed instead of groundspeed, and use 1.0 instead of 1.013333. If you are climbing with a substantial tailwind, the approximation becomes less valid. A higher climb rate in feet per minute will be rquired when the tailwind is pushing you closer to the obstacle(s).
This is off the top of my head - - please correct me if I'm wrong. If it's correct, I suppose we could offer it to the "Rules of Thumb" section of this board for future reference.
[Edited for formatting]