Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Turbojet part 135 takeoff numbers

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

CAP E TON

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2006
Posts
62
Flightsafety, simuflite, etc. takeoff and landing numbers are part 91 in their checklists. If your landing u must multiply 1.67 to the 91 number. If your taking off and it's wet you must add 15% to the 91 number. Does a percentage need to be added to the checklist for takeoff numbers if it's dry to make it a part 135 Checklist? Please answer only if you fly a part 135 jet.
 
No. My understanding is the AFM times 1.67 IS the dry part 135 numbers. If it's wet then AFM landing dist times 1.92.
 
So you believe as long as it is dry you can use the takeoff numbers right out of the checklist? Why would we have to add distance to make it part 135 for landing but not takeoff dry?
 
HS125 numbers from the book/tab data in the checklist are factored numbers, ie they are already x 1.67.
 
I looked in the checklist and it says takeoff field length and landing distance. Isn't the term "field length" used to represent a factored number where the term "distance" is used for raw numbers?
 
I've never heard of having to add 15% to a "takeoff" number for a wet runway. For landing, yes, but never for takeoff. Where is everyone seeing this/being taught this?

-mini
 
Flightsafety, simuflite, etc. takeoff and landing numbers are part 91 in their checklists. If your landing u must multiply 1.67 to the 91 number. If your taking off and it's wet you must add 15% to the 91 number. Does a percentage need to be added to the checklist for takeoff numbers if it's dry to make it a part 135 Checklist? Please answer only if you fly a part 135 jet.

1. It might be helpful if you list the CFR reference you are asking about.

2. What checklist for take off numbers? What is the process in your company manual for take off? Or are you writing a manual?

3. It has been a long time since I did 135 but as I recall a wet runway could increase your acc/stop distance and need to be accounted for.
 
Flightsafety, simuflite, etc. takeoff and landing numbers are part 91 in their checklists. If your landing u must multiply 1.67 to the 91 number. If your taking off and it's wet you must add 15% to the 91 number. Does a percentage need to be added to the checklist for takeoff numbers if it's dry to make it a part 135 Checklist? Please answer only if you fly a part 135 jet.

The way we do it:
First, APG. We use APG to give us a weight that we can land at given the 80% rule (it also gives us a weight for the wet runway numbers, which adds 15%).

Second, the FMS. We can use the 1.25, 1.67 or 1.92 factor in the FMS to give us a runway length. But by that point that number is pretty useless since the regulation just prohibits you from taking off at a weight greater than would allow for landing at your destination (given normal consumption of fuel, oil, etc.) within 60% or 80% of the runway length and factor the 15% in for a wet runway.

Also, we have our FSI/Cessna "checklist" (Flying the Cj3 for dummies) which gives us landing distances. If we REALLY wanted to be precise, we could haul the AFM inside and go into the performance section and do the work ourselves, but the software does it for us.

For takeoff, our takeoff distance (factored for wet runway and/or contaminants as necessary) just has to be equal to or less than the TODA, as I understand it. No factors need to be added because those numbers come straight from the AFM. Of course, if the numbers were exactly equal, we'd probably either wait for a dryer runway, cooler day, drop some bags, not take as much gas, etc. to get the required distance to be shorter to allow for some "oops" in the event of an aborted takeoff.

That's how we do it for 135 EOD ops. If we can't use EOD rules then we'd use the 60% factor. For our 91 flights with the owners, we use the 80% numbers almost exclusively.

Applicable regs for us: 135.398 (We're Part 23 Commuter category). That reg references 135.385 and 135.387. Those regs give us our 60% (or 80% for EOD) factor for destination and alternate airports. They also specify the 15% factor for wet or "slippery" runways at the destination.

Hope that helped some.

-mini
 

Latest resources

Back
Top