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Venr, Vyse

  • Thread starter Thread starter cezzna
  • Start date Start date
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cezzna

Remeber the analog
Joined
Jan 24, 2003
Posts
291
Posted this earlier, FSI is teaching that VENR is the same as VYSE, if nobody here can tell me the difference where should I look. I know that it's not right, just need the evidence.
 
mazawakhan said:
OK! WTF is Venr? In over ten years of flying I have yet to hear of that one!

In over 18 years of flying I have yet to hear of that one!
 
kevdog said:
In over 18 years of flying I have yet to hear of that one!

I'm going to go out on a limb and say it's the same as what a lot of people call Vt....best climb in a clean configuration. I hink it stands for V-enroute. Just guessing though.
 
I never heard of it either...
 
I had never heard of Venr until I flew Hawkers. It is never really defined in the FSI Hawker training manuals as anything but a final OEI climb speed. Venr will only be about 186 KIAS for a MGTOW (28,000 lb) 800XP. The aircraft is to be flown at this speed after reaching 1,500' AGL or running out of time on the takeoff engine limits, cancelling APR and setting max continuous thrust on the remaining engine. In practice, the -5BR engines are nowhere near limiting temps or speeds so no reduction would normally be necessary. This is a certification profile of course and bears little resemblance to the profile that would actually be flown in IMC over anything but flat ground. Venr is a performance speed like V2, meaning it's primary purpose was to establish a OEI climb profile for certification and may or may not be intended to achieve max SE ROC. Since climb gradient is our primary concern following takeoff, we would not normally accelerate to this speed until clear of all obstacles if visual, or at the minimum required IFR altitude if not. In any case, Venr is just a bit more than 1.6 Vs and would be pretty close to Vyse if that term were used. For the fullest possible explanation, post this in the tech log at PPRuNe. Guaranteed to to get you more of an answer than you bargained for!

Best,
 
We use it at CommutAir -- it's defined as the single-engine enroute climb speed. In the event of an engine failure on takeoff, we climb at V2 until 400 feet, accelerate to Venr, and then climb at that speed.

I suppose it could be the same speed in some airplanes, but it isn't in ours in most cases. For example, a fully-loaded 1900 would have a Venr of 123, while Vyse is 128. Definitely not the same speed.
 
asayankee said:
I'm going to go out on a limb and say it's the same as what a lot of people call Vt....best climb in a clean configuration. I hink it stands for V-enroute. Just guessing though.

or Vfs
 
Well I guess if UndauntedFlyer hasn't heard of it, then it truly does not exist.

His Airworthiness ladies and gentlemen.
 
Ok, to prove your case, FSI should darn well have a Raytheon B1900D AFM in the building with their vaunted 1900 sim. Look up Venr for max gross, 17,120. Look up Vyse at sea level (decreases 2 knots / 5000 ft) at 17,120. Your two different answer (Venr 123, Vyse 128) WILL NOT MATCH. There is your evidence that it aint the same thing.
 
I have been in that debate with FSI also. I pulled out a book that explained it very well (i can't remember the title), but the instructor said I was incorrect along with the book. Oh well....i guess that is why I am not the instructor :P
 
Venr

I think this was already addressed but I will take a second to re-state it. Venr is Enroute Climb Speed and is just another Name for Vfs or Vt. Cessna = Venr, Embraer = Vfs, Canadair = Vt, Boeing = Vfs. Bear in mind that the name of the specific "V" speeds above were used at the corporate and airline operators I have worked at, and your airline may have a different name for the same speed. In the 737, we use Vm (clean manuvering speed) as our Vfs/Venr/Vt in the event of an engine failure after takeoff and after cleanup. This is slightly faster then Vyse, but Vm is used to permit bank angles greater then 15 degrees.

V2 is not Venr!!! V2 = best rate of climb with the gear up and flaps in the takeoff position, and is the speed you will fly from a height 35 feet high after takeoff untill you achieve "acceleration height/altitude" or "cleanup height/altitude." After acceleration and cleanup, you will maintain Venr. Venr will provide you with a speed that will allow for a climb near Vyse (climb single engine in the CLEAN configuration, gear and flaps up for those that may have missed that.) Vfs/Vt/Venr, might be slightly above your Vyse speed to allow for manuvering (i.e. not limited to 15 degrees of bank) depending on the aircraft.

I am a pilot, not a writer. If the above doesn't make sense, then disregaurd it and go here: http://www.airplanedriver.net/study/part25.htm
 
JetDriver2727 said:
I think this was already addressed but I will take a second to re-state it. Venr is Enroute Climb Speed and is just another Name for Vfs or Vt. Cessna = Venr, Embraer = Vfs, Canadair = Vt, Boeing = Vfs. Bear in mind that the name of the specific "V" speeds above were used at the corporate and airline operators I have worked at, and your airline may have a different name for the same speed. In the 737, we use Vm (clean manuvering speed) as our Vfs/Venr/Vt in the event of an engine failure after takeoff and after cleanup. This is slightly faster then Vyse, but Vm is used to permit bank angles greater then 15 degrees.

V2 is not Venr!!! V2 = best rate of climb with the gear up and flaps in the takeoff position, and is the speed you will fly from a height 35 feet high after takeoff untill you achieve "acceleration height/altitude" or "cleanup height/altitude." After acceleration and cleanup, you will maintain Venr. Venr will provide you with a speed that will allow for a climb near Vyse (climb single engine in the CLEAN configuration, gear and flaps up for those that may have missed that.) Vfs/Vt/Venr, might be slightly above your Vyse speed to allow for manuvering (i.e. not limited to 15 degrees of bank) depending on the aircraft.

I am a pilot, not a writer. If the above doesn't make sense, then disregaurd it and go here: http://www.airplanedriver.net/study/part25.htm

This all makes sense to me so it must be well written. Great Post.

I have one question though, this Venr speed is really just the clean maneuvering speed, which means it is also the Minimum Drag (L/D) Speed too, right? And then that would make it the best angle of climb speed, max endurance and approximately the best holding speed too. If that is what Venr speed is, then it is, of course, a most important speed by a different name than is used by Boeing, Douglass and others. Clean Maneuvering Speed always sounds familiar to everyone, it think.

OK then, the only thing I don't get in your post is why is it that you refer to this as an enroute climb speed? It seems that such a speed for enroute climb would be much faster than a clean maneuvering speed. For example in the 727 the clean maneuvering speed is around 200K to 210K and the enroute climb speed is typically 300K or more.
 
Last edited:
UndauntedFlyer said:
I have one question though, this Venr speed is really just the clean maneuvering speed, which means it is also the Minimum Drag (L/D) Speed too, right? And then that would make it the best angle of climb speed, max endurance and approximately the best holding speed too. If that is what Venr speed is, then it is, of course, a most important speed by a different name than is used by Boeing, Douglass and others. Clean Maneuvering Speed always sounds familiar to everyone, it think.

OK then, the only thing I don't get in your post is why is it that you refer to this as an enroute climb speed? It seems that such a speed for enroute climb would be much faster than a clean maneuvering speed. For example in the 727 the clean maneuvering speed is around 200K to 210K and the enroute climb speed is typically 300K or more.
Venr is Venr...it's the final segment climb speed in the Hawker...it is the equivalent of any V-speed that you use to climb once you're above obstacles.

at 25000 lbs, it's 176 kias...single-engine LRC (probably closer to best L/D) is 235. They also publish a "min cruise" speed of 206 for that weight.

As far as what FSI says, I've found it's best to take anything they say about performance with about a pound of salt...In over 10 years of FSI/Simuflite/Simcom training, I've run across 2 instructors who have a clue about it...although there is one guy who could probably build the airplane charts if he had to ;)

Fly safe!

David

p.s...the other 4 answers I got are largely irrelevant, but the most common and consistent was "I don't know, and I don't care", or some variation thereof.
 

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