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Fly Away Simulation, Flight Simulator #1: Forums |
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calculating landing speeds at high altitudes
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KevinTsai First Officer


Joined: Aug 21, 2006 Posts: 434 Location: Berkeley Heights, NJ
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Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 11:57 am Post subject: calculating landing speeds at high altitudes |
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I know that as you go higher, the landing and takeoff speeds increases. I usually go on final approach at 160 knots usually. What would my landing speed be if I was landing at an airport 30,000 feet above sea level? Is there a special calculator for calculating landing speeds or a special math formula to do this? Help me! _________________ Love the Airbus A380. It's huge! |
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CRJCapt Chief Captain


Joined: Sep 12, 2005 Posts: 4344 Location: Ohio,USA
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Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 1:08 pm Post subject: |
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| I don't know of any airports at 30,000 feet, the ramp workers would all be dead from oxygen deprivation and very frozen. For the sake of discussion, you would have to land above the stall speed at FL300 which would probably be around 240 KIAS(guess). You would have all sorts of problems. Speeds are complicated and aircraft type specific. They're set by the manufacturer during flight testing and depend of weight, temperature and pressure. I'm sure they're basic charts that they start with but this information is hard to find and very complicated math. Within the normal range, 0-10,0000 feet MSL, landing speeds remain the same. The true airspeed increases thus requiring more runway. The pitot tube basically measures air molecules at a given speed. The wings require X amount of air molecules to pass over them to create enough lift for flight. 160 KIAS(X amount of air molecules) is the same at 0 feet or 9,000 feet but at 9,000 the aircraft has to pass thru the air at a faster rate(TAS-True Air Speed) to achieve this. At 0 ft. the TAS is about 160 knots. At 9000 ft. the TAS is about 183 knots. Both using 160 KIAS. |
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