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vutown 03-22-2005 02:41 AM

Flight Patterns
 
Guys,

Lately I've been doing a lot traveling via air and everytime the plane lands, it lands from a different direction. I've always wondered about this. I guess I'm curious as I look out the small window to see if I can recognize the major freeways and soon enough, the plane overshoots the airport and comes and makes a U-turn.

Any pilots out there who can explain this? I heard a few things about wind direction, etc, but I'm not sure.

-Vu

chazola 03-22-2005 04:55 AM

I'm not a pilot but I know aircraft usually land and take-off into the wind and of course the wind often changes from day-to-day. A lot of airports also have noise-abaitment rules so they have to change runways and different times of day and week-to-week.

Brian Carlton 03-22-2005 11:25 AM

The airplane is kept aloft based upon airspeed. So, if the airplane heads into the wind, the ground speed of the airplane is reduced by the speed of the wind. The airplane is then moving slower relative to the ground, but is moving at the same airspeed.

So, there is a definite preference to land into the wind.

Most airports have flight patterns that has the airplane do a downwind leg, followed by a 90 degree turn to "base leg" followed by another 90 degree turn to "final leg" and the runway approach.

However, there are noted exceptions and the three airports around NYC certainly have their share of them.

dmorrison 03-22-2005 11:57 AM

All the answers are correct. We land and takeoff into the wind so that our ground speed is the slowest possible ( accelerate/abort energies and landing/braking energies need to be the lowest possible). There are a few exeptions. Some tail wind on takeoff and landing is acceptable IF it has been calculated in the takeoff data.
We also have limitations on crosswind and total steady state wind speed that each aircraft manufacture determines. In the certification of the aircraft the manufacture determines the maximum headwind, crosswind and tailwind the aircraft can handle.
The maximum headwind may simply be based on safety. The MD80 I fly has a maximum headwind of 50Kts. Above this wind I can't land or takeoff. Not because of flight control limitations but because iti starts to become "dangerous". 50kt winds at the surface will probably produce severe turbulance in the lower level of the atmosphere. So its not the speed of the wind. Its the turbulence.
For a crosswind my aircraft has a 30Kt "demonstrated" croswind. They design the aircraft with a rudder for 3 reasons. 1, you need a control on the yaw axis if you want complete control of the aircraft. 2, in a multi engine aircraft, you need the rudder to counteract the yaw tendency if you loose an engine. and 3, during a crosswind landing ( the wind is perpendicular to the runway) you use cross controls to align the aircraft with the runway. So at touchdown the aircraft is not sliding over the ground and touches down in a crab. This puts large loads on the aircraft and is just uncomfortable for the passenger. Now this "demonstrated croswind" is actually demonstrated by the test pilots for the manufacture during the aircraft certification. This is the highest crosswind they were able to show the FAA in a crosswind landing. Above this value you are a test pilot. It can be done but it has not been proven to the FAA and if anything happens, your in trouble.
I had to do this in the C141 aircraft I flew in the military. We had a demonstrated crosswind limit of 32kts. We were landing at Lajes in the Azores. The winds were 50kts perpendicular to the runway. BUT we had nowhere else to go. Santa Maria, the only other airport in the Azores had the same wind and we did not have the fuel to go all the way to Portugal, the nearest land. So we landed, actually wreslted the aircraft to the ground. One of the limitations to the demonstrated crosswind is the rudders abiltiy to rotate the nose to align with the runway. On my aircraft winds above 30 kts. I will have full rudder in and the aircraft will not be completely aligned. We run out of control input.

Now in the New York airport area the flight patterns for all three major airports (LGA, EWR, JFK) is complicated. When the runways are changed at one airport it effects which runways can be used at the other airports due to the arriving and departing flight paths.

One other item. Runways are built based on the wind patterns in the area. If the wind comes out of the north 50% of the time and then the south another 20%. Then a north south runway is what is built so that the aircraft are aligned with the wind. However at times geographical factors may be greater. If you don't have a long section of land available then you do with what you have.

Sorry for the long winded :D answer.

Dave

chazola 03-22-2005 12:08 PM

on the subject of aircraft.... (slight hi-jacking of thread, excuse the pun) y'all might enjoy this picture I took last Friday.

http://www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=439038

Brian Carlton 03-22-2005 01:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dmorrison
. So at touchdown the aircraft is not sliding over the ground and touches down in a crab. This puts large loads on the aircraft and is just uncomfortable for the passenger.

One of the scariest things I witnessed was a DC-8 (IIRC) landing in St. Lucia.

Same deal, one runway and the need to use the controls to hold the aircraft parallel to the runway in a crosswind.

However, this fellow chose to use a crabbed approach for whatever reason and he held it all the way to touchdown. The aircraft instantly twists and the tires align themselves with the direction of flight (down the runway). It had to be just brutal on the gear, and, I'm sure the passengers didn't appreciate it one bit.

84300DT 03-22-2005 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chazola
on the subject of aircraft.... (slight hi-jacking of thread, excuse the pun) y'all might enjoy this picture I took last Friday.

http://www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=439038


going into heathrow right?
hope it was close to the airport :eek:

MTI 03-22-2005 02:51 PM

When the wind changes here, it can be quite amusing to see the pilots not familiar with the approach to HNL . . .a couple years back, a China Airlines 747 pilot was so far off that high rise condo owners in Waikiki got a close up view of his landing gear treads. :eek:

Brian Carlton 03-22-2005 02:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chazola
on the subject of aircraft.... (slight hi-jacking of thread, excuse the pun) y'all might enjoy this picture I took last Friday.

http://www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=439038

That's a great shot!!

It's difficult to judge the altitude of that aircraft from the photo. Would you say 300 ft.?

cscmc1 03-22-2005 03:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dmorrison
I had to do this in the C141 aircraft I flew in the military. We had a demonstrated crosswind limit of 32kts. We were landing at Lajes in the Azores. The winds were 50kts perpendicular to the runway. BUT we had nowhere else to go. Santa Maria, the only other airport in the Azores had the same wind and we did not have the fuel to go all the way to Portugal, the nearest land. So we landed, actually wreslted the aircraft to the ground. One of the limitations to the demonstrated crosswind is the rudders abiltiy to rotate the nose to align with the runway. On my aircraft winds above 30 kts. I will have full rudder in and the aircraft will not be completely aligned. We run out of control input.

Dave

Dave -- that's funny... we deployed to Lajes for the war, and though I didn't make that trip, I heard all about the winds! All the flight line vehicles have streamers on the antenna to indicate which was the wind is blowing. During the in-briefing, my colleagues were all warned to always park INTO the wind or they'd be sure to lose a door. The first day, a youg crew chief parked with the wind, and the wind ripped the door off its hinges. They quit tethering our tankers overnight; it was damaging the gear too much. They said it was easier to let the plane "walk" a few feet overnight and just reposition it later.

Crazy... that is some serious wind! I remember watching B-52s land in crosswinds; that gear setup they use for that purpose is really neat.

Chris

tangofox007 03-22-2005 03:49 PM

Not only is it windy at Lajes, but the wind is often highly variable. The tower would report the wind direction and speed at the approach end, midfield, and departure end of the runway. But if you think Lajes is windy, you probably have not operated out of Adak!!!

bobbyv 03-22-2005 05:04 PM

how about implications to surrounding residential communities?

i suppose it will be noisier on the designated takeoff end of a runway than on the designated landing end, since the engines are at full blast on takeoff.

also, a crash on takeoff will have more fuel than on landing ...

there is an airport about to be built around 10km from where I live, and my house is within the approach/departure cone of one of the smaller runways. My concern is not so much on safety/noise but more on the impact on residential real estate values.

MTI 03-22-2005 06:05 PM

Reminds me of two things . . . an episode of "Cheers" where Carla finds a great buy on a house, but she thinks it's because it's haunted . . . but it's at the end of the approach to Logan.

The second is what I like to think of as "the perfect case" for negligence. In San Diego, a lawyer who handled a woman's divorce got a call from the client, asking that he handle her ex-husband's estate's claim for wrongful death. The ex-husband never changed his will so she was the executor. It turns out that the husband was killed while sleeping in his bedroom, when a general aviation plane, on approach to Lindberg (SD residents know the landing pattern), crashed into the house.

dmorrison 03-22-2005 08:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Carlton
One of the scariest things I witnessed was a DC-8 (IIRC) landing in St. Lucia.

Same deal, one runway and the need to use the controls to hold the aircraft parallel to the runway in a crosswind.

However, this fellow chose to use a crabbed approach for whatever reason and he held it all the way to touchdown. The aircraft instantly twists and the tires align themselves with the direction of flight (down the runway). It had to be just brutal on the gear, and, I'm sure the passengers didn't appreciate it one bit.

We find 2 kinds of ex military pilots in the airline industry. And this is not always a hard and fast rule. Those who flew fighters and those who flew tranport aircraft or large bombers. Fighters are designed to land in a crab. Their gear is designed for the sideload and it works well for them. They also don't use an extensive flare technique. Large aircraft pilots are taught wing low landing technique. You approach in a crab. At the point that you are comfortable ( and this varies by pilot from 30-200ft above the runway) you apply the rudder to align the aircraft with the runway. To counteract the aircrafts tendancy to drift off the runway you apply, or drop the upwind wing slightly. This cross control manuever will allow the crab to be eliminated. With high winds you may touchdown on the upwind main wheel first ant then the downwind wheel will touchdown with spoiler deployment. All aircraft up to the An225 should be flown this way.
A few, and I mean very few pilots think the aircraft should be landed in a crab. I personally dont' like it. And I dont' think the aircraft likes it either.
( the C-5 and the B52 had crasswind landing gear, you rotate the gear to align them with the runway while the body is still crabbed. I understand this was removed inthe C-5B model.

I know that civilian trained pilots are taught this techique from day one. So it is natural for them.
An interesting sidenote. The newer Airbus aircraft that use computer controled flight controls are landed differently. The side stick controller when applied gives a "certain role RATE". Not a control input. Boeings give you a actual aileron movement depending on the amount of control input. When we apply the cross control techniques we input the controls and then maintain the input. But the airbus is giving you a role rate. Watch a A320 the next time it lands in a cross wind. They have to pump the control stick, in aileron movement, to create the crosswind technique.

Heres a few "non standerd landings"

http://www.airliners.net/open.file?id=229317&WxsIERv=Obrvat%20747-2W6OZ&WdsYXMg=Nve%20Puvan&QtODMg=Ubat%20Xbat%20-%20Xnv%20Gnx%20Vagreangvbany%20%28UXT%20%2F%20IUUU%29%20%28pybfrq%29&ERDLTkt=Puvan%20-%20Ubat%20Xbat&ktODMp=1993&BP=0&WNEb25u=Qnely%20Punczna&xsIERvdWdsY=O-2450&MgTUQtODMgKE=Lrg%20nabgure%20aba-fgnaqneq%20ynaqvat%20ng%20Xnv%20Gnx.%20Guvf%20jnf%20gur%20svefg%20cvpgher%20V%20rire%20tbg%20choyvfu rq.&YXMgTUQtODMgKERD=19469&NEb25uZWxs=2002-04-14%2000%3A00%3A00&ODJ9dvCE=&O89Dcjdg=&static=yes&sok=JURER%20%20%28nvepensg_trarevp%20YVXR%20%27Obrv at%20747%25%27%29%20NAQ%20%28cynpr%20%3D%20%27Ubat%20Xbat%20-%20Xnv%20Gnx%20Vagreangvbany%20%28UXT%20%2F%20IUUU%29%20%28pybfrq%29%27%29%20NAQ%20%28ZNGPU%20%28nve pensg%2Cnveyvar%2Ccynpr%2Ccubgb_qngr%2Cpbhagel%2Cerznex%2Ccubgbtencure%2Crznvy%2Clrne%2Cert%2Cnvepen sg_trarevp%2Cpa%2Cpbqr%29%20NTNVAFG%20%28%27%2B%22ynaqvat%22%27%20VA%20OBBYRNA%20ZBQR%29%29%20%20beq re%20ol%20cubgb_vq%20QRFP&photo_nr=38&prev_id=247814&next_id=223246

http://www.airliners.net/open.file?id=047556&WxsIERv=Obrvat%20747-4...&WdsYXMg=Puvan%20Nveyvarf&QtODMg=Ubat%20Xbat%20-%20Xnv%20Gnx%20Vagreangvbany%20%28UXT%20%2F%20IUUU%29%20%28pybfrq%29&ERDLTkt=Puvan%20-%20Ubat%20Xbat&ktODMp=Whar%201997&BP=0&WNEb25u=Fnzhry%20yb&xsIERvdWdsY=&MgTUQtODMgKE=Penml%20ynaqvat %20nf%20lbh%20pna%20frr%20fcbvyref%20naq%20gur%20gver%20genpx%20pyrneyl.%20Shyy%20senzr%20naq%20gnxr a%20sebz%20Ornpba%20Uvyy%20jvgu%20800%20zz%20yraf.&YXMgTUQtODMgKERD=817601&NEb25uZWxs=1999-09-19%2000%3A00%3A00&ODJ9dvCE=&O89Dcjdg=&static=yes&sok=JURER%20%20%28nvepensg_trarevp%20YVXR%20%27Obrv at%20747%25%27%29%20NAQ%20%28cynpr%20%3D%20%27Ubat%20Xbat%20-%20Xnv%20Gnx%20Vagreangvbany%20%28UXT%20%2F%20IUUU%29%20%28pybfrq%29%27%29%20NAQ%20%28ZNGPU%20%28nve pensg%2Cnveyvar%2Ccynpr%2Ccubgb_qngr%2Cpbhagel%2Cerznex%2Ccubgbtencure%2Crznvy%2Clrne%2Cert%2Cnvepen sg_trarevp%2Cpa%2Cpbqr%29%20NTNVAFG%20%28%27%2B%22ynaqvat%22%27%20VA%20OBBYRNA%20ZBQR%29%29%20%20beq re%20ol%20cubgb_vq%20QRFP&photo_nr=90&prev_id=047761&next_id=NEXTID

Dave

tangofox007 03-22-2005 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dmorrison
The side stick controller when applied gives a "certain role RATE". ...............But the airbus is giving you a role rate.

And all these years I thought it was "roll." I reckon I need to study up on them there erodynamik principuls.


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