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Starlionblue wrote:Climb rate is indeed reduced but this is accounted for in the calculation. If the conditions mean the required climb rate won't be maintained with the mandated climb procedure we inform ATC and they can change runway, waive the procedure, and so on.
Typically, THR RED and ACC altitudes are set automatically when you enter the runway and departure. At most places I've flown, they're the same altitude (NADP2).
- THR RED altitude has to do with thrust modes, and triggers THR CLB flashing in the first (thrust) column of the FMA. Once the lever is moved, the thrust mode changes from FLX, TOGA, or DRT to THR CLB (or more commonly THRDCLBx).
- Acceleration altitude has to do with the vertical modes. The acceleration altitude triggers a change from SRS to CLB. The change in vertical mode is from SRS to CLB.
There are three basic cases:
- NADP2, thrust reduction and acceleration altitudes the same. Once LVR CLB flashes on the FMA, reduce thrust to CLB. This can be delayed as appropriate. Once above acceleration altitude, flaps/slats can be retracted on schedule. This order is as per the FCOM.
- NADP1, acceleration altitude is higher than thrust reduction. Reduce thrust at thrust reduction, then keep climbing until acceleration altitude. Once the aircraft accelerates, retract on schedule.
- Thrust reduction altitude is higher than acceleration altitude, once the aircraft accelerates, retract on schedule. At thrust reduction altitude, reduce to climb thrust.
kemala wrote:And I will be happy to hear practical applications of NADP2. Not all companies or pilots strictly follow what book says, so actual applications will be appreciated to see here.
Thanks.
kemala wrote:Starlionblue wrote:Climb rate is indeed reduced but this is accounted for in the calculation. If the conditions mean the required climb rate won't be maintained with the mandated climb procedure we inform ATC and they can change runway, waive the procedure, and so on.
Typically, THR RED and ACC altitudes are set automatically when you enter the runway and departure. At most places I've flown, they're the same altitude (NADP2).
- THR RED altitude has to do with thrust modes, and triggers THR CLB flashing in the first (thrust) column of the FMA. Once the lever is moved, the thrust mode changes from FLX, TOGA, or DRT to THR CLB (or more commonly THRDCLBx).
- Acceleration altitude has to do with the vertical modes. The acceleration altitude triggers a change from SRS to CLB. The change in vertical mode is from SRS to CLB.
There are three basic cases:
- NADP2, thrust reduction and acceleration altitudes the same. Once LVR CLB flashes on the FMA, reduce thrust to CLB. This can be delayed as appropriate. Once above acceleration altitude, flaps/slats can be retracted on schedule. This order is as per the FCOM.
- NADP1, acceleration altitude is higher than thrust reduction. Reduce thrust at thrust reduction, then keep climbing until acceleration altitude. Once the aircraft accelerates, retract on schedule.
- Thrust reduction altitude is higher than acceleration altitude, once the aircraft accelerates, retract on schedule. At thrust reduction altitude, reduce to climb thrust.
Thank you for this detailed explanation. It is very informative. By the way, I want to clearify, it is normal to lose climb rate during accelaration. I was comparing reducing thrust at initiation of accelaration with accelaration with takeoff thrust until slat/flap retraction or until clean up as it is written on ICAO rules.
And I will be happy to hear practical applications of NADP2. Not all companies or pilots strictly follow what book says, so actual applications will be appreciated to see here.
Thanks.
kemala wrote:Do you obey LVR CLB reminder and reduce power or do you wait until clean up even though LVR CLB flashes?
kemala wrote:And I will be happy to hear practical applications of NADP2. Not all companies or pilots strictly follow what book says, so actual applications will be appreciated to see here.
Thanks.
kemala wrote:Not before 240 m (800 ft) and while maintaining a positive rate of climb, accelerate towards Vzf and reduce power with the initiation of the first flap/slat retraction
or
when flaps/slats are retracted and while maintaining a positive rate climb, reduce power and climb at Vzf + 20 to 40 km/h (Vzf + 10 to 20 kt)
CeddP wrote:kemala wrote:And I will be happy to hear practical applications of NADP2. Not all companies or pilots strictly follow what book says, so actual applications will be appreciated to see here.
Thanks.
Some would say this is nitpicking but actually you're quite right :kemala wrote:Not before 240 m (800 ft) and while maintaining a positive rate of climb, accelerate towards Vzf and reduce power with the initiation of the first flap/slat retraction
or
when flaps/slats are retracted and while maintaining a positive rate climb, reduce power and climb at Vzf + 20 to 40 km/h (Vzf + 10 to 20 kt)
The acceleration to Vzf until 3000ft AFE is often overlooked, and people tend to mix the low acceleration height procedure which is pretty much standard nowadays, with the actual NADP2. The vast majority of us would accelerate straight to 250 kt after cleaning up, which is wrong.
In Europe, the reality is very few airports enforce actual NADP2. Most of the time they either have no NADP at all (low accel height is ok for them), or some kind of non standard NADP1 (France is famous for still enforcing the old NADP A), or simply have some speed/alt restrictions coded directly in the SID which ultimately make you fly a profile very close to a NADP2.
VMCA787 wrote:Sorry, but I have to ask how you arrived at this statement? Having flown commercially for over 35 years, I have never seen nor heard of that. In addition, what airline would risk their AOC for not complying with a mandated departure procedure?
Starlionblue wrote:"Standard noise abatement" at my operator does include "Green Dot (Vzf) to 3000ft" after flap retraction, so we don't accelerate to 250kt. However in practice by the time you reach 3000ft, you might not even have had time to accelerate to Vzf. At 1500ft, thrust goes to CLB, and by the time you call for flaps zero and the PM moves the lever, you're probably well past 2000ft already.
Of course, if you start accelerating at 800ft, it's another story.
e38 wrote:kemala, at the company at which I work, in the United States, NADP2 is the standard procedure. The only time we use NADP1 profile is when specifically instructed to do so by company directive.
The information below is applicable to the Airbus A-320 series.
During preflight, the PF inputs thrust reduction/acceleration altitude in the PERF page of the FMS--for NADP2: 1000 feet / 1000 feet (this is AFE--above field elevation). For NADP1 we use 1000/3000.
After takeoff, in SRS mode, the flight director commands a pitch attitude that will result in a climb speed of V2 + 10 (both engines operating) or V2 (single engine).
At 1000 feet AFE, the climb mode changes from SRS to CLB, LVR CLB is annunciated in column 2 of the FMA, and the flight director will command a decrease in pitch attitude to allow the aircraft to accelerate. At that point, we move the thrust levers from TOGA or FLEX/MCT to CL. If the takeoff was made using Flaps 2 or 3, we select Flaps 1 in sequence when the airspeed is at or above F speed, then retract the flaps once airspeed is at or above S speed. The airspeed continues to increase until reaching 250 KIAS (or as specified based on the SID or local procedures).
With regard to your question:kemala wrote:Do you obey LVR CLB reminder and reduce power or do you wait until clean up even though LVR CLB flashes?
We always reduce thrust to CL when LVR CLB annunciator flashes. If we delay the reduction in thrust, we would not be complying with the intent of the noise abatement departure procedure.
Also, you stated, "it will cause aircraft to lose climb rate during clean up. This can be a problem especially during a hot weather, high elevation, heavy aircraft operation or departing close to residential area etc."
I have departed under all of the above conditions, occasionally all of them simultaneously, and have never had a problem with aircraft performance. The NADP2 profile takes into account that climb rate will decrease during acceleration. That is normal.
Also, I didn't understand you statement about being a problem departing close to residential area. Is this not the purpose of a NADP--to reduce the noise footprint over residential areas?
I hope this information is helpful.
e38
Starlionblue wrote:As VMCA787 says, operators comply with whatever regulation is in place. If we intentionally violated regulations without a very good reason we'd find ourselves having tea and biscuits with the chief pilot. Without the biscuits. Or the Tea.
CeddP wrote:The acceleration to Vzf until 3000ft AFE is often overlooked, and people tend to mix the low acceleration height procedure which is pretty much standard nowadays, with the actual NADP2. The vast majority of us would accelerate straight to 250 kt after cleaning up, which is wrong.
In Europe, the reality is very few airports enforce actual NADP2. Most of the time they either have no NADP at all (low accel height is ok for them), or some kind of non standard NADP1 (France is famous for still enforcing the old NADP A), or simply have some speed/alt restrictions coded directly in the SID which ultimately make you fly a profile very close to a NADP2.
kemala wrote:Starlionblue wrote:"Standard noise abatement" at my operator does include "Green Dot (Vzf) to 3000ft" after flap retraction, so we don't accelerate to 250kt. However in practice by the time you reach 3000ft, you might not even have had time to accelerate to Vzf. At 1500ft, thrust goes to CLB, and by the time you call for flaps zero and the PM moves the lever, you're probably well past 2000ft already.
Of course, if you start accelerating at 800ft, it's another story.
Thank you for this valuable feedback. This is kind of an answer that I was expecting to hear. As I could understand, your company procedure obeys ICAO rule by maintaining greendot until 3000' but still thrust reduction sequence is not exactly what is written, is that right? You reduce thrust right after reaching thrust reduction altitude, before initiation of slats/flaps retraction...
kemala wrote:I remember some flights where we reduced thrust right after LVR CLB flashes and aircraft was losing speed suddenly and was commanding an instant nose down, which causes a slight uncomfort for passenger. I remember one captain who recommended setting THR Reduction/Acceleration as 1200/1000.
e38 wrote:kemala wrote:I remember some flights where we reduced thrust right after LVR CLB flashes and aircraft was losing speed suddenly and was commanding an instant nose down, which causes a slight uncomfort for passenger. I remember one captain who recommended setting THR Reduction/Acceleration as 1200/1000.
kemala, when you stated "aircraft was losing speed suddenly and was commanding an instant nose down, which causes a slight uncomfortable for passengers," in my experience, Airbus A-320 series, when the aircraft reaches 1000 feet AFE and the annunciator flashes LVR CLB, as we reduce thrust from TOGA or FLEX/MCT to CLB and lower the nose smoothly 1 or 2 degrees, the airspeed remains fairly constant and then begins to accelerate. By executing the procedure gently and smoothly, I have not experienced a sudden reduction in airspeed; nor has it been uncomfortable for the passengers of which I am aware.
Also, if a pilot set THR Reduction/Acceleration 1200/1000, it would be a violation of company procedures. We are only authorized to set 1000/1000 or 1000/3000, as specified in company procedure for the applicable airport/runway.
And you are correct, NADP1 = Close-in community noise abatement departure procedure; NADP2 = Distant community noise abatement departure procedure.
e38
kemala wrote:VMCA787 wrote:Sorry, but I have to ask how you arrived at this statement? Having flown commercially for over 35 years, I have never seen nor heard of that. In addition, what airline would risk their AOC for not complying with a mandated departure procedure?
Then you were a lucky man, captain. I have reached that end by flying with many different captains from different countries and backgrounds. If it is not vital, people tends to have own SOP.