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r6russian wrote:transition altitude/transition level (one is used in climb, other in descend, dont remember which one is which)
e38 wrote:r6russian wrote:transition altitude/transition level (one is used in climb, other in descend, dont remember which one is which)
transition altitude is normally used in the climb--altitude where pilot is required to change from local QNH to standard 1013 / 29.92; transition level used during descent-change from standard back to local QNH.
e38
r6russian wrote:transition altitude/transition level (one is used in climb, other in descend, dont remember which one is which) are for guaranteed terrain clearance. In the US its FL180 because that gets safely over the rockies at 29.92 altimeter, and it was easy to make the whole country FL180.
In europe its lower because the mountains are lower/nonexistent. Netherlands is flat, hence 3000ft
Its easier for the controllers knowing vast majority if their traffic is on the same altimeter and only needing the local altimeter on approach and climbout
But why its different all over india, not sure. They got mountains there, maybe they decided to transition as low as possible while having terrain clearance
77west wrote:r6russian wrote:In europe its lower because the mountains are lower/nonexistent. Netherlands is flat, hence 3000ft
Ummm.. the Alps would like to have a word...
Starlionblue wrote:AFAIK, the reason ATC sets a transition level is due to QNH variations. The TL at any given time would be on the ATIS.
Starlionblue wrote:AFAIK, the reason ATC sets a transition level is due to QNH variations. The TL at any given time would be on the ATIS.
Many places have a "normal" published TL, but also different TLs for very high and very low QNH. HKG is an example with a normal TL of FL110, but if the QNH is 797 or below the TL is FL120. This can also apply to the TA. At PVG the normal TA is 9850ft, if QNH is 1031 or more 10830ft and if QNH is 979 or less 8860ft.
CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
Starlionblue wrote:CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Starlionblue wrote:CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
Or select Metric on PFDs, read and set metric. Except in China, where it’s a mess. QFE is nearly gone now. We used it at EAL, as did AA until 1995.
CosmicCruiser wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Starlionblue wrote:
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
Or select Metric on PFDs, read and set metric. Except in China, where it’s a mess. QFE is nearly gone now. We used it at EAL, as did AA until 1995.
We had a plastic card showing the metric alt and comparable feet as a cross check. I head years ago that AA would set one alt. to QFE and the other on QNH for I
LS apps. Is that true?
CosmicCruiser wrote:I was told my a PP buddy in UK that they do QFE if they stay local
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Starlionblue wrote:CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
Or select Metric on PFDs, read and set metric. Except in China, where it’s a mess. QFE is nearly gone now. We used it at EAL, as did AA until 1995.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Starlionblue wrote:CosmicCruiser wrote:I was always told from my flight Safety classes many many years a go the the US. uses 18,000' because it's half the atmosphere=500mb. When I went to the airlines I don't remember them saying much except the separate levels in Europe and other places. The oddest was Almaty, KZ where you descended on QNE and transitioned to QFE! And you had just passed 20,000' mountains. If you were IFR it was real sight to see the altimeter jump at the transition!
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
Or select Metric on PFDs, read and set metric. Except in China, where it’s a mess. QFE is nearly gone now. We used it at EAL, as did AA until 1995.
AirKevin wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Starlionblue wrote:
QFE. Gross...![]()
The one thing I really wish the entire world would agree on is altimetry. QNH vs mmHg is no big deal, but metric drives me up the wall. Get the clearance in metric. Read back. Convert to feet. Crosscheck with the other guy. Set in feet. Adds a bit to the pucker factor when you're doing an approach in mountainous terrain.
I'm a hardcore metric fanboi on almost anything, but I can't deny that altitudes and flight levels in feet are much easier to grasp instinctively than metres, because most of the increments are thousands instead of 300s(ish).
Or select Metric on PFDs, read and set metric. Except in China, where it’s a mess. QFE is nearly gone now. We used it at EAL, as did AA until 1995.
You can read the altitude in metric on the PFD, but how would you set the altitude in metric on the MCP.