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Matt6461 wrote:I'm wondering whether an engine derated for regional power - A330 Regional for instance - also has lower power at the top of its climb. Or does the derate only apply to absolute thrust values, which would only be relevant in denser air and lower speeds such as at takeoff.
I would guess derate doesn't usually impact ToC performance, as otherwise a derated plane would be severely climb-limited: with lower MTOW, a plane's optimal cruise air density (FL) is practically linear with weight, while the engine's maximum output at altitude is also nearly linear with weight (and actually linear once the isothermic stratosphere is reached).
LH707330 wrote:I'm pretty sure that only applies to the dense air conditions where it gets the most strain. Higher up you want to allow higher settings because the engine is more thermodynamically efficient.
77west wrote:EG would a GE90-77 actually produce the same cruise thrust as a GE90-94?
77west wrote:Matt6461 wrote:I'm wondering whether an engine derated for regional power - A330 Regional for instance - also has lower power at the top of its climb. Or does the derate only apply to absolute thrust values, which would only be relevant in denser air and lower speeds such as at takeoff.
I would guess derate doesn't usually impact ToC performance, as otherwise a derated plane would be severely climb-limited: with lower MTOW, a plane's optimal cruise air density (FL) is practically linear with weight, while the engine's maximum output at altitude is also nearly linear with weight (and actually linear once the isothermic stratosphere is reached).
I think it does depend if its a selectable derate or an actual rating plug derate. EG would a GE90-77 actually produce the same cruise thrust as a GE90-94? The B737NG you can select the thrust model 7B22, 24, 27 etc on the MCDU if the airline ordered the option. In this case it washes out above a certain alt I believe.
Max Q wrote:77west wrote:Matt6461 wrote:I'm wondering whether an engine derated for regional power - A330 Regional for instance - also has lower power at the top of its climb. Or does the derate only apply to absolute thrust values, which would only be relevant in denser air and lower speeds such as at takeoff.
I would guess derate doesn't usually impact ToC performance, as otherwise a derated plane would be severely climb-limited: with lower MTOW, a plane's optimal cruise air density (FL) is practically linear with weight, while the engine's maximum output at altitude is also nearly linear with weight (and actually linear once the isothermic stratosphere is reached).
I think it does depend if its a selectable derate or an actual rating plug derate. EG would a GE90-77 actually produce the same cruise thrust as a GE90-94? The B737NG you can select the thrust model 7B22, 24, 27 etc on the MCDU if the airline ordered the option. In this case it washes out above a certain alt I believe.
I thought thrust ratings were pin selectable and could only be changed by maintenance ?
77west wrote:Max Q wrote:77west wrote:
I think it does depend if its a selectable derate or an actual rating plug derate. EG would a GE90-77 actually produce the same cruise thrust as a GE90-94? The B737NG you can select the thrust model 7B22, 24, 27 etc on the MCDU if the airline ordered the option. In this case it washes out above a certain alt I believe.
I thought thrust ratings were pin selectable and could only be changed by maintenance ?
There is an option depending on the model and if the airline has purchased it, to have for example on the 738 a 22K 24K and 27K option selectable, which can then be mixed with an assumed temperature derate as well. I believe if you select, say, 22K, you are stuck with that on takeoff, even in the event of an engine failure, to ensure enough rudder authority will be available. So you might have 22K with an assumed temp of 45degC to reduce power even further (but still have the full 22K avail if needed) They wash out higher up on climbout, I believe this is also airline-selectable as to exactly what alt. Certainly by about 20,000ft you are running at max climb power all the way up from my observations (PMDG 737)
The BBJ has a TO-B bump option which I believe will allow the engine to run at max flat rating to higher density altitudes (at the cost of increased wear).
Max Q wrote:77west wrote:Max Q wrote:
I thought thrust ratings were pin selectable and could only be changed by maintenance ?
There is an option depending on the model and if the airline has purchased it, to have for example on the 738 a 22K 24K and 27K option selectable, which can then be mixed with an assumed temperature derate as well. I believe if you select, say, 22K, you are stuck with that on takeoff, even in the event of an engine failure, to ensure enough rudder authority will be available. So you might have 22K with an assumed temp of 45degC to reduce power even further (but still have the full 22K avail if needed) They wash out higher up on climbout, I believe this is also airline-selectable as to exactly what alt. Certainly by about 20,000ft you are running at max climb power all the way up from my observations (PMDG 737)
The BBJ has a TO-B bump option which I believe will allow the engine to run at max flat rating to higher density altitudes (at the cost of increased wear).
Understand the max thrust ratings can be changed, however I don’t believe this can be adjusted through the FMC by the pilots, this is a maintenance function
ArcticFlyer wrote:From my own experience on the 737 (CL and NG):
When selecting takeoff power it is possible to choose a "fixed" derate, an assumed temperature thrust reduction, or both. Normally we take off with as little thrust as possible (to minimize engine stress/wear) but there are some situations where only one or the other type of thrust reduction is allowed. In particular we are not permitted to use an AT thrust reduction on a contaminated runway but we can still use a fixed derate. AT is always at the crew's discretion but a fixed derate may be required: Due to the lower Vmc (and therefore lower permissible V1) provided by a fixed derate, on short runways it may be (somewhat counterintuitively) possible to carry a higher payload with a fixed derate compared to full thrust due to V1 potentially being several knots slower, reducing accelerate-stop distance.
In any case, when selecting a takeoff thrust reduction the FMC will automatically select one of two reduced-thrust climb profiles but this can be overridden by the crew and it is even possible to increase thrust at accel height if a large takeoff thrust reduction is followed by a max thrust climb. This scenario would only occur if the crew manually changes the climb settings, but I have done this when we're tight on fuel or climbing through icing conditions. The reduced thrust climb profiles are the same regardless of whether a fixed derate, assumed temp or both were used for takeoff and wash out when climbing through 15,000 feet.
LH707330 wrote:There's a thread somewhere about derates on here. Most of them wash out in the 8-10k foot range and then resume the normal climb schedule. I'm pretty sure that only applies to the dense air conditions where it gets the most strain. Higher up you want to allow higher settings because the engine is more thermodynamically efficient.
BoeingGuy wrote:LH707330 wrote:There's a thread somewhere about derates on here. Most of them wash out in the 8-10k foot range and then resume the normal climb schedule. I'm pretty sure that only applies to the dense air conditions where it gets the most strain. Higher up you want to allow higher settings because the engine is more thermodynamically efficient.
Most Boeing models have two catalog options. The climb derates either wash out between 10-12K or 10-30K.
kalvado wrote:What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
kalvado wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:LH707330 wrote:There's a thread somewhere about derates on here. Most of them wash out in the 8-10k foot range and then resume the normal climb schedule. I'm pretty sure that only applies to the dense air conditions where it gets the most strain. Higher up you want to allow higher settings because the engine is more thermodynamically efficient.
Most Boeing models have two catalog options. The climb derates either wash out between 10-12K or 10-30K.
What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
BoeingGuy wrote:kalvado wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:
Most Boeing models have two catalog options. The climb derates either wash out between 10-12K or 10-30K.
What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
BoeingGuy wrote:On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
LH707330 wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:kalvado wrote:What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
Thanks for confirming, that's super helpful. Sounds like the answer to the OP is "derate is for low-altitude and it goes away near ToC."
LH707330 wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:kalvado wrote:What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
Thanks for confirming, that's super helpful. Sounds like the answer to the OP is "derate is for low-altitude and it goes away near ToC."
Starlionblue wrote:LH707330 wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:
On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
Thanks for confirming, that's super helpful. Sounds like the answer to the OP is "derate is for low-altitude and it goes away near ToC."
That is a good way of putting it. Engines lose thrust with altitude due to lower mass flow in thinner air. Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
LH707330 wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:kalvado wrote:What are actual derate parameters? Something internal to engine like N1, fuel flow, temperature? Or engine actually gets altitude information and thrust is limited according to preprogrammed formula?
On all Boeing non-737 models climb derates are a fixed percentage of full climb there. There are two climb derate settings - CLB 1 and CLB 2. The precent derates are customer selectable, but they are usually 10% and 20%.
The 737 is a bit different and I’m not as familiar with it.
Thanks for confirming, that's super helpful. Sounds like the answer to the OP is "derate is for low-altitude and it goes away near ToC."
SteelChair wrote:I know of at least one airline that effectively derates throughout the entire spectrum (well not descent). They derate in cruise by biasing their FMS software to slow down slightly. The argument is that .01 Mach is negligible with regard to on time numbers, airplane hours, and crew pay, but does add up over millions of engine hours by savings through reduced EGT. Pushing off shop visits as long as possible generates savings (per the argument).
It doesn't have to be .01M. Your FMS might fly the airplane at .816 instead of .82. Reduces EGT by an almost negligible amount over millions of engine flight hours.
Getting the pilots to actually slow down is another issue.
BoeingGuy wrote:SteelChair wrote:I know of at least one airline that effectively derates throughout the entire spectrum (well not descent). They derate in cruise by biasing their FMS software to slow down slightly. The argument is that .01 Mach is negligible with regard to on time numbers, airplane hours, and crew pay, but does add up over millions of engine hours by savings through reduced EGT. Pushing off shop visits as long as possible generates savings (per the argument).
It doesn't have to be .01M. Your FMS might fly the airplane at .816 instead of .82. Reduces EGT by an almost negligible amount over millions of engine flight hours.
Getting the pilots to actually slow down is another issue.
That’s not a derate. There is a Cost Index entry in the FMC that will select cruise speed based on the number input.
SteelChair wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:SteelChair wrote:I know of at least one airline that effectively derates throughout the entire spectrum (well not descent). They derate in cruise by biasing their FMS software to slow down slightly. The argument is that .01 Mach is negligible with regard to on time numbers, airplane hours, and crew pay, but does add up over millions of engine hours by savings through reduced EGT. Pushing off shop visits as long as possible generates savings (per the argument).
It doesn't have to be .01M. Your FMS might fly the airplane at .816 instead of .82. Reduces EGT by an almost negligible amount over millions of engine flight hours.
Getting the pilots to actually slow down is another issue.
That’s not a derate. There is a Cost Index entry in the FMC that will select cruise speed based on the number input.
Thus the use of the word "effectively."
Reduced power is reduced power, no?
kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:That is a good way of putting it. Engines lose thrust with altitude due to lower mass flow in thinner air. Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
ArcticFlyer wrote:kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:That is a good way of putting it. Engines lose thrust with altitude due to lower mass flow in thinner air. Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
By maximum he means maximum available. At FL350 max available thrust is only about 15-20% of sea level thrust due to reduced air density. As far as parameters go (at least on the engines with which I have experience):In the FMC there is usually a thrust limit page displaying the various N1 or EPR limits for TO/GA, CLB, CRZ and (max) CON. At high altitude they are all the same number or pretty close.
- N1 increases gradually throughout the climb. On the CFM56 initial climb N1 is usually in the high 80s and increases to about 101% in the mid-30s (max is 106%)
- EPR (if displayed) increases pretty dramatically throughout the climb. On the JT8D takeoff was usually around 2.1 and initial climb was 1.8-1.9, but this increased to around 2.4 in the mid-30s
- Fuel flow steadily decreases throughout the climb despite increases in the above parameters
ArcticFlyer wrote:kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:That is a good way of putting it. Engines lose thrust with altitude due to lower mass flow in thinner air. Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
By maximum he means maximum available. At FL350 max available thrust is only about 15-20% of sea level thrust due to reduced air density. As far as parameters go (at least on the engines with which I have experience):In the FMC there is usually a thrust limit page displaying the various N1 or EPR limits for TO/GA, CLB, CRZ and (max) CON. At high altitude they are all the same number or pretty close.
- N1 increases gradually throughout the climb. On the CFM56 initial climb N1 is usually in the high 80s and increases to about 101% in the mid-30s (max is 106%)
- EPR (if displayed) increases pretty dramatically throughout the climb. On the JT8D takeoff was usually around 2.1 and initial climb was 1.8-1.9, but this increased to around 2.4 in the mid-30s
- Fuel flow steadily decreases throughout the climb despite increases in the above parameters
bluecrew wrote:SteelChair wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:
That’s not a derate. There is a Cost Index entry in the FMC that will select cruise speed based on the number input.
Thus the use of the word "effectively."
Reduced power is reduced power, no?
Not in this case. You're not limiting power, just changing the speed the aircraft cruises at to save a little gas. The engine health effects, if true, are minor and come along for the ride.
I don't believe this would have any effect on long-term engine health, positive or negative, but I will defer to the mechanics on this one.
That kind of stuff really does save a very small amount of gas. It's fashionable to talk about how much you're the new guy removing the olive from the salad, but we're talking maybe a couple hundred pounds? Cost index gets changed all the time anyways.
kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
kalvado wrote:And what about temperatures? Those should be significant for engine wear. Of course, if temperature is communicated to pilots to begin with...
Matt6461 wrote:I'm wondering whether an engine derated for regional power - A330 Regional for instance - also has lower power at the top of its climb. Or does the derate only apply to absolute thrust values, which would only be relevant in denser air and lower speeds such as at takeoff.
I would guess derate doesn't usually impact ToC performance, as otherwise a derated plane would be severely climb-limited: with lower MTOW, a plane's optimal cruise air density (FL) is practically linear with weight, while the engine's maximum output at altitude is also nearly linear with weight (and actually linear once the isothermic stratosphere is reached).
Chaostheory wrote:kalvado wrote:And what about temperatures? Those should be significant for engine wear. Of course, if temperature is communicated to pilots to begin with...
Not sure what you're trying to get at here but EGT isn't hidden from the crew, at least not in any types I've flown.
Going by the Trent 800 publication recommended below, a 10% derate will results in EGTs a little over 20% lower than a max thrust takeoff.
EGT isn't a consideration at cruise power. Only rare occasions like the A321 and old V2500 engines out of Khartoum in summer would I watch the redline like a hawk.
kalvado wrote:
I am looking at things from completely different side of technical spectrum. I somewhat understand physics of the engine, but have very limited idea of how things are presented in a cockpit.
And from my perspective temperature is something that accelerates degradation big time. For me "derate" means primarily "lets reduce temperature a bit so things last longer".
In that RR paper they are saying same thing, e.g. fig. 12 and 14. Too bad there is no actual temperature scale on those graphs.
77west wrote:They can select lower but not higher. But I believe it’s an option so some airlines may only have assumed temp derates and no "fixed" derates.
zeke wrote:
The terminology you are using is unhelpful.
kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:LH707330 wrote:Thanks for confirming, that's super helpful. Sounds like the answer to the OP is "derate is for low-altitude and it goes away near ToC."
That is a good way of putting it. Engines lose thrust with altitude due to lower mass flow in thinner air. Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
BoeingGuy wrote:On Boeing airplanes the THRUST LIM page doesn’t give the actual N1 or EPR or TPR limit. It just allows you select any limit.
kalvado wrote:And what about temperatures? Those should be significant for engine wear. Of course, if temperature is communicated to pilots to begin with...
Chaostheory wrote:Google 'Roll royce derated climb performance'. The pdf you find will answer all your questions.
ArcticFlyer wrote:kalvado wrote:And what about temperatures? Those should be significant for engine wear. Of course, if temperature is communicated to pilots to begin with...
I've never flown a turbine aircraft that didn't have EGT gauges. Usually it's only a concern during takeoff but when I flew the Dash 8 the EGT would gradually rise as we climbed and we would start needing to reduce power through about FL200 to stay within EGT limits. Not sure if that was normal or just because our airplanes were old and junky but I haven't observed this on any other type.
Matt6461 wrote:It also seems that, given the relative trends in high engine temps and fuel burn since 2005, the industry would have shifted more towards climb derate as standard practice (though higher oil prices might counteract that calculus). Are climb derates now standard practice?
glen wrote:Matt6461 wrote:It also seems that, given the relative trends in high engine temps and fuel burn since 2005, the industry would have shifted more towards climb derate as standard practice (though higher oil prices might counteract that calculus). Are climb derates now standard practice?
When we received RR powered A330 13 years ago we used derate depending on TOW. On a heavy aircraft we didn't use any derate at all, at medium weights (10 to 20 tons below MTOW if I remember correct) D1 and at lower weights D2.
Today the amount we have to pay for maintenance is heavily depending on how much derate we use and is based on actual measurements. Therefore we should use always D2 unless we have some climb restrictions.
ArcticFlyer wrote:kalvado wrote:And what about temperatures? Those should be significant for engine wear. Of course, if temperature is communicated to pilots to begin with...
I've never flown a turbine aircraft that didn't have EGT gauges. Usually it's only a concern during takeoff but when I flew the Dash 8 the EGT would gradually rise as we climbed and we would start needing to reduce power through about FL200 to stay within EGT limits. Not sure if that was normal or just because our airplanes were old and junky but I haven't observed this on any other type.
gloom wrote:kalvado wrote:Starlionblue wrote:Hence why cruise power is pretty near maximum.
Near maximum by what metric? Certainly not by shaft power or fuel flow. Near maximum achievable at that altitude? From what I get from pilots here, if there is enough power to climb - it makes economic sense to do so..
Would N1 and/or EGT be near maximum long-term values? Or is there another physical limit in the engine?
The metric usually looked at is N1% (as limiting metric, and a good checkpoint to maximum in current conditions). The conditions in cruise (for the lack of oxygen) will be nowhere near ground thrust, definitely.
There used to be a Java based simulator in one of NASA sites, able to simulate CFM56 thrust (I believe CFM56-3B from the Classics, rated at 23.5klbs TO thrust). At 37kft cruise, the engine was maxed out at ~5.2klbs, so I assume 4:1 ratio between TO and cruise is a good "rule of thumb" estimation.
Cheers,
Adam
PS. They don't have CFM56 anymore, but CF6 shows similar behavior.
https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/beginners-guide-to-aeronautics/enginesimu/
Starlionblue wrote:
From what I have heard, the A340 engines would regularly overtemp EGT if it was hot and/or high, and require thrust reduction.
glen wrote:Starlionblue wrote:
From what I have heard, the A340 engines would regularly overtemp EGT if it was hot and/or high, and require thrust reduction.
Regularly is a bit too much of a word. But with high OAT and TOGA-takeoff, the possibility of an EGT exceedance during takeoff or shortly afterwards is higher. The reason is the engine performance is limited by the engine design.
As long as the overtemp stays within a certain limit for a limited time, the engine can be continued to operate for the rest of the flight.
The EGT margin is decreasing as the engine becomes less efficient due to compressor and turbine blade wear. On the other hand EGT margin can be increased with regular engine core wash and a sufficient warm-up time. While the minimum warm-up time is 2 minutes, it is recommended to warm up 10 minutes before a TOGA-takeoff of with FLX-temperatures close to OAT.
LH707330 wrote:Is that the T500 or CFM56-5C that has the issue?
Starlionblue wrote:From what I have heard, the A340 engines would regularly overtemp EGT if it was hot and/or high, and require thrust reduction.
zeke wrote:Starlionblue wrote:From what I have heard, the A340 engines would regularly overtemp EGT if it was hot and/or high, and require thrust reduction.
Nope, not regular at all. We would have had a NTC in the front of the tech log if the engine was having high egts. Compressor washers helped a lot.