The slowdown that airliners do on approach

Jake

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Jake
When I fly commercial (I'm not a pilot...yet) as we approach the airfield the jet makes a very noticeable slowdown. Would this be pulling back the throttle, lowering flap, or something else? I'm pretty sure it isn't the landing gear as I think I hear that much closer.
 
The gear too? Seems like we're really moving but I just looked and Airbus 320 is gear down at 250 knots and lands around 150?
 
When I fly commercial (I'm not a pilot...yet) as we approach the airfield the jet makes a very noticeable slowdown. Would this be pulling back the throttle, lowering flap, or something else? I'm pretty sure it isn't the landing gear as I think I hear that much closer.
Jets will pick up speed like crazy in the descent, so why you are noticing initially at the begging of the descent from cruise is a significant power reduction. If they are having to work to get done, they will throw out the spoilers (you'll see that on the top of the wing). The gear and flaps obviously much closer to the airport and you will hear and feel.

In some of the early jets, there were other tricks to get down, but you won't see much of that anymore.
 
They are dumping all their fuel over congested areas. Or for they only do this over Sedona ?
 
It's not polite to tell a jet jock he/she is adjusting the throttle... Those are Thrusters/thrust-levers... at least that's what an Airforce LtCol told me once...:rolleyes:
 
Airline pilots just jockey the thrust levers , speed up, slow down, and anything else you can think of, to make passengers think we're flying the Space Shuttle...thrust vectors? :);)
 
The gear too? Seems like we're really moving but I just looked and Airbus 320 is gear down at 250 knots and lands around 150?
Depends on how slow ATC wants us. Coming from the south, NY wants us at 250/11000 at a specific fix and they'll tell us to keep 180 until a 5 mile final. At smaller out stations, they usually don't assign us a speed because there's a lot less sequencing and traffic.
 
Airline pilots just jockey the thrust levers , speed up, slow down, and anything else you can think of, to make passengers think we're flying the Space Shuttle...thrust vectors? :);)

Turbulence_91bbed_2908459.jpg
 
The DC-8 could deploy the inboard engines' (#2 & 3) thrust reversers.

I asked a guy who used to fly DC8's why they can't get the damn airplane down once. He told me about using the thrust reversers but said they could only do that when they were hauling frieght, not passengers. Might have just been his company's rule, I didn't ask that.
 
I have that card (somewhere) that I've been intending to frame someday. :thumbsup:
 
I asked a guy who used to fly DC8's why they can't get the damn airplane down once. He told me about using the thrust reversers but said they could only do that when they were hauling frieght, not passengers. Might have just been his company's rule, I didn't ask that.

I was on a flight on a DC-8 back in 1983 going into Japan on my way to Korea and they deployed the reversers in order to get down. Of course, I guess being in the Army at the time, we were considered freight.
 
Flew on a DC8 going to Germany, had us (military charter) packed in there like sardines, and then flew to Korea in one too, "Stretched 8" I think they called it.

upload_2016-11-12_9-43-47.png
 
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Flew on a DC8 going to Germany, had us (military charter) packed in there like sardines, and then Korea too, "Stretched 8" I think they called it.

View attachment 49198

I did the sardine can thing going to Japan. Going home a year a later I got a good book to read and started the line at the terminal at Yokota 2 hours before boarding to get the emergency exit row. The stews occupied the window seat during takeoffs and landings and was empty the rest of the time. I had elbow room for the 8 or so hour flight back and could stretch the legs.
 
It's not polite to tell a jet jock he/she is adjusting the throttle... Those are Thrusters/thrust-levers... at least that's what an Airforce LtCol told me once...:rolleyes:
We called them throttles at TWA.
 
I asked a guy who used to fly DC8's why they can't get the damn airplane down once. He told me about using the thrust reversers but said they could only do that when they were hauling frieght, not passengers. Might have just been his company's rule, I didn't ask that.
Not an operating limitation, but the buffet was so bad it would scare the passengers.
 
One substantial reduction at 10,000 feet for the 250 knot speed restriction. Several smaller ones to 180 knots, or maybe one all at once to the final approach fix and one last one at the final approach fix to slow to final approach speed.

I think the most noticeable one is at 10,000 feet.
 
When I fly commercial (I'm not a pilot...yet) as we approach the airfield the jet makes a very noticeable slowdown. Would this be pulling back the throttle, lowering flap, or something else?
Next time, get a window seat on/behind the wing and watch the control surfaces. Flaps are normally easy to hear and spot, spoilers are nicely visible on top of the wings (and cause a decent buffet) and you should also be able to hear engine tone change.

I'm pretty sure it isn't the landing gear as I think I hear that much closer.
That should be normally over the FAF or even earlier if they are too fast and need to throw it out to slow down. But you can usually feel the gear unlatch and drop and then feel the deceleration.

Enjoy flying commercial while you can! Once you become a pilot, you might stop liking it. ;)
 
On the 320 the plan is to be at idle thrust all the way down from cruise. Sometimes it works sometimes not. Most airframes rumble wth the boards up and have a large increase in wind speed as the gear comes down. On the 320 the gear is referred to as the rubber speed brakes, if you get behind it or atc jams you, sometimes it's the only way to get down and slow down. The 321 is the worst of the family in that respect.

Bob
 
Interesting about deploying the spoilers on descent. A couple weeks ago coming from BWI to CMH on Southwest and sitting just behind the wing I noticed the spoilers deployed as we descended. I was tempted to ask about it here because I don't recall seeing that before. I took a screen shot of Garmin Pilot which I was running on my phone at the time. I like to play 'guess the arrival procedure' as a way to learn more about the app and it's fun to follow along.
spoiled.JPG ifr.PNG
 
I asked a guy who used to fly DC8's why they can't get the damn airplane down once. He told me about using the thrust reversers but said they could only do that when they were hauling frieght, not passengers. Might have just been his company's rule, I didn't ask that.
United certainly did it plenty of times when passengers were aboard. Used to ride the -8 with them all the time (The -8 was also the first to have ATC-on-9 I believe).
 
I recall one of our captains that would always point to the speed brake handle when he had a controller riding the jump seat and state, "These are for my mistakes, not yours."
 
I recall one of our captains that would always point to the speed brake handle when he had a controller riding the jump seat and state, "These are for my mistakes, not yours."
I've heard that, too. But that attitude doesn't work today. Simpler times then.
 
I asked a guy who used to fly DC8's why they can't get the damn airplane down once. He told me about using the thrust reversers but said they could only do that when they were hauling frieght, not passengers. Might have just been his company's rule, I didn't ask that.
Reversing the inboards inflight produced a lot of noise and vibration. It certainly would frighten passengers who weren't accustomed to it. As the airplanes aged the wear and tear from inflight reverse led to us being discouraged from using it. I can only remember using inflight reverse in the DC8 twice in roughly 1200 hours.

In the 737s that I fly now, we can't go below about 210 knots without extending flaps. Gear goes down at roughly 2000' above/6mi from touchdown. Landing flaps between 1000' and 1500' above touchdown. ATC typically assigns 170-180kts until the FAP at the bigger airports. Slowest speed on final can be as low as in the mid-130s (737-700) or as high as the high 170s (737-900 w/gusty winds). Typical is in the 145kt-155kt range. Had to do a go-around yesterday because approach put us 2.5mi behind an E145 and I couldn't fly any slower than 153kts on final.
 
When I fly commercial (I'm not a pilot...yet) as we approach the airfield the jet makes a very noticeable slowdown. Would this be pulling back the throttle, lowering flap, or something else? I'm pretty sure it isn't the landing gear as I think I hear that much closer.

They slow to 250 knots when passing 10,000 feet. Is that what you are talking about?
 
They slow to 250 knots when passing 10,000 feet. Is that what you are talking about?

At some of the very busy airports STARs often have speed reductions above 10,000.
 
At some of the very busy airports STARs often have speed reductions above 10,000.

And some of the busier terminal areas will start speed restricting arrivals even without a STAR.
 
It's not polite to tell a jet jock he/she is adjusting the throttle... Those are Thrusters/thrust-levers... at least that's what an Airforce LtCol told me once...:rolleyes:


Calling BS......computers are doing it all now.
 
Calling BS......computers are doing it all now.

Wrong. Maybe you're thinking of auto throttles, not all jets have them. I flew the CJ 200,700, and 900, all without auto throttles. But the 700 & 900 did have FADEC. Yes computers control and do a lot in modern airplanes, but not all.
 
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