Downwind leg - how wide from the runway?
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Downwind leg - how wide from the runway?
Over the years, Melbourne based Pprune contributors occasionally complain about the wide circuits flown at Moorabbin. It probably happens at other capital city general aviation airports in Australia as well. . As one instructor rationalized, "Wide circuits give time for student pilots to settle down." That is not a credible reason. On the contrary, wide circuits can be frustrating, annoying (and costly) to other pilots who fly intelligent circuits commensurate with aircraft type.
Some Boeing manuals (Boeing 737 for example) recommend a standardized two mile wide downwind leg for their types. It follows that a half mile width should be the norm for typical flying school trainers. The circuit width should not be tailored to the pilot but to the type of aircraft and the pilot should be trained to that standard - instructors please note.
The following article discusses circuit training:
https://pilotworkshop.com/tips/traffic-pattern-track/?utm_source=totw&utm_medium=email&utm_term=7-3-2019&utm_campaign=tip
Some Boeing manuals (Boeing 737 for example) recommend a standardized two mile wide downwind leg for their types. It follows that a half mile width should be the norm for typical flying school trainers. The circuit width should not be tailored to the pilot but to the type of aircraft and the pilot should be trained to that standard - instructors please note.
The following article discusses circuit training:
https://pilotworkshop.com/tips/traffic-pattern-track/?utm_source=totw&utm_medium=email&utm_term=7-3-2019&utm_campaign=tip
Depending how well I correct for wind on the day, 850-1000m in the RV-9...And you can get a touch-and-go circuit in every 3 minutes 20 seconds if there's no one else about to conflict with!
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Ideally, it depends on the glide ratio and airspeed of the airplane in question, to be able to make the runway in the event of engine failure.
Realistically, it depends on other practicalities, such as skill level of the pilot (particularly in the early learning stages).
Realistically, it depends on other practicalities, such as skill level of the pilot (particularly in the early learning stages).
it also depends on the climb rate as instructors won’t let the downwind turn start until 1000ft on crosswind. My guesstimate for the width is about 800 - 900m for a C172 from my time there.
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I was taught during basic military flying training that at an unfamiliar airfield, when unsure of the downwind spacing, put the edge of the (inboard) wingtip just on the runway. Certainly worked as a decent approximation for smallish aircraft
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In RAF SEP, low wing aircraft we used to teach students to put the roundel on the outer wing over the runway in use. The idea was that it kept you close enough so in the unlikely event of the engine failing, you would have a chance of making the airfield, if necessary. We also flew "oval" circuits, not the much larger, "civvie" rectangular ones. Anyone going outside of the normal pattern, such as when committing the heinous crime of extending too far downwind might be directed by the duty instructor to go around onto the deadside and rejoin the circuit.
These days it's all too common to see aircraft supposedly in the circuit of minor airfields leaving the protection of the ATZ on the downwind leg - obviously many of these pilots aren't looking outwards, only in towards the field; not at all sensible.
These days it's all too common to see aircraft supposedly in the circuit of minor airfields leaving the protection of the ATZ on the downwind leg - obviously many of these pilots aren't looking outwards, only in towards the field; not at all sensible.
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it depends on other practicalities, such as skill level of the pilot (particularly in the early learning stages).
Varies for every aircraft as there are lots of factors like how steep the descent is, speed, likelyhod of an engine failure, flaps, can they sideslip. In anything slightly higher performance, if you conduct a turn at 120kts the diameter would be roughly 1-1.2nm (1800-2200m). So a minimum of that is needed.
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Maybe - Maybe not. Assuming the instructor has the ability to first demonstrate to the student the correct width of the downwind leg along with required turning points, then the student has something to aim for. But if the instructor lets the student fly the circuit he feels comfortable with, then that is poor instruction because that could impact other users of the circuit. A learner driver would probably be happier driving down the middle of the road rather than keeping to the left. But most driving instructors wouldn't allow that to happen.
In my previous life at Parafield airport we had the same issue as Moorabbin, constantly wider and wider circuits - particuarly when there is a tailwind on crosswind or downwind.
In a single engine aircraft - close enough to glide from a downwind position and comfortably glide in (0.75-1nm). Larger aircraft operate higher and faster, so flying the same sized circuit would not be practical. The aircraft I operate now (medium turboprop) we aim for approx 1.5-1.8nm spacing with a 1500' circuit.
In a single engine aircraft - close enough to glide from a downwind position and comfortably glide in (0.75-1nm). Larger aircraft operate higher and faster, so flying the same sized circuit would not be practical. The aircraft I operate now (medium turboprop) we aim for approx 1.5-1.8nm spacing with a 1500' circuit.
The instructor should demonstrate correctly then the student follow. The first turn onto crosswind is done at 500' AGL but the turn onto downwind is to set up the downwind leg at the correct distance from the runway, not an altitude. We often get "mega circuits" here at Jandakot and instructors just letting them wander to the edge of the control zone. It's very annoying when you have to follow an aircraft that is taking the scenic route.
I never said it was correct, just what a certain school did. Climbing turns, descending turns, spirals to loose height were not part of their syllabus. The CFI also hated side slipping.
The lax behaviour at YMMB soon boiled down for the ab initial student to : “aim for this factory, then turn to follow xxx road, then yyyy road, aim for vegetable gardens, then golf clubhouse, etc., etc.” Nothing useful was taught about visual cues apart from “put the strut on the runway, about 45 degrees’ to the point that I still have trouble judging turning points on short narrow strips and that has cost me $$ in go around and overlong final approaches to compensate.
The lax behaviour at YMMB soon boiled down for the ab initial student to : “aim for this factory, then turn to follow xxx road, then yyyy road, aim for vegetable gardens, then golf clubhouse, etc., etc.” Nothing useful was taught about visual cues apart from “put the strut on the runway, about 45 degrees’ to the point that I still have trouble judging turning points on short narrow strips and that has cost me $$ in go around and overlong final approaches to compensate.
Last edited by Sunfish; 5th Jul 2019 at 07:23.
Ideally, it depends on the glide ratio and airspeed of the airplane in question, to be able to make the runway in the event of engine failure.
Realistically, it depends on other practicalities, such as skill level of the pilot (particularly in the early learning stages).
Realistically, it depends on other practicalities, such as skill level of the pilot (particularly in the early learning stages).
Keep it tight ---- you might be surprised how small a circuit can be, in a large aircraft,
Tootle pip!!
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This remark from a former RAF Canberra pilot who was sent to Canada for his flying training. Of course not all Harvards were in the circuit at the same time but you can bet circuit discipline was tight.
"I remember training in Canada on the Harvard at RCAF Penhold Alberta (near Red Deer) in 1957.It was quite normal to have 60 or 70 Harvards serviceable on the line in the morning.(100 deg F in Summer -40 in winter) Cheers"
"I remember training in Canada on the Harvard at RCAF Penhold Alberta (near Red Deer) in 1957.It was quite normal to have 60 or 70 Harvards serviceable on the line in the morning.(100 deg F in Summer -40 in winter) Cheers"
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Last edited by Stickshift3000; 5th Jul 2019 at 22:33. Reason: Context
Whaat!? You lucky bu99er. I am lucky to get 3 touch and go's in a 1 hour lesson which has made my training at a very busy airport slow and expensive.
"Back in the day", with 05/23 in full swing at (then) ASBK, 12 in the circuit was common, with 3 of 4 more or less abreast on final for the grass and runway.
Most of us were "logging" 100h per month.
Sadly, these days, 3 or 4 per hour would be more like it.
Tootle pip!!