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Old 24th Jun 2012, 23:12
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burning alternate fuel

Greetings all!!
I'm flying over in China domestically and they require alternate fuel for all flights even if the destination is CAVU. My question is, can you start burning your alternate fuel if ATC gives you a few delaying turns or keeps you lower than flight plan? It seems crazy to divert to an alternate when the destination is CAVU. My Chinse copilots say you must divert as soon as you get down to only alternate plus reserve (45 mins). Any thoughts or even better, a regulation pertaining to this? Thanks
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Old 24th Jun 2012, 23:17
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What regulations are you operating under?
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Old 24th Jun 2012, 23:32
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CAAC (China)
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 00:32
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Sorry I can't help with a reference but if the destination is CAVOK then are you allowed to commit to it under your Chinese rules? If you commit then burning Alternate fuel would be justifiable - since you're not going to use it for an alternate.

Last edited by The African Dude; 25th Jun 2012 at 00:33.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 00:59
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I know I will not be able to find it in the Chinese regs, but can anyone direct me to a source in their own regs where it specifically states you are allowed to burn alternate fuel enroute to your destination? Thanks
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 02:14
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It doesn't really matter what you do or what the regs say.

You will be wrong, the locals will be right and the desired result from the company will be the most ludicrous you can imagine.

I had a situation inbound to north america with a chinese carrier where the chinese crew wanted to divert into PANC as we were looking like landing at destination with less than reclearance fuel. cavok, planned touchdown with 2.5 hours of gas. But they wanted to land enroute.

freaks!!!!!!!
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 03:24
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In the US you're required to depart with a certain amount of fuel onboard (or redispatch-rerelease with a certain amount of fuel onboard), what you do with that fuel is entirely up to you. No requirements for arriving over destination with X amount onboard.

I know the EU differs, though I don't know to what extent.

As far as CAAC is concerned, oicur seems to have hit the nail on the head.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 03:48
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I know I will not be able to find it in the Chinese regs, but can anyone direct me to a source in their own regs where it specifically states you are allowed to burn alternate fuel enroute to your destination? Thanks
Do you have SOPs? General ops Manual?

Did you have line training at all??

Last edited by de facto; 25th Jun 2012 at 15:17.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 04:22
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Why not make your alternate the destination and your destination the alternate?

Take off with minimum fuel, fly a little low and fast, then you are sure to arrive at your destination with less than the required fuel. You will then be compelled to divert (hopefully while enroute) to the "alternate" and everyone's happy, especially the passengers.

So basically you're diverting to your intended destination, and not away from it!
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 04:29
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I see now why your name is #blip#

Blip blip blip ..flat line--------------
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 11:58
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Most large air carriers' SOPs and Ops manuals include a declaration that states in plain, understandable, level-4 English that you are not constrained from using common sense. . . . if you get the drift.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 12:30
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Why don't you just take extra fuel for those delaying vectors... Once the fuel bill gets high enough the carriers will start complaining with the CAAC and voila rules change...

Last edited by 737Jock; 25th Jun 2012 at 12:35.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 12:41
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Yet another 'waste of time thread' started by a supposed 'Captain' flying commercially under CAAC regulations but totally unable to know how to look anything up under the CAAC rules or even in the 'supposed' airline's Ops Manual. Also 'unable' to ask anyone in the airline's management or training structure..

We are being plagued on PPRune by charlatans.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 13:49
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737jock

exactly.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 15:14
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Yet another 'waste of time thread' started by a supposed 'Captain' flying commercially under CAAC regulations but totally unable to know how to look anything up under the CAAC rules or even in the 'supposed' airline's Ops Manual. Also 'unable' to ask anyone in the airline's management or training structure..

We are being plagued on PPRuNe by charlatans.
I guess so.
Another of those first officers who magically got PIC time and went through the net...
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 16:28
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You can burn it, as long as you land with more than the final reserve.

But I don't know in china...
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 17:00
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I grabbed this from www.chinaflightcrew.com
It looks like you need a lot of extra fuel.... You can decide how much you trust the website...


FUEL REQUIREMENTS
All domestic flights must have enough fuel to:
A. Fly to the airport to which the flight was dispatched;
B. Thereafter, fly to and land at the most distant alternate airport (if an alternate is
required) for the airport to which dispatched; and
C. Thereafter, fly for 45 minutes at normal cruising fuel consumption.
Certificate holders who are authorized by CAAC can determine the fuel requirement
by means of flying from specified airport to alternate. No person may dispatch or take off an
airplane unless it has enough fuel to fly from the specified airport to and land at an alternate
airport, and thereafter fly for 45 minutes at normal cruising fuel consumption. But the fuel
quantity is not less than the requirement to fly to destination dispatched, and thereafter fly
for 2 hours at normal cruising fuel consumption.
The fuel required for a flag flight landing within the contiguous China is the same as
for domestic flights.

Nonturbine and turbo-propeller-powered airplanes flight (with an alternate available)
landing outside the contiguous China must have enough fuel to:
A. Fly to and land at the airport to which it is dispatched;
B. Thereafter, fly to and land at the most distant alternate airport specified in the
dispatch
release; and
C. Thereafter, fly for 30 minutes plus 15 percent of the total time required to fly at
normal
cruising fuel consumption to the airports specified in paragraphs I and 2 of this
section or to fly for 90 minutes at normal cruising fuel consumption, whichever is
less.
No person may dispatch a nonturbine or turbo-propeller-powered airplane to an
airport for which an alternate is not specified, unless it has enough fuel, considering wind
and forecast weather conditions, to fly to that airport and thereafter to fly for 3 hours at
normal cruising fuel consumption.
Turbojet-engine-powered air carder airplanes, other than turbo propeller, flight (with
an alternate available) landing outside the contiguous China must have fuel to:
A. Fly to the destination, then
B. Fly 10 % of the total time required to fly to the destination, then
C. Fly to and land at the most distant alternate, then
D. Fly for 30 minutes at holding speed at I 500 feet above the alternate.
No person may release a turbine-engine powered airplane (other than a
turbo-propeller airplane) to an airport for which an alternate is not specified unless it has
enough fuel, considering wind and other weather conditions expected, to fly to that airport
and thereafter to fly for at least 2 hours at normal cruising fuel consumption.
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 22:47
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Not CAAC… but for reference this is what EU-OPS 1.375 thinks about it (my underlining):

(b) in-flight fuel management.

1. the flight must be conducted so that the expected usable fuel remaining on arrival at the destination aerodrome is not less than:

(i) the required alternate fuel plus final reserve fuel, or

(ii) the final reserve fuel if no alternate aerodrome is required;

2. however, if, as a result of an in-flight fuel check, the expected usable fuel remaining on arrival at the destination aerodrome is less than:

(i) the required alternate fuel plus final reserve fuel, the commander must take into account the traffic and the operational conditions prevailing at the destination aerodrome, at the destination alternate aerodrome and at any other adequate aerodrome, in deciding whether to proceed to the destination aerodrome or to divert so as to perform a safe landing with not less than final reserve fuel, or

(ii) the final reserve fuel if no alternate aerodrome is required, the commander must take appropriate action and proceed to an adequate aerodrome so as to perform a safe landing with not less than final reserve fuel;
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Old 25th Jun 2012, 23:35
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On the contrary, de facto.

A ridiculous requirement such as this deserves a ridiculous solution. This is assuming that the dispatch fuel requirement is in fact required in flight, which as many have already suggested is probably not the case anyway.

Last edited by Blip; 25th Jun 2012 at 23:36.
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Old 27th Jun 2012, 14:53
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So are we to understand that if you planned a trip for 2 hours, and you arrive at your destination at 2 hours and 2 minutes, your supposed to divert? Or are you supposed to divert when you hit a certain fuel quantity?

Also, how tight are they fuelling up planes over there...cruise plus reserve? filled up? I'd be curious if they are performance Nazis only putting on what the flight absolutely needs.
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