B777 single engine overweight landing question.
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B777 single engine overweight landing question.
Saw something in a sim the other day that got me thinking and would like others thoughts on it.
Scenario was a simple engine failure in cruise at a weight of about 300 tons. One crew member wanted to dump fuel to landing weight, one wanted to land at current weight to save fuel and environmental damage. Runway was long enough to theoretically allow landing without blowing the tires (but barely) and aircraft was WAT capable of single engine go around.
So while I was siding with the more conservative course of action, are there any certification or technical issues with an overweight single engine landing?
Thanks, Cropduster.
Scenario was a simple engine failure in cruise at a weight of about 300 tons. One crew member wanted to dump fuel to landing weight, one wanted to land at current weight to save fuel and environmental damage. Runway was long enough to theoretically allow landing without blowing the tires (but barely) and aircraft was WAT capable of single engine go around.
So while I was siding with the more conservative course of action, are there any certification or technical issues with an overweight single engine landing?
Thanks, Cropduster.
Diversion to nearest suitable commenced...fuel dumping commenced..at which point the Fuel jettison system failed.
After suitable review (nature of the engine failure, performance, etc) the crew made the decision to land above max landing weight.
All ended well, aircraft checked out for overweight landing, nothing adverse found
as a result of the landing but the engine was a mess.
Company completely supportive of crew actions/decisions.
No obvious certification reasons.
O-Wt landing would not be higher than max takeoff wt; brakes etc are certificated and tested for max wt RTO. Thus brakes and tyre care is not an issue; your are not going to have a quick turnaround !
Time wise; land as you judge the urgency of the situation; according to the situation as assessed, at that time by the people there.
Weight; reduce wt to maximise safety as judged by the landing distance margin vs possible need to make several approaches / divert. Don’t box yourself in to making a ‘first time’ approach and landing which probably has ‘not be done before’ - simulator may not count for much in a real emergency; the aircraft may be the same, you are not.
Dump for the ‘environment’ ! Only if woods / wild life, fish stocks, or fuel tanks are in the overrun area.
Relatives will not thank you for planning a ‘Green funeral’.
O-Wt landing would not be higher than max takeoff wt; brakes etc are certificated and tested for max wt RTO. Thus brakes and tyre care is not an issue; your are not going to have a quick turnaround !
Time wise; land as you judge the urgency of the situation; according to the situation as assessed, at that time by the people there.
Weight; reduce wt to maximise safety as judged by the landing distance margin vs possible need to make several approaches / divert. Don’t box yourself in to making a ‘first time’ approach and landing which probably has ‘not be done before’ - simulator may not count for much in a real emergency; the aircraft may be the same, you are not.
Dump for the ‘environment’ ! Only if woods / wild life, fish stocks, or fuel tanks are in the overrun area.
Relatives will not thank you for planning a ‘Green funeral’.
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I don’t fly the 777 so how much holding time will this take?
I’m not sure your local CAA/FAA will agree wih your company.
Or did I read you wrong? You would dump as much fuel as possible and land at whatever weight you end up with on your way to your diversion field? Which is what I imagine most pilots would do.
Given that on e.g. -300 you can be departing 90’ish tonnes above max landing weight I’m also pretty sure the CAA/FAA wouldn’t be too impressed with a once around the pattern and land for a simple engine failure either.
Only half a speed-brake
Yikes, what else would they like to see? Fly out 60 miles to a fuel dump racetrack, spend 25 mins there and come back, does not sound too smart.
The AC is certified for an RTO with about 1000 m remaining to the stop. After an engine fails we do our thing, put all of the runway in front of the nose again, and land the ailing bird. Is that scenario any different for a heavy?
If it will take off, you can land it - my predecessors claim to bring that rule of thumb directly from Seattle - a certification requirement they said.
With a cargo smoke warning, we would be landing PDQ as the safest course of action. I do not see how a -1 engine makes that a less professional choice.
Ready to be educated, FD.
The AC is certified for an RTO with about 1000 m remaining to the stop. After an engine fails we do our thing, put all of the runway in front of the nose again, and land the ailing bird. Is that scenario any different for a heavy?
If it will take off, you can land it - my predecessors claim to bring that rule of thumb directly from Seattle - a certification requirement they said.
With a cargo smoke warning, we would be landing PDQ as the safest course of action. I do not see how a -1 engine makes that a less professional choice.
Ready to be educated, FD.
Last edited by FlightDetent; 23rd Feb 2019 at 18:34.
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FWIW I’ll throw this into the debate - one of “our” triples suffered an interesting engine (as in not just a run down) failure in the cruise recently, whilst well over FCOM max landing weight.
Diversion to nearest suitable commenced...fuel dumping commenced..at which point the Fuel jettison system failed.
After suitable review (nature of the engine failure, performance, etc) the crew made the decision to land above max landing weight.
All ended well, aircraft checked out for overweight landing, nothing adverse found
as a result of the landing but the engine was a mess.
Company completely supportive of crew actions/decisions.
To add to the debate, what does the MEL say about having the jettison system inop? That may give some insight into what Boeing thinks.
Disclaimer- I've never flown an airplane capable of dumping fuel.
FWIW I’ll throw this into the debate - one of “our” triples suffered an interesting engine (as in not just a run down) failure in the cruise recently, whilst well over FCOM max landing weight.
Diversion to nearest suitable commenced...fuel dumping commenced..at which point the Fuel jettison system failed.
After suitable review (nature of the engine failure, performance, etc) the crew made the decision to land above max landing weight.
All ended well, aircraft checked out for overweight landing, nothing adverse found
as a result of the landing but the engine was a mess.
Company completely supportive of crew actions/decisions.
A Cathay Pacific 747-400 taking-off out of the old Kai Tak airport in 1995, on runway 13 out to sea, had an engine blow up, remained on fire in a big way - Captain did a 180 and landed back on runway 31 at 400 tones with 421 on board (max take-off weight) - as they did the 180 the two guys in the back did the performance sums etc etc etc (know your charts well I guess) - all this in around 11 minutes. Amazing ! NEEDS MUST !
I always found the ROD on final approach at those high speeds scary :-)
During certification, we look at something called "Return to Land" - basically there is a serious emergency shortly after a Max Weight TO (e.g. uncontrollable fire), and you need to land ASAP - significant fuel dumping is not an option. It may not be pretty, and you want the pilots to be on their 'A' game, but it's required to be possible (and safe) to do a MTOW landing at the departure airport (since you just left there at MTOW, it presumably has a reasonably long runway). This of course assumes that whatever went wrong didn't significantly affect landing/stopping distances.
Personally I've been on a enough overweight landings during flight testing that I don't really see it as being that big of deal so long as the pilots know what they're doing and you're not talking something like a short and/or contaminated/slick runway.
Personally I've been on a enough overweight landings during flight testing that I don't really see it as being that big of deal so long as the pilots know what they're doing and you're not talking something like a short and/or contaminated/slick runway.