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B737 NG Skid Resist TO Data

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B737 NG Skid Resist TO Data

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Old 5th Nov 2002, 17:35
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B737 NG Skid Resist TO Data

Boeing made available, for the B737 NG, Skid Resist TO Data (not so for previous B737 derivatives). This data, for use on grooved runways, is very close to the data for dry runways even though the runway is wet, however, the data is apparently an option. Are there any operators out there with the B737 NG that did not opt for this data and therefore it is unavailable to their pilots?

Appreciate any information,

LL
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Old 6th Nov 2002, 12:00
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Wink

I've only flown for 1 NG operator, but numerous other airlines on other B-types. This concept is a new one to me, but Lauda Air had a novel approach; that is I'd never heard of it before either. If the runway was grooved treat it as dry. They could not verify the validity of this as the guru who introduced the idea had left the company. They certainly didn't have any extra tables, just used the dry ones.

This opens up a related topic of Dry, Damp & Wet.

A grooved runway in the tropics, where you are most likely to need the extra water dispersal, is hardly going to be nearly dry in performance terms. It could easily be swimming (contaminated) with the weight of downpour.
However, in UK, ATC were forever saying the runway is WET when it's only damp after a passing shower. That can put you in a quandry if, by treating it as WET in performance terms, you can't get to where you want to go. When I asked ATC why they were using the term WET. they responded with a definition different to ours.
I'm a bit out of the loop now, but is this still the case? And just exactly what does damp mean in performance terms? Is it braking action good but not clean and dry".


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