Jump to content

Planning descents


MATTS875

Recommended Posts

what kind of descent planning are you all doing? I ahve a friend that flys and I believe I understood him correct but he said that if he is flying say 5000'  he takes the 5000' divide by 2= 2500 and starts his standard 500' minute descent about 25 miles out.I think I understood him correctly on this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 51
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I never pay a lot of attention to the miles out, but instead look at minutes from destination on my Garmin.  For a 500 fpm decent my simple math is Cruise Altitude - Pattern Altitude / 500.  (ex. (8000-1500)/500=13 minutes out that I start my 500 fpm decent.  Or easier yet, just subtract the cruise and pattern alts and multiply the number by 2 and take the resulting number's two first digits as the minutes.  (ex. (8000-1500) x 2= 13,000).  After doing it a few times it becomes pretty easy.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That works if your ground speed is 150 in the descent. If your going 180 in the descent you have to start your descent 30 miles out if you want to drop 5000ft at 500fpm. I just divide my groundspeed I'm traveling in the descent by 60, and that will give me the miles per min I'm traveling. Then I take the time it's going to take to descend. 5000ft divided by 500fpm is 10 min. Multiply the two numbers together and you get the miles out you have to start your descent. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I plan 3 mins per 1000' of descent (about 300 fpm) for cruise descents.  For a 5000' descent that works out to about 41 nm away when travelling at 150 kts - so slightly longer than your friend.  But he is planning for a 500 fpm descent from the numbers you have given (I think).


I generally like a shallower descent because the higher descent rate pushes my airspeed closer to Vne unless I throttle back to less than 20 inches.


There is an old saying about Mooneys being able to either slow down or go down - just not at the same time.


 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll have to play with the Garmin vnav function. So far, it's been very easy to count thousands of feet from TPA to cruise, double that number, add 2 or three, and start down that many minutes out. If you've got a GPS that will give ETE, "distance out" is not needed, you've got time left and a descent rate in feet per minute--converting minutes to miles is not easy to do in your head, and it varies tremendously with wind direction/strength.


If you want less than 500 feet per minute, triple the thousands of feet number. The key is to hold your descent rate pretty close to target, let the speed build [i walk the throttle and mixture during descent to maintain cruise MP/EGT all the way down]. From 10,000 cruise to 1600' pattern is 8½ thousand feet, or 17 minutes, so I'll start down around 20 minutes out, which is generally 50+ miles.


If you're up in turbo territory, this may not work as well, but it works pretty good for me. When IFR, you can ask for descent, but it's pretty controlled in my limited experience.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quote: MATTS875

what kind of descent planning are you all doing? I ahve a friend that flys and I believe I understood him correct but he said that if he is flying say 5000'  he takes the 5000' divide by 2= 2500 and starts his standard 500' minute descent about 25 miles out.I think I understood him correctly on this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quote: N4352H

 And Hank multiplied. Your math is fuzzy. It should be:

5000-1000(arrive at TPA). To loose 4000 feet going two miles a minute, choose your decent rate or distance out. 1000 feet per minute 4 mins/8 miles out, 500fpm 8 min/16 miles out. Faster/slower..interpolate.

As mentioned earlier in the thread, if you have a G430, the V-nav function kicks butt. I put it in first Nav window of my 430.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think your speed is a little low for Mooney speeds, perhaps closer to 3 miles per minute.

Quote: N4352H

 And Hank multiplied. Your math is fuzzy. It should be:

5000-1000(arrive at TPA). To loose 4000 feet going two miles a minute, choose your decent rate or distance out. 1000 feet per minute 4 mins/8 miles out, 500fpm 8 min/16 miles out. Faster/slower..interpolate.

As mentioned earlier in the thread, if you have a G430, the V-nav function kicks butt. I put it in first Nav window of my 430.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

\

Quote: Hank

I'll have to play with the Garmin vnav function. So far, it's been very easy to count thousands of feet from TPA to cruise, double that number, add 2 or three, and start down that many minutes out. If you've got a GPS that will give ETE, "distance out" is not needed, you've got time left and a descent rate in feet per minute--converting minutes to miles is not easy to do in your head, and it varies tremendously with wind direction/strength.

If you want less than 500 feet per minute, triple the thousands of feet number. The key is to hold your descent rate pretty close to target, let the speed build [i walk the throttle and mixture during descent to maintain cruise MP/EGT all the way down]. From 10,000 cruise to 1600' pattern is 8½ thousand feet, or 17 minutes, so I'll start down around 20 minutes out, which is generally 50+ miles.

If you're up in turbo territory, this may not work as well, but it works pretty good for me. When IFR, you can ask for descent, but it's pretty controlled in my limited experience.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You're welcome, Matt.  It's easy to use.


Sure, there dozens of ways of computing TOD (top of descent), but, if you've got a nav system that will do it (as well as remind you approaching TOD and update you on your progress in the descent), it seems, to me, good airmenship to use it--if for no other reason than to check one's mental math--oops, mental counting.


Furthermore, it's been my experience that the more tasks you can accomplish ahead of time, the less likely you are to get overloaded when unforseen events (wx, mechanical, ATC, etc.) occur.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was IFR and Shreveport kept my up high (for my Mooney -- 9000') despite my requests for lower.  When they finally cleared me for descent I fugured, "Oh well, it's just me and my instructor." 


Speedbrakes really do work to help get you down fast. ;-) 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was out about 21 miles this week when Greensboro Approach said I could start my descent from 4500 to pattern atitude 1900.

I was shocked and hesitated before replying. That never happened before!

I guess he saw the M20F coming in blazing and figured I would need help with reentry. :)

At least that is what I told myself, even as I was surrounded by airliners.

Tomorrow I will be descending to real sea level as we fly to North Myrtle Beach for a Steve Miller Band concert.

I love my Mooney!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Full, 2300-3500, 15 LOP at altitude, (same as cruise setting)  around 50-75 LOP below 3000', to enter the pattern, 90 LOP.   180-185 MPH IAS. (whatever is required for 500-700 FPM.)  On downwind, reduce MP to 17", reset mixture to 1" from full rich, gear, flaps, etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.