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Taxi Speed |
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Apr 15 2006, 05:33 PM
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QUOTE(MrMe @ Apr 15 2006, 03:32 AM) [snapback]79880[/snapback] As the title suggests - I was wondering what the average taxi speed (under normal circumstances) is of say a 747 or 737? All 'recommended" speeds aside, the taxi speed is directly related to these factors*: 1) It's the go home leg 2)You are going to a 'good' overnight 3)You need to get there to make your flight home 3)Pay is accrued by having the parking brake released (the longer the time between release & setting it again, the better usually) *with safety in mind, of course.
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Apr 17 2006, 03:23 PM
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QUOTE(talldude @ Apr 16 2006, 11:32 PM) [snapback]80155[/snapback] Does taxi at a brisk walk ring a bell to anyone? Allmost everyone of you gave out complex answers, its funny. Take a simple question and complicate it, lol. Who's making it complicated? Walking speed for airliners wouldn't cut it though. Too slow. I looked up "taxi" in my company manual and there is no specificed speed at all. A few weeks ago at LAX there was a Cactus airbus hauling arse up Echo. I mean, this guy was moving! I bet he was going at least 40 m.p.h. We took notice as I had never seen any aircraft move so fast on a taxiway. We think it was some mx repositioning from the hangar. Twr called him, didn't get a response, so he called again- with a hold short instruction. Boy, you should have seen the smoke come off those tires! There still is a very marked set of tire skids near Echo & D8 where he slammed them on.....
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Apr 17 2006, 06:30 PM
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QUOTE(27driver @ Apr 17 2006, 03:32 PM) [snapback]80222[/snapback] Brisk walk...dude...you have got to be kidding. Try briskly walking from Cargo city to any departing runway at JFK, ORD, IAH, LAX, MCO...you name it. YouŽll be there for days. Get the freraking thing to the runway and blast off...time and money are a wasting. No I am not kidding, well that is for GA flying at least, hahahha. But it might as well work for big planes because in large planes the pilot sits higher off the ground so....the pilot will perceive the situation as slow, but in reality the plane is going quite fast. So...its all about perception, it may feel like a brisk walk from up there. And to clarify that "taking days thing", well it will not take you over 24 hrs to walk that far.
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Apr 18 2006, 12:48 AM
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QUOTE(SF3aviatrix @ Apr 17 2006, 05:37 PM) [snapback]80250[/snapback] GA is one thing but airline operation is a different animal. Due to the large amount of traffic movement at larger, busy airports going "walking speed" creates a traffic jam. I have flown with many captains who like to go as slow as possible to make the time on the clock as long as possible each leg. If there is other traffic waiting for you, or you slow down othe raircraft movements with a slow taxi, Ground calls up and asks you to pick up the pace! Yeah, the whole "brisk walk" concept was shattered upon my first visit to DFW a few years ago. I immediately learned the "hurry up and wait" procedure there when taxiing with the big boys. Had a 727 in front of me and a 777 behind as I made my way into the really long line for departure after an impossibly long taxi to RWY 35L via Taxiway Golf, Zulu bridge and Lima. I remember the distinct feeling that I had better keep up with the local traffic or get run over. Ever see a T7 squash or ingest a C210? I have, at least in my head that day.... I felt sort of like FOD.
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