[FAR Part § 23.67: Climb: One engine inoperative -- FAA FARS, 14 CFR] -- Flightsim Aviation Zone - Number 1 Flight Simulation and Aviation Resource! Information, Tools, Downloads, Databases, FAQ, Aviation Humour, Glossaries, Directory, FS2006, Multimedia, Screenshots, Free Flight Planner, Weather Reports  
Add page to your bookmarks:
BOOKMARK at Del.icio.us, Digg, Furl, Google Bookmarks, Furl, Live Bookmarks, Favorites, and more...
THIS WEBSITE IS FOR SALE! -> more info...
Flight Simulator X
 
» Support this site -> Shop Online at Amazon!
Saturday 6 September 2008 02:32 GMT
 
 

FAA Federal Aviation Regulations (FARS, 14 CFR)

FARs   >   Part 23   >   Section 67 - Climb: One engine inoperative

PREVIOUS section 23.66  |  section 23.69 NEXT

FONT
serif sans
TEXT SIZE
T T T T

(a) For normal, utility, and acrobatic category reciprocating engine-powered airplanes of 6,000 pounds or less maximum weight, the following apply:

(1) Except for those airplanes that meet the requirements prescribed in §23.562(d), each airplane with a VSO of more than 61 knots must be able to maintain a steady climb gradient of at least 1.5 percent at a pressure altitude of 5,000 feet with the --

(i) Critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) Remaining engine(s) at not more than maximum continuous power;

(iii) Landing gear retracted;

(iv) Wing flaps retracted; and

(v) Climb speed not less than 1.2 VS1.

(2) For each airplane that meets the requirements prescribed in §23.562(d), or that has a VSO of 61 knots or less, the steady gradient of climb or descent at a pressure altitude of 5,000 feet must be determined with the --

(i) Critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) Remaining engine(s) at not more than maximum continuous power;

(iii) Landing gear retracted;

(iv) Wing flaps retracted; and

(v) Climb speed not less than 1.2VS1.

(b) For normal, utility, and acrobatic category reciprocating engine-powered airplanes of more than 6,000 pounds maximum weight, and turbine engine-powered airplanes in the normal, utility, and acrobatic category --

Top of Page

(1) The steady gradient of climb at an altitude of 400 feet above the takeoff must be measurably positive with the --

(i) Critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) Remaining engine(s) at takeoff power;

(iii) Landing gear retracted;

(iv) Wing flaps in the takeoff position(s); and

(v) Climb speed equal to that achieved at 50 feet in the demonstration of §23.53.

(2) The steady gradient of climb must not be less than 0.75 percent at an altitude of 1,500 feet above the takeoff surface, or landing surface, as appropriate, with the --

(i) Critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) Remaining engine(s) at not more than maximum continuous power;

(iii) Landing gear retracted;

(iv) Wing flaps retracted; and

(v) Climb speed not less than 1.2 VS1.

(c) For commuter category airplanes, the following apply:

(1) Takeoff; landing gear extended. The steady gradient of climb at the altitude of the takeoff surface must be measurably positive for two-engine airplanes, not less than 0.3 percent for three-engine airplanes, or 0.5 percent for four-engine airplanes with --

Top of Page

(i) The critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the position it rapidly and automatically assumes;

(ii) The remaining engine(s) at takeoff power;

(iii) The landing gear extended, and all landing gear doors open;

(iv) The wing flaps in the takeoff position(s);

(v) The wings level; and

(vi) A climb speed equal to V2.

(2) Takeoff; landing gear retracted. The steady gradient of climb at an altitude of 400 feet above the takeoff surface must be not less than 2.0 percent of two-engine airplanes, 2.3 percent for three-engine airplanes, and 2.6 percent for four-engine airplanes with --

(i) The critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the position it rapidly and automatically assumes;

(ii) The remaining engine(s) at takeoff power;

(iii) The landing gear retracted;

(iv) The wing flaps in the takeoff position(s);

(v) A climb speed equal to V2.

(3) Enroute. The steady gradient of climb at an altitude of 1,500 feet above the takeoff or landing surface, as appropriate, must be not less than 1.2 percent for two-engine airplanes, 1.5 percent for three-engine airplanes, and 1.7 percent for four-engine airplanes with --

(i) The critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) The remaining engine(s) at not more than maximum continuous power;

(iii) The landing gear retracted;

(iv) The wing flaps retracted; and

(v) A climb speed not less than 1.2 VS1.

(4) Discontinued approach. The steady gradient of climb at an altitude of 400 feet above the landing surface must be not less than 2.1 percent for two-engine airplanes, 2.4 percent for three-engine airplanes, and 2.7 percent for four-engine airplanes, with --

(i) The critical engine inoperative and its propeller in the minimum drag position;

(ii) The remaining engine(s) at takeoff power;

(iii) Landing gear retracted;

(iv) Wing flaps in the approach position(s) in which VS1 for these position(s) does not exceed 110 percent of the VS1 for the related all-engines-operated landing position(s); and

(v) A climb speed established in connection with normal landing procedures but not exceeding 1.5 VS1.

[Doc. No. 27807, 61 FR 5186, Feb. 9, 1996]

PRINTABLE VERSION of this PageE-MAIL THIS PAGE to Somebody!SAVE TO FAVORITES / Bookmark this PageLINK TO THIS PAGE! (view simple HTML code)

Current page:   FARs   >   Part 23   >   Section 67 - Climb: One engine inoperative

PREVIOUS section 23.66  |  section 23.69 NEXT

page stats: viewed 1349 unique times - last change 02-Jan-2005

SEARCH the FARS :

Top of Page

» DOWNLOADING (PARTS OF) THIS WEBSITE AUTOMATICALLY IS NOT ALLOWED! «

THIS IS NO OFFICIAL SOURCE -- [DISCLAIMER] [FAA WEBSITE]

See also: AIM | ATC | FSS | NOTAMS | PCG |

 
Top of page
BOOKMARK at Del.icio.us, Digg, Furl, Google Bookmarks, Furl, Live Bookmarks, Favorites, and more...   @ E-mail this! Link to us!
Top of page
© 2002-2008 - Legal | Contact | Advertise | Sitemap
Visit our $pons0rs:
Your site here?
hosted by 123XS || also visit ColorTools.net & EmailSafe.org || Link to us!