A380 'wake'
Author
Discussion

Pinkie15

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

104 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
quotequote all
Down in Windsor they're coming over to land, just noticed that there's a good minute, maybe even 90 sec gap (instead of the usual 30 secs) between inbound A380 and next plane, a 737/A320 sized plane.

Is the 'wake' off of the A380 really that big ?

ninja-lewis

5,254 posts

214 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
quotequote all
Yep. Guidance calls for 3 minute/7NM gap between an A380 and 737/A320 size aircraft.

A business jet was written off after flying through an A380 wake en-route.

https://www.flightsafetyaustralia.com/2018/01/down...

Testaburger

3,925 posts

222 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
quotequote all
In still/certain light wind conditions, wake can linger for a long time, and can easily cause even a large jet to be thrown around.
There’s a required separation of 4-8 miles between jets on approach, depending on their heft. This has the added disadvantage of a headwind slowing down the aircraft arrival rate - as aircraft take longer to cover said 4-8 miles.

Wake turbulence is potentially nasty business - but because wake dissipates faster when there’s wind, Heathrow devised a time-based separation procedure which is now spreading to other large airports which operate close to max capacity.

This allows aircraft to be closer-spaced on approach, while maintaining the ‘wake safety’ of the previous distance-based separation. In turn, this maintains the aircraft arrival rate.



Pinkie15

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

104 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies

aeropilot

39,791 posts

251 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
That's why, if they can and there's a suitable gap likely in the take-off queue (often see this early morning) ATC will put a A380 to land onto the next door take-off runway thus leaving the standard seperation on the normal incoming path. Obviously not always possible.


Puggit

49,455 posts

272 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
As a fairly frequent flier on smaller planes out of LHR, I always groan when I see an A380 in the queue in front of our plane.

Have witnessed wake turbulence once, fortunately almost at cruising altitude. Sudden and absolutely like nothing else. I can understand why it would be avoided at all costs near the ground.

mcdjl

5,699 posts

219 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
If you stand in the right place at Donington Park you can hear the wake whistle through the catch fencing a good few seconds after a plane has landed at East Mids airport next door.

aeropilot

39,791 posts

251 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
mcdjl said:
If you stand in the right place at Donington Park you can hear the wake whistle through the catch fencing a good few seconds after a plane has landed at East Mids airport next door.
Easy to experience at Heathrow as well, and the whistle made by the A380 is very noticably louder and of longer duration than any other aircraft.


DanL

6,586 posts

289 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
This is a nice little video I watched a while ago that explains things: https://youtu.be/XBZULOoe94U

Found it quite interesting.

Testaburger

3,925 posts

222 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
Puggit said:
As a fairly frequent flier on smaller planes out of LHR, I always groan when I see an A380 in the queue in front of our plane.
Why? You’re only talking about an extra couple of minutes vs a single aisle jet.

JuniorD

9,013 posts

247 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
I opened this thread thinking it would be about an event to mourn the upcoming demise of the Superjumbo hehe

bitchstewie

64,412 posts

234 months

Tuesday 16th July 2019
quotequote all
If anyone remembers that horrific New York crash where the tail fin snapped off an Airbus, that was, I believe, in part because it flew through the wake of a large aircraft from the aircraft in front.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Fl...

5150

736 posts

279 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
If anyone remembers that horrific New York crash where the tail fin snapped off an Airbus, that was, I believe, in part because it flew through the wake of a large aircraft from the aircraft in front.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Fl...
That wasn't the cause of the accident. NTSB found that the crash resulted from the separation of the vertical stabiliser, caused by the pilot's unnecessary / excessive inputs to the rudder pedals.


48k

16,442 posts

172 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
Puggit said:
As a fairly frequent flier on smaller planes out of LHR, I always groan when I see an A380 in the queue in front of our plane.

Have witnessed wake turbulence once, fortunately almost at cruising altitude. Sudden and absolutely like nothing else. I can understand why it would be avoided at all costs near the ground.
Highly unlikely to have been wake turbulence at altitude, sounds more like CAT (Clear Air Turbulence).

Testaburger

3,925 posts

222 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
48k said:
Highly unlikely to have been wake turbulence at altitude, sounds more like CAT (Clear Air Turbulence).
I’ve hit wake turbulence many times at altitude. Definitely not as prevalent but in the right conditions (routinely over the still-air polar routes, same direction aircraft 1000 above) you may well get a gutful of it.

My company send us off as a flock to Europe in a minimally-spaced conga line, same routing (for the first 9 hours), same jet, same weights and therefore same altitudes. Consequently I seem to spend half my life offset a mile or two upwind of the airway centreline.

louiebaby

10,887 posts

215 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
DanL said:
This is a nice little video I watched a while ago that explains things: https://youtu.be/XBZULOoe94U

Found it quite interesting.
I might have to add him. As an enthusiastic newbie to the aviation industry I've learned a lot from Wendover and others.

thumbup

djc206

13,429 posts

149 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
48k said:
Highly unlikely to have been wake turbulence at altitude, sounds more like CAT (Clear Air Turbulence).
I’ve lost count of the number of reports I’ve had to file as an Air Traffic Controller regarding wake turbulence encounters at altitude. As Testaburger says in the age of extremely accurate navigation it’s common for aircraft to fly in a very neat line and consequently occasionally encounter the wake of aircraft in front. Not limited to the A380 either although it is the worst offender for obvious reasons

48k

16,442 posts

172 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
Interesting cheers chaps, I sit corrected. I'd always associated wake turbulance with being low and slow.

Testaburger

3,925 posts

222 months

Wednesday 17th July 2019
quotequote all
48k said:
Interesting cheers chaps, I sit corrected. I'd always associated wake turbulance with being low and slow.
That’s generally the case - aerodynamically the wing configured for takeoff produces a bigger wake.

Also, the wind is generally far greater up there, which dissipates the wake more quickly.

Even with required separation you can get caught up in it for a while. As I mentioned, I’m usually in a conga line of identical departing aircraft flying the same departure track. It’s very common to be flying in their wake from takeoff up to altitude - so we’ll either dial the speed back to increase the climb gradient or perhaps decline a corner-cutting shortcut that the preceding jet got, so we escape their path. The navigational accuracy of these things is deeply impressive now!

Just some pointless info for you


Doshy

859 posts

241 months

Thursday 18th July 2019
quotequote all
louiebaby said:
DanL said:
This is a nice little video I watched a while ago that explains things: https://youtu.be/XBZULOoe94U

Found it quite interesting.
I might have to add him. As an enthusiastic newbie to the aviation industry I've learned a lot from Wendover and others.

thumbup
I also watch this guy, very good.