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Standard rate turn

Reference for aircraft maneuvering

Standard rate turn

Summary

Reference for aircraft maneuvering

A standard rate turn in aircraft maneuvering, also known as a rate one turn (ROT), is defined as a turn at 3° per second..

Executing a standard rate turn completes a 360° turn in 2 minutes. This is known as a 2-minute turn, or rate one (180°/min). Fast airplanes, or aircraft on certain precision approaches, use a half-standard-rate ('rate half' in some countries), completing a 360° turn in 4 minutes.

Usage

coordinated]] right turn.

Standardized turn rates are often employed in approaches and holding patterns to provide a reference for controllers and pilots so that each will know what the other is expecting. The pilot banks the airplane such that the turn and slip indicator points to the mark appropriate for that aircraft and then uses a clock to time the turn. The pilot can roll out at any desired direction depending on the length of time in the turn.

During a constant-bank level turn, increasing airspeed decreases the rate of turn, and increases the turn radius. A rate half turn (1.5° per second) is normally used when flying faster than 250 kn. The term rate two turn (6° per second) is used on some low-speed aircraft.

Instrumentation

Instruments, either the turn and slip indicator or the turn coordinator, have the standard rate or half standard rate turn clearly marked. Slower aircraft are equipped with 2-minute turn indicators while faster aircraft are often equipped with 4-minute turn indicators.

Formulae

Angle of bank formula

The formula for calculating the angle of bank for a specific true airspeed (TAS) in SI units (or other coherent system) is:

\phi = \arctan \frac{v_\mathrm{t}^2}{rg}

where \phi is the angle of bank, v_\mathrm{t} is true airspeed, r is the radius of the turn, and g is the acceleration due to gravity.

For a rate-one turn and velocity in knots (nautical miles per hour, symbol kn), this comes to

\phi = \arctan \frac{{v_\mathrm{t}}_\mathrm{kn}} {364}.

A convenient approximation for the bank angle in degrees is

\phi / ^\circ \approx \frac{{v_\mathrm{t}}_\mathrm{kn}} {10} + 7

For aircraft holding purposes, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) mandates that all turns should be made, "at a bank angle of 25° or at a rate of 3° per second, whichever requires the lesser bank."{{cite book

Radius of turn formula

One might also want to calculate the radius r of a Rate 1, 2 or 3 turn at a specific TAS.

{r}\mathrm{nmi} = \frac{{v\mathrm{t}}\mathrm{kn}} {20 \pi {\omega\mathrm{turn}}_{^\circ / \mathrm{s}} }

Where \omega_\mathrm{turn} is the rate of turn.

If the velocity and the angle of bank is given,

r; = \frac{v_\mathrm{t}^2} {g \tan \phi}

where g is the gravitational acceleration. This is a simplified formula that ignores slip and returns zero for 90° of bank.

In metres (where gravity is approximately 9.81 metres per second per second, and velocity is given in metres per second):

{r}\mathrm{m} = \frac{{v\mathrm{t}}_\mathrm{\mathrm{m/s}}^2} {9.81 \tan \phi}

Or in feet (where velocity is given in knots):

{r}\mathrm{ft} = \frac{{v\mathrm{t}}_\mathrm{kn}^2} {11.294 \tan \phi}

References

References

  1. "Glossary: S - section STANDARD RATE TURN". Federal Aviation Administration.
  2. Jeppeson Sanderson, Inc., "Guided Flight Discovery Instrument Commercial," Jeppeson, Englewood, Colorado, 2015. P. 2-8.
  3. [http://www.luizmonteiro.com/Article_Bank_Angle_for_Std_Rate_01.aspx LuizMonteiro.com Aviation Education]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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