Great reaction by the first officer at 20:09, showed excellent situational awarness - when he wasn't sure what the autopilot was doing he didn't hesitate to intervene before the speed of the aircraft would drop to a dangerous level.
Thanks for the feedback! Yes, I fully agree, the first officer is a very good pilot with an excellent situational awareness. His reaction was very good. But - just for information - the speed was still above VLS and far away from dangerous and in addition, the Airbus speed would never drop to a dangerous level. There are protection systems installed which make that impossible. That's one of the major differences between an Airbus and a Boeing.
Thank you so much for another great video. I've always had a terrible fear of flying but since watching your take offs and landings I managed to fly from Salzburg to London without any problem.Thank you.
Thank you so much for sharing your very personal feedback! It's great to hear that the videos are helping you to overcome your fear of flying. Have a nice day!
Hello Cpt. I am once again overwhelmed by this great departure video. 😀🤩 What I particularly liked is that it went up to cruising altitude. 👌👍 The view of the Alps was just great. 🏔 Can only say again and again, thank you for the great videos from the cockpit! I would also like to thank you for your kind words. That means a lot to me! I'm already looking forward to the next video! With this in mind, I wish you and your crew a nice week. Greetings from Styria🤗 Werner
Love hearing the chaos of having to juggle ATC and the Pushback crew speaking to one another at the same time! Great job remaining courteous and listening/explaining their concern about any delay falling on them.
Thanks for watching and the feedback! I would not call it chaos. It's more like lots of work to be done at the same time. As pilots, we prioritize the work and make sure that it is done right.
Thank you very much for watching and your very personal feedback! It's great to hear that .my videos are helping you to reduce your fear of flying. One reason why I started this channel was helping people like you. Have a nice day and always a safe and relaxing flight!
Thank you for another great video Captain. I found your point at the end that certain routes have higher traffic than pre-covid interesting as well as great news for the aviation sector.
Very nice, interesting and extremely useful also for simmers ( 🙄 ); complete comms with ATC help to rightly understand all mandatory clearance procedures. Looking forward for a further flight over Italy 😉
Great video captain, just read that Eurowings will be coming back to Catania, hope to get another video of that approach with good audio and with the new camera angles. I really appreciate the fact that you give us the opportunity to fly with you with such detailed quality work.
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! Yes, Eurowings is flying to Catania. I hope to be scheduled soon on one of the flights. That would give me the chance to record and publish a new Catania video with good audio and the "updated" instruments view. Have a nice day!
Danke fürs Anschauen und das gute Feedback! Vor dem Pushback gab es ja schon die Info, welche Departure Route zu erwarten ist. Die eigentliche IFR-Streckenfreigabe kam dann während des Pushbacks. Wie genau der Standard in Italien ist, weiß ich nicht. Allerdings ist es mir schon häufig passiert, dass die IFR-Clearance und/oder der Transpondercode erst beim Pushback oder manchmal sogar erst beim Rollen gegeben wurde. Das gibt es auch in Griechenland.
Thanks for the feedback! Yes, the ground crew sends together with our departure data a delay message which includes very specific delay codes and times. We get the message in the airplane and check if we agree. To avoid different reports, we speak (whenever possible) with the ground crew about a delay before the message is generated.
Can totally relate to the ground crew pondering the delay to see if they’ll get the dreaded ‘GL’ - maybe he could have avoided it by connecting the pushback earlier then getting you to release the brakes whilst you waited for ATC clearance etc - I do this often on a tight turn to try and avoid ‘catching’ the delay - though depends on how chilled the captain is 😂 - great vid as always hope to see you at OSL soon 😎
Thanks for watching and your personal feedback. I prefer that the pushback truck is connected latest when the last passenger gets into the plane and before the cargo doors are closed. This enables us to call "ready to move" and for a release as soon as operational possible. OSL would be nice. But I have to wait until scheduling sends me to the airport. As always, this may take a while. Please stay tuned.
Yeah I connect it asap, usually after the pilot does the walk around - we use TBLs here not towbar so it takes 30 seconds to connect…no phaffing around with a towbar 🙃😆 - ah ok well hope to see you there soon 😎 - love handling Eurowings it’s usually max 20 bags in and out 😂🙌🤝
ohh you got to love that! 😍 Just awesome as always…your videos have become a part of my weekend routine. Makes my weekend always a bit better :D Looking so much forward to next saturday! Have a great remaining week 👆🏼
Wieder ein Klasse Video, genauso wie das von letzter Woche....ich überlege jetzt Venice als Flughafen für den Flight Simulator zu kaufen...scheint ein interessanter Airport zu sein....
Always impressed by the professionalism of these crews and in particular the captain. Such a treat to see experts doing their job in full control. Hopefully within the next few months I’ll be joining an airline and starting my A320 type rating so binging on these videos and enjoying them all
Very interesting video, i,m a pilot student and in fly different times in LIPZ I have only a question: when you contacted Venice ground for push back she replied to you “ stan by”, why you read back with “ standing by”, it would have been more correct not to answer.
Awesome video with a very scenic city in background, i got one question , at minute 22.34 you were discussing about the level off altitude in case of an engine failure/ decompression above the alps right? Thanks in advance for an eventual answer and thx again for your content captain!
Thanks for the great feedback! Yes, we are always discussing the minimum altitudes which we can safely use in case of an immediately required descent along our planned routing. For a decompression we would like to descent to 10.000 feet or - if obstacles are in the way - to a higher altitude. With an engine failure we would descent to the best altitude for single engine ops. This depends on the weight and the temperature. Usually, the alps are no factor for that because the single engine altitude would be higher than the lowest altitude we can safely fly at.
I just found your channel, and really love your videos and can hear your passion for aviation come through in every video. You are also teaching me a lot of things I can use in Flight simulator, thank you and keep these great videos coming 🙂
Vielen Dank fürs Anschauen und die netten Worte! Rhodos kommt bestimmt irgendwann. Das hängt allerdings von meinem Dienstplan ab. Wohin ich fliege, ist immer eine Überraschung.
Great video - really enjoyed it - so much going on and yet the Captain and the FO make it seem effortless. Can I ask who or what determines which person will be flying the aircraft and which person will be monitoring? Thank you!
Thanks for watching and your good feedback! One pilot is the pilot flying and the other the pilot monitoring. The decision is usually done by the crew before the first flight of the day. If there is an even number of legs, every pilot will be pilot flying at half of the legs. Some airports are restricted as "Captain landing" or "Captain Takeoff". Examples are Funchal, Samos, Calvi, Salzburg ....
I do love your presentation. It's fascinating to see just how busy you are up the front there! I'd be fascinated, if you get it, to see a landing video for Preveza (Aktion International) in Greece, especially runway 25R. I've flown in a couple of times and it feels quite an exciting approach!
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! I haven’t been scheduled to Preveza for some time. As soon as I fly there again, I will try to record and publish a video. It may take a while. Please stay tuned.
If you watch the the PFD in the video, you will see that the trust reduction was done at 1000 feet above the airport elevation and the acceleration at 3000 feet. This is called NADP1.
Eurowings do a summer weekly flight from Dusseldorf into my local airport Newquay, Cornwall. Think it is the "Poldark" tour. Are you likely to fly this route at any time? Keep up the fine videos. Bis bald.
I did the flight once last year. Unfortunately, the weather was very rainy without any views of the nice area, so we did not record a video of the approach. I hope to be scheduled soon again to Newquay. And - for sure - I will try to record a video to publish it here. It must be a very beautiful landscape. The area hosted a very successful German TV-movie series. Please stay tuned.
Another quality video 👍👍I just had a question about ILS approach pls. When you are on the glide slope and disengage AP flying manually, do you concentrate on keeping the magenta diamond in the centre line on the PFD or is there other FD info on PFD you focus on. Thanks
Thanks for watching, the good feedback and your question: When flying manually with the flight director engaged, we follow the flight director commands. In addition, we scan the raw data of the localizer, the glideslope, the vertical speed, the speed, attitude ...... For example: If the vertical speed gets a little low and away from our target vertical speed, we usually see first the change in vertical speed, then a glideslope deviation and then the flight director shows an appropriate correction. For a very smooth approach, it makes sense to make small corrections on the basis of the raw data even before the flight director gives an appropriate command. This keeps the flight director command bars centered.
Thanks for watching and the observation. This is a good question! We flew 4 legs on this day, he flew the legs to and from Venice and I flew the other 2 legs.
Thank you for watching! When I fly the next time to Bucharest, I try to record the approach and publish it here. It may take a while. Please stay tuned!
At 20 minutes in when the F/O Says just a sec…the speed seemed to drop way below green dot and was predicting speed decease? I think he changed the auto throttles to make the aircraft increase speed again?
No, he did not change the autothrust. The wind changed from a headwind to a tailwind. This resulted in a an indicaTED airspeed drop. The first officer reduced the climbrate to get the speed back. The thrust did not change.
Were you going all the way to FL400? The last thing I saw was that you were going to 380. Are you that high because of the mountains? I know that radiation actually becomes a problem if you fly at too high of an altitude too often.. it's a consideration even at the altitudes y'all usually do fly.
The Airbus A320 series has a maximum altitude of 39800 feet. Flying at 40000 feet is not allowed. Yes, we want to fly above the obstacles. But 18000 feet or so would be enough for the alps. The reason for the higher altitude is that the plane is flying more efficiently at higher altitudes. We try to fly as close as possible to the optimum altitude, where fuel burn and speed is at a good relationship Radiation is recorded and tracked for each crewmember. On flights like the one in the video, the radiation dose is very very low.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos I usually only see private jets flying at 45000. I know the radiation is very minimal.. but that you had to watch it when you spend that much time at altitude. People live on the ISS for over a year and it's 200 miles up, so flying at 7 miles is really nothing to worry about!
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Doesn't that put you into the jetstream better being at 39000? I've noticed a huge change in the directions of the jetstreams in the last few months as the Pacific changes to El Niño after three years of being La Niña.
@@crypto1701 The optimum altitude for the particular flight is based also on the exact position and altitude of a jet stream. It happens that the optimum altitude with the wind is lower than without wind because of way more headwind at higher altitudes.
may I ask why FO pulled the Vs to 0 at time 20:13 for a few seconds when you were pointing out lido airport? is it because the speed was getting a little low?
No before TO check list, no after TO check list? ... Weird. listening ATIS VCE after TO? ..... Also when one day the ATC will manage for only rolling take offs instead hold and line and wait to save fuel for companies ?
You are wrong here. The name of the before takeoff checklist is lineup checklist. And yes, there is no after takeoff checklist. Standard Airbus takeoff is static up to 50 % N1 or 1.05 EPR. The crew may decide to do a rolling takeoff. We listen to the ATIS or read the digital ATIS when we start the preparation for the flight. As a courtesy for you, I integrated the ATIS audio at the end of the video together with all the used charts.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Ok line up CL why no after TO CL ? just for info sir Ok understood for ATIS 😊 But for people who is not pilot or do not know enough about flying can sound strange, was only my message ( I am older pilot but I say for others people's) For rolling TO the subject was about saving fuel for all TO in the world and not only Airbus, all aircrafts Your videos are great don't misunderstand my commentary.
@@frbo323 The new Airbus procedure have removed the Before the line and below the line and made it all in one checklist, also the after takeoff checklist is removed, since the aircraft would show warning on ecam if anything was not done correctly...
Gute Frage. Wenn man verschiedene Flughäfen miteinander vergleicht, geht es an manchen extrem schnell mit sehr wenig Personal. An anderen laufen viele Dinge etwas gemütlicher ab und benötigen darüber hinaus mehr Personal.
These videos have become a part of my Saturday routine, many thanks for continuously uploading these!
I love to hear that! Thanks for watching! Have a nice weekend!
Great reaction by the first officer at 20:09, showed excellent situational awarness - when he wasn't sure what the autopilot was doing he didn't hesitate to intervene before the speed of the aircraft would drop to a dangerous level.
Thanks for the feedback! Yes, I fully agree, the first officer is a very good pilot with an excellent situational awareness. His reaction was very good. But - just for information - the speed was still above VLS and far away from dangerous and in addition, the Airbus speed would never drop to a dangerous level. There are protection systems installed which make that impossible. That's one of the major differences between an Airbus and a Boeing.
Thank you so much for another great video. I've always had a terrible fear of flying but since watching your take offs and landings I managed to fly from Salzburg to London without any problem.Thank you.
Thank you so much for sharing your very personal feedback! It's great to hear that the videos are helping you to overcome your fear of flying. Have a nice day!
Hello Cpt.
I am once again overwhelmed by this great departure video. 😀🤩
What I particularly liked is that it went up to cruising altitude. 👌👍
The view of the Alps was just great. 🏔
Can only say again and again, thank you for the great videos from the cockpit!
I would also like to thank you for your kind words. That means a lot to me!
I'm already looking forward to the next video!
With this in mind, I wish you and your crew a nice week.
Greetings from Styria🤗
Werner
Hello Werner, thanks again for watching and your friendly and helpful feedback! Have a nice day! Best greetings to Styria!
Love hearing the chaos of having to juggle ATC and the Pushback crew speaking to one another at the same time! Great job remaining courteous and listening/explaining their concern about any delay falling on them.
Thanks for watching and the feedback! I would not call it chaos. It's more like lots of work to be done at the same time. As pilots, we prioritize the work and make sure that it is done right.
thankyou somuch captain. i dont like flying because of the flying fear but this make my fear less more this is brilljant and helps a lot!
Thank you very much for watching and your very personal feedback! It's great to hear that .my videos are helping you to reduce your fear of flying. One reason why I started this channel was helping people like you. Have a nice day and always a safe and relaxing flight!
Danke für das Video. Am besten gefielen mir die Alpen und natürlich euer Start. Aber am besten noch die freundlichen Gesichter am Ende!
Vielen lieben Dank fürs Anschauen und das gute Feedback! Die Alpen gefallen mir auch immer sehr gut! Einen schönen Tag noch!
Thank you for another great video Captain. I found your point at the end that certain routes have higher traffic than pre-covid interesting as well as great news for the aviation sector.
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! Have a nice day!
thank you captain for yet another stunning video. we appreciate you so much.
Thanks for watching and the nice feedback! All the best to you!
Smooth departure on a fabulous day in a fantastic flying machine with a very professional crew. Excellent. Thanks!
Thank you so much for the friendly words. Have a nice day!
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos ,
You're welcome. My pleasure. And you have a wonderful day!
Very nice, interesting and extremely useful also for simmers ( 🙄 ); complete comms with ATC help to rightly understand all mandatory clearance procedures. Looking forward for a further flight over Italy 😉
Glad you enjoyed it! Have a nice day and lots of fun with your simulator!
Great video captain, just read that Eurowings will be coming back to Catania, hope to get another video of that approach with good audio and with the new camera angles. I really appreciate the fact that you give us the opportunity to fly with you with such detailed quality work.
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! Yes, Eurowings is flying to Catania. I hope to be scheduled soon on one of the flights. That would give me the chance to record and publish a new Catania video with good audio and the "updated" instruments view. Have a nice day!
Another very very very nice video.Thanks Captain.
Thank you fort watching and the good feedback! Have a great day!
Another Saturday means another of these to look forward to! Excellent as always!
Thanks! All the best to you!
Congratulations captain, it's always a pleasure to watch your videos and equally a pleasure to see you fly the plane with great safety and simplicity.
Thanks you so much for the great feedback and the kind words!
Video molto bello buongiorno e grazie
Grazie! Greetings to Italy!
Wieder ein tolles Video! Interessant, dass IFR clearance and Push back gemeinsam gegeben werden-ist das Standard in Italien? Vg
Danke fürs Anschauen und das gute Feedback! Vor dem Pushback gab es ja schon die Info, welche Departure Route zu erwarten ist. Die eigentliche IFR-Streckenfreigabe kam dann während des Pushbacks. Wie genau der Standard in Italien ist, weiß ich nicht. Allerdings ist es mir schon häufig passiert, dass die IFR-Clearance und/oder der Transpondercode erst beim Pushback oder manchmal sogar erst beim Rollen gegeben wurde. Das gibt es auch in Griechenland.
Καλησπέρα από την Ελλάδα , χαιρόμαστε που ήρθατε στην γειτονιά μας , χαιρετισμούς στον ικανό πιλότο και στο πλήρωμα !
Thanks for the Kind words! Best greetings to Greece!
My home airport, departed and arrived dozens of times as a passenger...beautiful !
Thank you and Grazie for watching and your comment! Best greetings to bella Italia.
Great video as always captain, i personally like the departure videos even better than the arrivals! Much appreciated
Thanks for watching and the helpful feedback! I will continue to publish departure and approach videos. Have a nice day!
Lovely video captain. Did not know the ground crew also have to report delay reasons. Thank you as always.
Thanks for the feedback! Yes, the ground crew sends together with our departure data a delay message which includes very specific delay codes and times. We get the message in the airplane and check if we agree. To avoid different reports, we speak (whenever possible) with the ground crew about a delay before the message is generated.
once again what an exceptional job you are doing. i wish you will continue. Always a great pleasure when your video arrives in my inbox. Thx !
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! Have a nice day!
Just love to see taxing to takeoff video....its motivate me very much❤❤❤❤❤...salute captain....love from my side🇮🇳
Great to hear that you also like this video! All the best and lots of greetings to India!
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Welcome captain sir🙏🏻✈️👨🏻✈️😊
Can totally relate to the ground crew pondering the delay to see if they’ll get the dreaded ‘GL’ - maybe he could have avoided it by connecting the pushback earlier then getting you to release the brakes whilst you waited for ATC clearance etc - I do this often on a tight turn to try and avoid ‘catching’ the delay - though depends on how chilled the captain is 😂 - great vid as always hope to see you at OSL soon 😎
Thanks for watching and your personal feedback. I prefer that the pushback truck is connected latest when the last passenger gets into the plane and before the cargo doors are closed. This enables us to call "ready to move" and for a release as soon as operational possible. OSL would be nice. But I have to wait until scheduling sends me to the airport. As always, this may take a while. Please stay tuned.
Yeah I connect it asap, usually after the pilot does the walk around - we use TBLs here not towbar so it takes 30 seconds to connect…no phaffing around with a towbar 🙃😆 - ah ok well hope to see you there soon 😎 - love handling Eurowings it’s usually max 20 bags in and out 😂🙌🤝
great video's, keep them coming !!!
Thanks! More videos are coming! The next is planned for next Saturday!
ohh you got to love that! 😍 Just awesome as always…your videos have become a part of my weekend routine. Makes my weekend always a bit better :D Looking so much forward to next saturday! Have a great remaining week 👆🏼
Thanks for the friendly words and the good wishes! All the best to you! Have a nice week!
Wieder ein Klasse Video, genauso wie das von letzter Woche....ich überlege jetzt Venice als Flughafen für den Flight Simulator zu kaufen...scheint ein interessanter Airport zu sein....
Schön zu hören, dass Dir das Video gut gefällt! Viel Spaß mit Deinem Simulator!
Always impressed by the professionalism of these crews and in particular the captain. Such a treat to see experts doing their job in full control.
Hopefully within the next few months I’ll be joining an airline and starting my A320 type rating so binging on these videos and enjoying them all
Thanks for the great feedback! I am wishing you all the best for your aviation career.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos thank you sir! I hope most of my captains are as professional as you are
Thanksss a lot! Once again a great video!
Thanks! Have a good day!
Wowwww I’m attending flight school not far away from Venice 😍
I wish you all the best for your flight training!
Very interesting video, i,m a pilot student and in fly different times in LIPZ I have only a question: when you contacted Venice ground for push back she replied to you “ stan by”, why you read back with “ standing by”, it would have been more correct not to answer.
Thanks for watching and your feedback about the radio communication. Greetings to Italy!
Great video as always thanks!!
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! Have a nice day!
Another great flight video 😁
Thanks for watching! Have a good day!
Awesome video with a very scenic city in background, i got one question , at minute 22.34 you were discussing about the level off altitude in case of an engine failure/ decompression above the alps right? Thanks in advance for an eventual answer and thx again for your content captain!
Thanks for the great feedback! Yes, we are always discussing the minimum altitudes which we can safely use in case of an immediately required descent along our planned routing. For a decompression we would like to descent to 10.000 feet or - if obstacles are in the way - to a higher altitude. With an engine failure we would descent to the best altitude for single engine ops. This depends on the weight and the temperature. Usually, the alps are no factor for that because the single engine altitude would be higher than the lowest altitude we can safely fly at.
I just found your channel, and really love your videos and can hear your passion for aviation come through in every video. You are also teaching me a lot of things I can use in Flight simulator, thank you and keep these great videos coming 🙂
Thanks for watching and the great feedback! Have a nice day and lots of fun with your simulator!
Ja vielen herzlichen Dank, Captain! Wundervoll, alles klar verständlich! Wann gehts denn mal nach Rhodos?
Vielen Dank fürs Anschauen und die netten Worte! Rhodos kommt bestimmt irgendwann. Das hängt allerdings von meinem Dienstplan ab. Wohin ich fliege, ist immer eine Überraschung.
Great video - really enjoyed it - so much going on and yet the Captain and the FO make it seem effortless.
Can I ask who or what determines which person will be flying the aircraft and which person will be monitoring? Thank you!
Thanks for watching and your good feedback! One pilot is the pilot flying and the other the pilot monitoring. The decision is usually done by the crew before the first flight of the day. If there is an even number of legs, every pilot will be pilot flying at half of the legs. Some airports are restricted as "Captain landing" or "Captain Takeoff". Examples are Funchal, Samos, Calvi, Salzburg ....
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Thank you!
I do love your presentation. It's fascinating to see just how busy you are up the front there! I'd be fascinated, if you get it, to see a landing video for Preveza (Aktion International) in Greece, especially runway 25R. I've flown in a couple of times and it feels quite an exciting approach!
Thanks for watching and the good feedback! I haven’t been scheduled to Preveza for some time. As soon as I fly there again, I will try to record and publish a video. It may take a while. Please stay tuned.
Very good to see the PFD and ND during the take off. Nice video. It was a NADP 1 take off?
If you watch the the PFD in the video, you will see that the trust reduction was done at 1000 feet above the airport elevation and the acceleration at 3000 feet. This is called NADP1.
Another beautiful very well explained video ❤
Thanks for the good feedback!
Eurowings do a summer weekly flight from Dusseldorf into my local airport Newquay, Cornwall. Think it is the "Poldark" tour. Are you likely to fly this route at any time? Keep up the fine videos. Bis bald.
I did the flight once last year. Unfortunately, the weather was very rainy without any views of the nice area, so we did not record a video of the approach. I hope to be scheduled soon again to Newquay. And - for sure - I will try to record a video to publish it here. It must be a very beautiful landscape. The area hosted a very successful German TV-movie series. Please stay tuned.
Another quality video 👍👍I just had a question about ILS approach pls. When you are on the glide slope and disengage AP flying manually, do you concentrate on keeping the magenta diamond in the centre line on the PFD or is there other FD info on PFD you focus on. Thanks
Thanks for watching, the good feedback and your question: When flying manually with the flight director engaged, we follow the flight director commands. In addition, we scan the raw data of the localizer, the glideslope, the vertical speed, the speed, attitude ...... For example: If the vertical speed gets a little low and away from our target vertical speed, we usually see first the change in vertical speed, then a glideslope deviation and then the flight director shows an appropriate correction. For a very smooth approach, it makes sense to make small corrections on the basis of the raw data even before the flight director gives an appropriate command. This keeps the flight director command bars centered.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Thank you for the feedback. It is nice to hear it from real pilots. Continue with great content and camera work. 👍👍
Excellent!!!! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching and your great feedback!
Great views!
Thank you very much!
Hello captain! Wonderful video as always, just wondering why F/O was PF in both legs? Thanks a lot have a great weekend :)
Thanks for watching and the observation. This is a good question! We flew 4 legs on this day, he flew the legs to and from Venice and I flew the other 2 legs.
Hello Sir, ever flown to Bucharest? If you do anytime soon, please upload. Thank you for your content
Thank you for watching! When I fly the next time to Bucharest, I try to record the approach and publish it here. It may take a while. Please stay tuned!
Would love to see a video going into or out of Dublin sometime.
Thanks for watching and the suggestion. I will keep it in mind. It may take a while. Please stay tuned.
At 20 minutes in when the F/O Says just a sec…the speed seemed to drop way below green dot and was predicting speed decease? I think he changed the auto throttles to make the aircraft increase speed again?
No, he did not change the autothrust. The wind changed from a headwind to a tailwind. This resulted in a an indicaTED airspeed drop. The first officer reduced the climbrate to get the speed back. The thrust did not change.
Could someone tell me why the delivery/groundgived the clearance after the pushback? Thanks
Sometimes the final departure clearance or the transponder code are not available prior to pushback or taxi. This also happens at Greek airports.
Were you going all the way to FL400? The last thing I saw was that you were going to 380. Are you that high because of the mountains? I know that radiation actually becomes a problem if you fly at too high of an altitude too often.. it's a consideration even at the altitudes y'all usually do fly.
The Airbus A320 series has a maximum altitude of 39800 feet. Flying at 40000 feet is not allowed. Yes, we want to fly above the obstacles. But 18000 feet or so would be enough for the alps. The reason for the higher altitude is that the plane is flying more efficiently at higher altitudes. We try to fly as close as possible to the optimum altitude, where fuel burn and speed is at a good relationship Radiation is recorded and tracked for each crewmember. On flights like the one in the video, the radiation dose is very very low.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos I usually only see private jets flying at 45000. I know the radiation is very minimal.. but that you had to watch it when you spend that much time at altitude. People live on the ISS for over a year and it's 200 miles up, so flying at 7 miles is really nothing to worry about!
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos Doesn't that put you into the jetstream better being at 39000? I've noticed a huge change in the directions of the jetstreams in the last few months as the Pacific changes to El Niño after three years of being La Niña.
@@crypto1701 The optimum altitude for the particular flight is based also on the exact position and altitude of a jet stream. It happens that the optimum altitude with the wind is lower than without wind because of way more headwind at higher altitudes.
may I ask why FO pulled the Vs to 0 at time 20:13 for a few seconds when you were pointing out lido airport? is it because the speed was getting a little low?
I assume so. The speed dropped below minimum clean and nearly dropped into the speed band.
Your observation is correct. The speed dropped a little and to regain the speed fast he set the vertical speed to zero for a short while.
That Ryanair was in a big hurry!
Maybe their takeoff slot was going to expire
💕💕💕✌🏽
Thanks for the friendly feedback!
No before TO check list, no after TO check list? ... Weird.
listening ATIS VCE after TO? .....
Also when one day the ATC will manage for only rolling take offs instead hold and line and wait to save fuel for companies ?
You are wrong here. The name of the before takeoff checklist is lineup checklist. And yes, there is no after takeoff checklist. Standard Airbus takeoff is static up to 50 % N1 or 1.05 EPR. The crew may decide to do a rolling takeoff. We listen to the ATIS or read the digital ATIS when we start the preparation for the flight. As a courtesy for you, I integrated the ATIS audio at the end of the video together with all the used charts.
@@ApproachandDepartureVideos
Ok line up CL
why no after TO CL ? just for info sir
Ok understood for ATIS 😊
But for people who is not pilot or do not know enough about flying can sound strange, was only my message ( I am older pilot but I say for others people's)
For rolling TO the subject was about saving fuel for all TO in the world and not only Airbus, all aircrafts
Your videos are great don't misunderstand my commentary.
@@frbo323 The new Airbus procedure have removed the Before the line and below the line and made it all in one checklist, also the after takeoff checklist is removed, since the aircraft would show warning on ecam if anything was not done correctly...
radar open en ground
Benötigt man bei den Italienern eigentlich immer etwas mehr an Geduld? 😂
Gute Frage. Wenn man verschiedene Flughäfen miteinander vergleicht, geht es an manchen extrem schnell mit sehr wenig Personal. An anderen laufen viele Dinge etwas gemütlicher ab und benötigen darüber hinaus mehr Personal.