Vol1 AOM Part1
Vol1 AOM Part1
Vol1 AOM Part1
CRJ-700 CRJ-900
AOM PART 1
VOL
1-1-1
09-Sep-2015
Rev #
Date
Author
Change
Version
001
9-Sep-2015
MK
Start of documentation
0.50
002
18-Sep-2015
MK
0.90
003
18-Sep-2015
MK
0.91
004
21-Sep-2015
MK
0.92
On behalf of Authority
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................................................... 4
CREDITS................................................................................................................................................. 4
INSTALLING & REMOVING .................................................................................................................... 4
DOWNLOAD ...................................................................................................................................... 4
BOXED ............................................................................................................................................... 5
REMOVING........................................................................................................................................ 5
COPYRIGHTS ......................................................................................................................................... 5
MANUALS ............................................................................................................................................. 5
CONTACT SUPPORT .............................................................................................................................. 6
NAVIGATION DATABASE ....................................................................................................................... 6
VERSION NUMBERS .......................................................................................................................... 6
THE CRJ ................................................................................................................................................. 6
BASIC FACTS ...................................................................................................................................... 7
PILOT INFORMATION FOR TRANSITIONING TO THE BOMBARDIER CRJ700 AND 900 ........................... 7
GEOMETRY ........................................................................................................................................ 7
SYSTEMS ........................................................................................................................................... 8
FLIGHT CHARACTERISTICS ................................................................................................................. 9
AVIONICS AND FLIGHT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (FMC)..................................................................... 9
THE CRJ IN FLIGHTSIM ........................................................................................................................ 11
LOADING THE CRJ ........................................................................................................................... 11
THE VIRTUAL COCKPIT OVERVIEW .................................................................................................. 11
OVERHEAD PANEL ........................................................................................................................... 12
GLARESHIELD / AUTOPILOT PANEL ................................................................................................. 14
WARNING / ANNUNCIATOR LIGHTS PILOTS SIDE ........................................................................ 15
CENTER INSTRUMENT PANEL.......................................................................................................... 16
CAPTAINS INSTRUMENT PANELS .................................................................................................... 17
CAPTAIN SIDE CONTROL ................................................................................................................. 18
UPPER PEDESTAL ............................................................................................................................ 19
LOWER PEDESTAL ........................................................................................................................... 20
PRE-DEFINED VIEWS ........................................................................................................................... 22
MCDU KEY INPUT ................................................................................................................................ 22
ADDITIONAL TOOLS / OPTIONS........................................................................................................... 24
SAVING AND LOADING A FLIGHT .................................................................................................... 24
USING PANEL STATES .................................................................................................................. 24
DAVE ............................................................................................................................................... 24
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CHECKLISTS ................................................................................................................................. 24
FUEL PLANNER ............................................................................................................................ 24
V-SPEEDS ..................................................................................................................................... 25
OPTIONS ..................................................................................................................................... 25
SERVICES / MAINTENANCE ......................................................................................................... 25
DOORS ........................................................................................................................................ 25
CRJ MANAGER................................................................................................................................. 25
LIVERY MANAGER ........................................................................................................................... 26
ROUTE SUGGESTIONS ......................................................................................................................... 27
DIGITAL AVIATION CRJ900 FLIGHT FROM DSSELDORF (DUS) TO Basel (BSL) ................................ 28
FLIGHT PLANNING ....................................................................................................................... 28
DEPARTURE FROM DUSSELDORF AIRPORT ................................................................................. 30
ENGINE START AND PUSHBACK ON APRON POSITION ............................................................... 31
TAXIING TO RUNWAY 26L ........................................................................................................... 31
TAKE-OFF ON RWY 23L ............................................................................................................... 31
CLIMB AND CRUISE ..................................................................................................................... 33
ARRIVAL TO Basel AIRPORT ......................................................................................................... 34
FINAL APPROACH DIRECTION RWY 15 ........................................................................................ 35
LANDING ..................................................................................................................................... 35
PARKING AND SECURING THE AIRCRAFT .................................................................................... 35
DISCLAIMER ................................................................................................................................ 36
EXTENDED FLIGHT PLAN EDDL-LFSB (SOURCE VATROUTE) ......................................................... 36
EXTENDED FLIGHT PLAN EDDL-LFSB (SOURCE AIVLASOFT EFB) .................................................. 37
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INTRODUCTION
Thank you very much for purchasing Digital Aviation/Aerosoft CRJ700 / CRJ900 package. Development of the
package went through a lot of highs and lows. Thank you for bearing with us.
The CRJ is a typical regional jet to connect smaller airports or remote areas with the bigger hubs. Hence the
CRJ is able to get fast up to cruise altitude and stay there pretty long, but is not designed for world record
cruise speeds.
The CRJs history goes back into the 80s, when first studies were made regarding options to create a regional
jet out of the Challenger 600 business jet. Near the end of the 80s Lufthansa pushed the idea again and the
project was actually started in 1989 with the maiden flight in 1991 and certification in 1992: the CRJ100 was
born. The CRJ200 was developed later on basis of the CRJ100 and equipped with better engines. Both versions
carry 50 passengers.
When the CRJ700 was developed, the fuselage was stretched further to accommodate 70 passengers.
Accordingly the wings needed to be modified, and furthermore new winglets and new engines were attached.
Its maiden flight was in May of 1999. On basis of the CRJ700 the CRJ900 was developed. The fuselage was
stretched again to accommodate 90 passengers.
The CRJ700 / 900 by Digital Aviation/Aerosoft comprises the CRJ700ER and CRJ900ER models with flight
dynamics modelled according the respective flight performance data and of course 3d representations as close
as possible in FS to the real thing. Accurate systems programming reflects behaviour of the real CRJ within
normal operations.
CREDITS
Programming:
3d Modelling, Texturing:
Flight dynamics:
Sound:
Documentation:
Metzger
Project Management:
Advisors:
Livery Manager:
Additional Liveries:
The beta testers of this product deserve special mentioning. In this development we experimented extensively
with involving them directly in the production, they often tested code minutes after it was written, gave
feedback and got new code almost immediate. Without them the product would not be where it is now.
CRJ-700 CRJ-900
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
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BOXED
After inserting the DVD the installer will start automatically (if not navigate to the DVD and start the
setup.exe). We strongly recommend using these steps to install:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
REMOVING
Never remove this product by manually removing the files but to use the Windows Software control panel.
COPYRIGHTS
The manual, documentation, video images, software, and all the related materials are copyrighted and cannot
be copied, photocopied, translated or reduced to any electronic medium or machine legible form, neither
completely nor in part, without the previous written consent of AEROSOFT. THE SOFTWARE IS FURNISHED AS
IS AND IT DOES NOT COME FURNISHED WITH ANY GUARANTEE IMPLICIT OR EXPRESS. THE AUTHOR DECLINES
EVERY RESPONSIBILITY FOR CONTINGENT MALFUNCTIONS, DECELERATION, AND ANY DRAWBACK THAT
SHOULD ARISE, USING THIS SOFTWARE.
Copyright 2015 AEROSOFT / Digital Aviation. All rights reserved. All trademarks and brand names are
trademarks or registered trademarks of the respective owners.
Copyrights are serious stuff. If you find any pirated copies of this software please notify us at
support@aerosoft.com. We will make sure reports of copyrights violation are rewarded.
Aerosoft GmbH
Lindberghring 12
D-33142 Bren, Germany
www.aerosoft.com
MANUALS
The documentation for the CRJ700 / CRJ900 comprises of several documents:
Vol.1: AOM part I General Information. You are reading this manual at the moment. Contains
information on installation, where to find support, manual structuring, some basic information on the
CRJ, a transition guide for experienced users, an introduction to loading the CRJ, the external model,
its cockpit, keyboard commands, tools coming along with the CRJ, and some flight suggestions apart
from the tutorial.
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Vol.2: Quick Reference Handbook, QRH. Contains information on procedures, limitations and aircraft
performance.
Vol.3: Tutorial. Tutorial flight which takes you from Los Angeles to Monterey guiding you through a
flight from preparation to shutdown.
Vol.4: Normal Ops Checklist. Short checklists on two pages for experienced pilots
Vol.5: AOM part II - Systems Manual. Introduction and explanation on the CRJs systems.
Vol.6: AOM part III Flight Management System, FMS manual. In depth explanation on the Flight
Management System
You will find that we discuss the project in FSX a lot. If you are using Prepar3D V2 it should not be a problem
finding the same locations and settings. If there is a problem just contact us and well assist!
Also note that the readme.txt always contains the information on the latest updates. Before contacting
support do make sure you installed the latest version!
CONTACT SUPPORT
Support for this product is done by Aerosoft. We prefer to do support on the support forum for one simple
reason, it is fast and efficient because customers help customers when we are sleeping. Its also the difference
between one support person reading the question and 500 people, some of why know a LOT about the
aircraft.
We feel strongly about support. Buying one of our products gives you the right to waste our time with
questions you feel might be silly. They are not.
NAVIGATION DATABASE
With this CRJ comes a complete copy of the NavDataPro navigation database. This database contains the LIDO
data and is the worlds most used navigation database in aircraft. The database is fully updateable; check its
product page on our websites: www.aerosoft-shop.com/products/navdatapro/navdatapro.html
The CRJ is fully compatible with the well-known Navigraph database. Although these databases come from a
different source and have some differences they are basically the same and you should not see any differences
between the two.
VERSION NUMBERS
When there are many hotfixes we will also make full new builds. If you are ever in doubt which version you
have, check the product.cfg that you can find in FSXMainFolder\Aerosoft\CRJ*.
THE CRJ
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As we already looked into the CRJs history during the introduction this chapter provides some basic facts on
the CRJ.
BASIC FACTS
CRJ700
CRJ900
Length
32,3 m
106 ft 1 in.
36,2 m
118 ft 11 in.
Wingspan
23,2 m
76 ft 3 in.
24,9 m
81 ft 7 in.
Height
7,6 m
24 ft 10 in.
7,5 m
24 ft 7 in
20290kg
44731lbs
22131kg
48790lbs
28259kg
62300lbs
31751kg
70000lbs
Maximum Payload
8190kg
18055lbs
9907kg
21840lbs
Cargo Weight
2438kg
5375lbs
2756kg
6075lbs
34133kg
75250lbs
37735kg
82750lbs
Maximum take-off
weight (MTOW)
34019kg
75000lbs
37421kg
82500lbs
30391kg
67000lbs
33340kg
73500lbs
70
90
2553 km
1378 nm
2439 km
1317 nm
473 kts
0.825 Mach
470 kts
0.82 Mach
1605 m
5040 ft
1847 m
6060 ft
1536 m
5040 ft
1603 m
5260 ft
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On the first look from outside, it is obvious that the CRJ has been realized with a different concept of engine
arrangement in the back of the aircraft. As engines are relatively heavy, consequently the wing position, in
reference to the fuselage length, is also much more rearward, to assure that the centre of gravity of the empty
or fully loaded aircraft is within the limits of the wing chord to assure a stable flight behaviour.
Loading the aircraft properly is therefore vital for sufficient control of the elevator which has less of an arm for
pitch control than on a classical arrangement. Please refer to the trim tables to be properly trimmed for takeoff depending on weight and centre of gravity index.
The big advantage of positioning the engines at the rear end of the fuselage is a lighter wing construction no
need to carry the heavy engines and having the whole surface and shape available to produce the required
lift in respect to aircraft weight. This wing is optimized for high speeds and supported by slats and flaps for the
slower flying regime during take-off and approach/landing.
There is also a very noticeable difference while flying an aircraft with that engine arrangement when applying
power changes. On the CRJ the engine thrust is pushing at a position higher than the centre of gravity and
above the wing. This results in a pitch down moment when increasing power and consequently a pitch up
moment when pulling engine levers to idle. While in cruise the autopilot would eliminate this with trim
commands, it is specifically important to bear this in mind during the final landing phase, especially the flare
onto the runway. You need very little pull on the yoke when you slow the descent and retard the engines
before touch down.
Do not retard the engines to idle 50 ft. or even higher, as this will lead to a pitch up of the CRJ and fast loss of
speed too high above the runway and requires a corrective nose down push to avoid a hard landing.
Opposite to the landing, the full power during take-off pushes the nose down and you need pull the yoke
substantially to initiate the rotation. The pitch down attitude, characteristic for these two planes while on
ground, is not helping either to get airborne. Therefore pull firmly, rotate with about 3/s to 15-18 pitch and
trim for the initial climb speed.
A specialty of the CRJ is its automatic trim movement when flying manually and extending or retracting flaps
between the positions UP-1-8-20. This automatic trim travel supports the pilot hand-flying the aircraft when
there is a need to compensate the impact from changing flaps configuration with intense lift changes that
require pitch control.
SYSTEMS
Regional jets are typically doing many flights per day and so does the crew. Bombardier has therefore
automated many systems to release the pilots from routine procedures. Examples are the two button only
start-up of the APU with automatic bleed air assignment. Similar the main engines single button start-up and
thereafter fully controlled by the Full Authority Digital Engine Control (FADEC) system.
Fixed throttle detents for the take-off and climb help setting the correct power for these conditions of flight.
On the other hand the CRJs do not have an auto-throttle system and therefore the pilot flying needs to
manage power in cruise and descent. It also has no vertical navigation capability (VNAV) and therefore decent
planning is in the pilots hand and experience.
In return, there is no need to worry about switching bleed air for controlling cabin pressure or during anti-ice
operations. But due to the smaller engines, the loss of power from using bleed air for heating the wings
leading edge is more noticeable than on a larger aircraft. The climb performance is significantly reduced
despite the setting for N1 targets are a bit higher.
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Further, do not be surprised by the increase of N1 and consequent thrust increase during a descent with idle
power when switching on anti-ice. The engines need to turn faster to maintain cabin pressure while hot air
from the turbine is deviated and guided to the engine cowlings and wing leading edges. This can ruin your
planned descent path by picking up more speed and requiring lower rates of descent and it is better to
anticipate icing early in the planning of the descent schedule than being forced to use spoilers to obtain
required rate of descent and not exceeding speed limits.
The two screens in the centre of the panel provide you with a wealth of information on system status, error
awareness or alerts. They also have dedicated screens for the controls and the monitoring role of the pilots
during the start-up of the systems all the way to the engines. We have modelled these pages with great care
and realism. Details can be found in the provided systems documentation and also in the tutorial flights.
FLIGHT CHARACTERISTICS
Beyond the above mentioned specifics of a tail driven aircraft, the CRJ is very stable in flight with easy roll and
pitch response in the speed range that may be typically flown by hand.
At cruise speed the response is very direct and minimal yoke input is required. The lower weights versus the
bigger aircraft you may know make it also more receptive to air turbulence.
In the lower range of the speed band, the controls are becoming less sensitive, but still remain more on the
sportive side as it is a light aircraft with significant less inertia on roll versus an aircraft with wing mounted
engines.
Due to the slats and efficient flaps, you typically have a high margin to stall speed and that enables low landing
speeds and short runways. Pitch attitude during descent and on final is often negative and becoming slightly
positive at reference speed providing a good forward view.
As soon as pitch establishes around +2 during the approach, it is time to select the next flaps setting.
The landing gear has very little drag and hardly any pitch effect. Slats and flaps shall be used to slow down the
aircraft and the flight spoiler may assist when you have left little time to adjust speed but dont expect
miracles from them, especially on the CRJ900.
In flare, level pitch will not cause a nose gear first touchdown as it is shorter than the main gear. The low wing
has a significant ground effect and the CRJ has a tendency to float forever if you come in just a bit too fast for
the landing weight. You need to set down the nose gear gently and pay specific attention when you use
reverse thrust immediately after ground contact.
On outbound taxi, the CRJ starts rolling with a little power push initially and maintains taxi speed close to idle.
On inbound taxi, you may need to use the brakes from time to time to avoid exceeding apron speed limits.
AVIONICS AND FLIGHT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (FMC)
Every major aircraft producer favours his avionics provider and even when you are used to a Dash-400 built by
the same manufacturer Bombardier as the CRJ, you need to get familiar with the display and the programming
technique of the FMS used on the CRJ700 and CRJ900.
Please refer to the information provided in the systems description and the procedures as part of the tutorial
flights. Two main screens directly located in front of you provide you with a wealth of information on your
flight situation from an aerodynamic point of you and from a navigational perspective. Again, please familiarize
yourself with the many options of displaying data and graphical awareness displays for navigation and route
following.
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We would like to encourage you to properly fly the CRJ700 and CRJ900 by investing some time to build a
knowledge base for proper operation.
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1.Overhead
2.Glareshield/Autopilot
8. Upper Pedestal
9. Lower Pedestal
OVERHEAD PANEL
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1. Electrical Power
5. Fuel Controls
6. Pneumatic Controls
9. Hydraulic Controls
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1. ROLL SEL and PLT / CPLT ROLL. The ROLL SEL light comes
on, to indicate that roll priority selection I necessary. The
PL / CPLT ROLL illuminates green to indicate which side
(Captains or First Officers) has been selected for spoileron
control.
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1. Course 1 Selector
8. Speed Selector
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5. Clock / Stopwatch
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UPPER PEDESTAL
6. Gear Lever.
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LOWER PEDESTAL
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PRE-DEFINED VIEWS
The CRJ700 / CRJ900 has no 2d-panels. Instead a set of pre-defined views is available which are similar to a 2dpanel. The following list shows the available views and their respective key assignment / hot key. Of course
these views can be undocked and moved to other monitors.
Hot Key
View
Shift + 1
Shift + 2
Shift + 3
Shift + 4
Shift + 5
CPT Full Panel (similar to CPT Standard with CDU in view additionally)
Shift + 6
CPT MCDU
Shift + 7
Shift + 8
Shift + 9
Ctrl + Plus
Ctrl + Minus
Shift + Q
Toggle HUD
Ctrl + W
Toggle Yoke
F10
F11
F12
Ctrl + Shift + 1
Ctrl + Shift + 2
Ctrl + Shift + 3
Ctrl + Shift + 4
Ctrl + Shift + 5
Ctrl + Shift + 6
Ctrl + Shift + 7
Ctrl + Shift + 8
German Keyboard
U.S. Keyboard
Strg + Umschalt + 1
Ctrl + Shift + 1
Strg + Umschalt + 2
Ctrl + Shift + 2
LSK 1L
F1
F1
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LSK 2L
F2
F2
LSK 3L
F3
F3
LSK 4L
F4
F4
LSK 5L
F5
F5
LSK 6L
F6
F6
LSK 1R
F7
F7
LSK 2R
F8
F8
LSK 3R
F9
F9
LSK 4R
F10
F10
LSK 5R
F11
F11
LSK 6R
F12
F12
MSG
Strg + F1
Ctrl + F1
Dir/Intc
Strg + F2
Ctrl + F2
Fpln
Strg + F3
Ctrl + F3
Dep/Arr
Strg + F4
Ctrl + F4
Hold
Strg + F5
Ctrl + F5
MCDU Menu
Strg + F6
Ctrl + F6
Index
Strg + F7
Ctrl + F7
Fix
Strg + F8
Ctrl + F8
Legs
Strg + F9
Ctrl + F9
Sec Fpln
Strg + F10
Ctrl + F10
VNAV
Strg + F11
Ctrl + F11
Exec
Radio
Umschalt + F1
Shift + F1
Prog
Umschalt + F2
Shift + F2
Perf
Umschalt + F3
Shift + F3
MFD Data
Umschalt + F4
Shift + F4
MFD Menu
Umschalt + F5
Shift + F5
MFD Adv
Umschalt + F6
Shift + F6
A-Z
A-Z
A-Z
0-9
0-9
0-9
SP
Leertaste
Space
DEL
Entf
Delete
CLR
Zurck
Backspace
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V-SPEEDS
Of course the V-Speeds can be calculated and set using the cockpit controls but because that is complex we
included a shortcut option to set V1, Vr, V2 and Vref.
OPTIONS
Diverse options can be set (and saved) in these two pages. Most will be self-explanatory, some guidance on
these:
IRS ALIGN TIME: The inertial reference system uses a system of gyroscopes to measure the movement
of the aircraft. As it knows he starting location it can calculate the current position without any
external references (for example from GPS satellites or radio navigation beacons. To be able to
operate it needs time to spin up and align itself. Depending on conditions this can take quite some
time. The settings here can be used to select realistic time, a compressed time or an instant IRS
aligning.
HELP MESSAGES: Toggles the display of additional EICAS messages. In the CRJ the messages on the
EICAS can be rather cryptic, enabling this option makes then easier to understand. They are always
shown in magenta.
PREPAR3D HDR LIGHTING: When HDR lighting is used in P3D this needs to be activated to make Dave
readable.
SERVICES / MAINTENANCE
WHEEL BLOCKS, GROUND POWER and GROUND AIR option will toggle the display of external objects
but also the actual availability of Ground Power and Ground Air.
AUX DRIVE GEN: When the Auxiliary Drive Generator (known as a Ram Air Turbine in other aircraft) is
deployed it needs to be cranked into stowed position by ground staff.
IDG: The Integrated Drive Generators are engine driven electrical power generating systems. When
you disconnect them in flight they need to be reset by ground staff and this options simulates that.
DOORS
Allows you to open and close the doors and hatches. You can save the configuration so your aircraft will load
with these settings when you load it next.
CRJ MANAGER
You will find the CRJ manager in FSXMainFolder\Aerosoft\Digital Aviation CRJ folder. It allows you to load
passengers and payload and to calculate the fuel load, Center of Gravity and Take-off trim.
Before starting it make sure your simulator is running and your CRJ is the active aircraft on your departure
airport. Also make sure the right aircraft and simulator is selected in the top bar. When all is right a green
Connected should be visible in the top bar.
After you done all calculations you have three options to export the settings to FSX.
Set Fuel & Payload In Flight Simulator: Writes payload and fuel data directly into FSX/FSX-SE/P3D
Save Fuel To Saved Flight File: Writes fuel data into a .FLT or .FXML file (depending on which is
simulator is selected)
Save Payload To Aircraft Configuration: Writes payload data in the aircraft.cfg file
Save Flight Settings: Saves the current payload/fuel settings into a configuration file so CRJ Manager
shows the same data when you start it next time.
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LIVERY MANAGER
You will find the livery manager in FSXMainFolder\Aerosoft\Digital Aviation CRJ\Livery Manager Folder.
Installing a livery is as simple as dragging the zip file you downloaded on top of the livery manager. For 90% of
the additional liveries this will work. All other livery ZIP files that meet the following conditions will be handled
automatic (if this method does not work ask the livery designer to be compliant with our standards):
There must be a txt-file ("readme.txt" or different name as long as it's the only txt-file) with the code
snippet for the aircraft.cfg included.
The snippet starts with [FLTSIM.X] and ends with a blank line.
In this snippet the line "ui-type=*aircraft_type*" must be contained, otherwise the manager doesn't
know which plane the livery should be added to.
Each ZIP-file can only contain one livery / alternative versions must be separated into two ZIP files.
The whole file must be a proper ZIP-file containing the file and folder structure on the first level. So do
not zip the folder with the files but only the files themselves.
Beside the text file there needs to be the texture folder with its extension name, containing a
"thumbnail.jpg"
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ROUTE SUGGESTIONS
During preparation of the tutorial we looked into several different routes flown by the CRJ in real life. The
intention was to find a scenic route which is not too short (more stress when climb and descend follow nearly
instantly on to each other) and not too long (overall time it takes to work through the tutorial).
We didnt want all our ideas go to waste and hence include the routes as suggestions for further flights after
going through the tutorial. Alexander Metzger further provided a rather extensive description on one of those
flights, which youll find attached at the end of this section.
So here you go with our route suggestions:
Departure
Arrival
Airline / Flight No
CRJ Type
Hamburg
Copenhagen
Scandinavian
CRJ900
(HAM / EDDH)
(CPH / EKCH)
SK646
09:50
10:40
Copenhagen
Gothenburg
Scandinavian
(CPH / EKCH)
(GOT / ESGG)
SK434
08:10
08:55
Munster-Osnabruck
Frankfurt
Lufthansa
(FMO / EDDG)
(FRA / EDDF)
LH063
06:35
07:25
Dusseldorf
Basel-Mulehouse
Lufthansa / Germanwings
(DUS / EDDL)
(BSL / LFSB)
4U9712
07:10
08:20
Munich
Marseille
Lufthansa
(MUC / EDDM)
(MRS / LFML)
10:45
12:20
Copenhagen
Aberdeen
Scandinavian
(CPH / EKCH)
(ABZ / EGPD)
SK1521
18:05
18:50
Copenhagen
Berlin Tegel
Scandinavian
(CPH / EKCH)
(TXL / EDDT)
SK0679
15:00
15:55
Copenhagen
Bergen
Scandinavian
(CPH / EKCH)
(BGO / ENBR)
SK2868
14:05
15:25
San Francisco
Jackson Hole
United Airlines
(SFO / KSFO)
(JAC / KJAC)
UA5490
12:50
15:57
Seattle
Santa Barbara
Alaska Airlines
(SEA / KSEA)
(SBA / KSBA)
AS3444
20:15
22:42
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ900
CRJ700
CRJ700
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We select flight level 290 (FL290) and the route distance has been calculated to 280 nautical miles (NM). An
additional 20 NM are added to cover departure and arrival routes. As alternate airport we selected Zurich
(LSZH). The distance from LFSB is 45 NM plus 20 NM for the arrival route. We do expect taking off from runway
23L and following the Standard Instrument Departure route (SID) called MODRU 9T.
WEATHER
This is a typical spring morning with refreshing 3 C, light clouds and a moderate, south-easterly wind on
ground.
Based on this data we expect to be taking off from runway 23L. For flight planning we conclude an average
wind component of eleven knots from 032 degrees (11/032) at FL290 and a headwind component of -22 knots
(tailwind) according the weather forecast at cruise altitude.
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Weight in pounds
22471 kg
49540 lbs.
72 * 84 = 6048 kg
462 kg
1020 lbs.
339 kg
748 lbs.
29315 kg
64627 lbs.
31752 kg
70000 lbs.
< MZFW OK
Fuel
2700 kg
6000 lbs.
32015 kg
70672 lbs.
37422 kg
82500 lbs.
Comment
< MTOW OK
Weight in pounds
32000 kg
70570 lbs.
104 kg (minimum)
Reserve
750 kg
1655 lbs.
Taxi
100 kg
220 lbs.
Minimum fuel
2627 kg
5791 lbs.
Block fuel
2700 kg
6000 lbs.
Distance to destination
340 nm
FL290
ISA deviation
-10 C
Headwind component
Contingency
-22 knots
5%
Distance to alternate
45 nm
FL150
22.4% MAC*
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TAKE-OFF DATA
Based on the above determined take-off weight of 31715 kg (69917 lbs.) we will now define the critical
speeds for departure. EDDL runway 23L is long enough (9843 x 148 ft. / 3000 x 45 m) so that there is no
restriction and we can use the speeds from the speed card for 70000 lbs. (31751 kg).
We will be setting flaps to 8 degrees for the take-off and our departure airport altitude is close to sea level.
Outside temperature is less than 10 C. This concludes in the following speed selection:
From the same table we also take the speeds for retraction of flaps during the acceleration to initially 210
knots (maximum speed for flaps extended to 8 is 230 kts):
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Check identical values for HDG-bug and runway direction should be 232
Running Before Take-off Checklist
o Completed
After having received clearance for taking off you switch on the landing lights and by that signals to the tower
that the take-off is imminent. First move the throttles forward to achieve about 70% N1 and check that both
engines are very close N1%. By that you assure that both engines are delivering similar thrust. Only then you
guide the throttles beyond CLB-dent into the TOGA-dent and monitor that the target N1% is matched while ITT
temperature limit is not exceeded. Any malfunction leads to immediate take-off abortion by the pilot in
charge.
Background information:
Taking off in an aircraft is a relative strict process serving safety of flight and noise abatement procedures. You
may divide into the take-off run up to V1, the rotation at VR and the initial climb at minimum V2 + 10. All these
V-Speeds have been defined during flight preparation as per earlier chapters. See previous chapter of this
tutorial.
Rotation at VR shall not exceed 3 degree/second, so that the tail will not touch the ground (tail strike). Pitch
attitude will be set to 15 to 18 and the trim may be adjusted to match and the gear will be retracted. By that
an optimal rate of climb with a built in safety margin in case of engine failure and minimal speed can be
achieved.
At 1500 ft. above aerodrome elevation (AAE) engine power is reduced for noise abatement.
At 3000 ft. above AAE the acceleration towards the maximum allowed speed of 250 kts will be initiated. This is
executed by an aligned process of flaps lift and flaps drag reduction with synchronous reduction of engine
power and climb rate to achieve the desired acceleration. You may control the aircraft manually or let the
autopilot have the controls.
REGULAR TAKE-OFF SEQUENCE (WITHOUT SPEED LIMIT ON DEPARTURE ROUTE) FOR THIS FLIGHT:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
1500 ft.
3000 ft.
> 159 kts
> 178 kts
Flaps are 0
Climb Check
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NETEX[K210-] the speed until NETEX is limited to 210 kts, even if you may have exceeded FL100
MODRU[F210+] means that we should be crossing MODRU at FL210 or higher
Background information: Yet the CRJ has a built in autopilot modus that can control the climb or descent
speed by changing the pitch attitude and by that the rate of climb or descent to match a given target speed.
For best performance, thrust lever need to be at least in CLB and the FADEC will set an optimal climb power
according a database that relates to altitude and outside temperature. The typically used speed profile is
250/290/0.74 and this profile is the base for our flight calculation. Alternatively you may choose to fly faster,
i.e. catch up with a delay. This would be 250/300/0.77 or even 250/320/0.80. Naturally both are less
economical.
The first number in this list of speeds is the speed below FL100, which is unified around the world but maybe
lifted by the controller, if current traffic allows.
The second number is the speed for climb and cruise above FL100. With increased flight altitude, there is a
limit for aircraft not only from indicated Airspeed but also from the Mach number that shall not be
exceeded. The mentioned speed profiles keep a safety margin from these structural limits of the aircraft. At
about FL270, you reach an interception of IAS =290 and Mach =0.74 and you need to follow the speed control
by Mach. The speed selection button has a center push button to switch between IAS and Mach.
Passing FL100 we switch off the landing lights and could change the IAS HOLD to the desired 290 kts for the
following climb to FL290. But since the SID contains a speed restriction of maximum 250 kts until waypoint
NETEX, we need to wait until we have that passed. Since our weather is not predicting any special turbulence,
we switch off the Fasten Seat Belt sign.
Just before we reach FL290 we are matching up with Mach 0.74 and change to Mach speed control.
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At 1000 ft. prior to target FL an alert will draw our attention to monitor the levelling off to horizontal cruise
flight. Since this requires less power from the engines, we need to pull out the thrust lever and adjust the N1
manually so that the speed stays at Mach 0.74. From experience we know that the expected N1 is about 81 to
82 % and we adjust to keep a speed of Mach 0.74 consistently.
Cruising is the quietest flight chapter and except for scanning other traffic and ATC handover we just monitor
engine parameters and climate control.
ARRIVAL TO BASEL AIRPORT
DECENT AND ENTRY INTO AIRPORT SPACE
The descent to our destination airport has two distinctive parts. First part is the descent into lower airspace
with the reduction of speed down to 250 knots below FL100. Thereafter follows the arrival according to the
published Standard Arrival Route (STAR) or according vectors given by the approach controller. We follow the
process flying the STAR route which needs to be selected first.
Slight winds from southeast suggest that runway 15 is in use. The approach will be done following the
Instrument Landing System (ILS) starting at the Initial Approach Fix (IAF) called ALTIK at 5500 ft. This is linked
to our last waypoint by the STAR called ARPUS8K. Now the route to our landing runway is defined.
Background information: The arrival to the destination airport will be explained by the pilot flying (PF) in great
detail during the approach briefing. The Pilot Monitoring (PM) is checking the process. Every step will be
indicated and any specialties will be clarified. This may cover speed restriction and minimum altitudes,
obstacles and noise abatement requirements. Further the setup of the navigation instruments like VORs (VHF
Omnidirectional Range) in both NAV devices and in the ADF (Automatic Direction Finder), if an NDB (NonDirectional Bearing) is available. Final item is the process to execute a missed approach, stating the route
which typically ends at a holding at a waypoint, from which a new approach can be executed.
Route preparation:
DESCENT CHECK
Entry into airport space:
> 10000 ft. > Setting target speed to 250 kts (maximum speed <FL100) and reducing accordingly
10000 ft > Landing lights on
15 min before landing > Passenger signs on
7 min before landing > Cabin crew information Cabin crew prepare for landing
6000 ft. > Actual barometric pressure set in all altimeters
Approach Check > Running Approach Checklist
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Basel airport is located in the 3 country triangle of France, Germany and Switzerland with the cities of
Mulhouse and Basel and the Jura mountains in the south. Due to this location, the arrival route is quite
complex. Adhering to altitude minimum 4000 ft. and a speed of maximum 185 kts, because of tight turns on
the entry to the DME (Distance Measurement Equipment) arc and the final 90 turn on ILS localizer (LOC),
requires a good control of the aircraft. As a consequence you need to reduce speed to 200 kts and flaps 1 and
185 kts with flaps 8 is necessary.
A more simple arrival can be done by using vectors, i.e. outbound VOR/DME GROSTENQUIN GTQ 111.25 MHz
set in NAV1 and descending to 4000 ft. at 10.4 NM before VOR/DME Basel MULHOUSE BLM 117.45 MHz set in
NAV2 and once close to BLM switch to standby ILS/DME MH 111.55 MHz on NAV 1.
FINAL APPROACH DIREC TION RWY 15
The required 185 kts at 4000 ft. should be flown with flaps 8. We capture the glideslope at 9.5 NM distance
and 3100 ft. altitude difference to the runway. Remaining are about 3 min to achieve landing configuration.
We therefore reduce to 160 kts and flaps 20. 5NM before threshold we drop the gear and reduce speed
further. Consequently flaps 35 and 45 are set so that we achieve landing configuration at 1000 ft. above
runway elevation and the speed should read VRef + 10 = 146 kts. Typically you need about 58% N1 power.
Running the Before Landing Checklists and switching off the autopilot we are cleared to land.
LANDING
During the last 1000 ft. we are concentrated on keeping the speed and the correct position in reference to the
flight director (FD) indication. If the deviation from the ILS LOC/GS happens to be more that 1 dot, the landing
must be aborted and the above discussed Missed Approach Procedure (MAP) must be executed.
Crosswind influences must be equalized precisely and with strong headwinds the value for Vref needs to be
increased by half the headwind. This is done to increase the safety margin.
At 50 ft. above runway well indicated at the RA display we pull the thrust lever to idle and reduce the
vertical speed with a soft pull on the yoke. Once the main wheels have touched the ground, the spoilers are
automatically deployed and the pilot pulls the throttle into reverse position. Drop the nose softly to get the
front wheel on ground and only then use wheel brakes for further speed reduction. At 90 kts you cut reversers
by setting the throttle lever back to idle position and take the next exit left to your parking position.
Crossing the hold line you configure the aircraft for taxiing to position:
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