July 15, 200718 yr For Take Off Distance Required, I like to use the charts published by Boeing and available at http://www.boeing.com/commercial/airports/plan_manuals.html . They have charts for (I think) almost every Boeing and Douglas airliner. Click there in your plane and then click on "Airplane Performance" and you'll get a PDF with the charts you need. Why did Airbus only release this type of data for the A380 only, that's a good question.Hope this helpsBest regards from ColombiaLuis MiguelEdit: Oops Drek, you were faster than me.... Best regards,Luis Hernández Main rig: self built, AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D (with SMT off and CO -50 mV), 2x16 GB DDR4-3200 RAM, Nvidia RTX 5060Ti 16GB, 256 GB M.2 SSD (OS+apps) + 2x1 TB SATA III SSD (sims) + 1 TB 7200 rpm HDD (storage), ID-Cooling SE-224-XTS air cooler, Viewsonic VX2458-MHD 1920x1080@120-144 Hz (G-sync compatible), Windows 11. Running P3D v5.4 (with v4.5 scenery objects as an additional library, just in case), FSX-SE, MSFS2020, MSFS2024 and even FS9! Lossless Scaling for all my sims. What a godsend...Mobile rig: ASUS Zenbook UM425QA (AMD Ryzen 7 5800H APU @3.2 GHz and boost disabled, 1 TB M.2 SSD, 16 GB RAM, Windows 11 Pro). Running FS9 there .VKB Gladiator NXT Premium Left + GNX THQ as primary controllers. Xbox Series X|S wireless controller as standby/mobile.
July 15, 200718 yr Author Thanks, Luis. Great minds think alike! I was hoping these charts would provide some guidance as to various outside air temperatures at takeoff. It only provides one temperature (standard 15c/59f). Besides altitude variations (which it does provide), high air temperatures (such as the one I had yesterday 23c) increase the takeoff roll dramatically.Best,Pete in KORD
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