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by biggieshellz
1207 days ago
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FWIW, it takes way more than 1 second for the engines to spool up. And an engine not producing sufficient thrust would not doom the plane -- as long as the airplane makes it to V1 (decision speed), it should be able to fly with a single engine failure after that point. And the pilots should already have talked through the takeoff and come up with a go / no-go based on distance: "if we're after this point and we haven't reached V1, we'll abort". |
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Having said that, a speed-at-distance rule like the one you give here, especially if it was evaluated at a distance before you expect to reach V1, would be perfectly good. There is a rule-of-thumb for small-plane pilots saying you should have reached 80% of the rotation speed before you are halfway down the runway (though that speed is also weight-dependent - as demonstrated in these incidents.) There is a tacit assumption here that your deceleration after choosing to abort will exceed your acceleration up to that point.