T7 in TNCM?
T7 in TNCM?
Hey everyone,
More of a general question than anything but why don't you ever see the T7 at TNCM? Is there some sort of limitation with the a/c?
Just curious...
Thanks in advance,
-P
More of a general question than anything but why don't you ever see the T7 at TNCM? Is there some sort of limitation with the a/c?
Just curious...
Thanks in advance,
-P
Re: T7 in TNCM?
I heard once it got to do with the power of the 2 engines.psolk wrote:Hey everyone,
More of a general question than anything but why don't you ever see the T7 at TNCM? Is there some sort of limitation with the a/c?
Just curious...
Thanks in advance,
-P
I'd well believe it since its coming out of 2 huge fans instead of the 4 on the A340's or 747's.
Thanks TJC
I thought it was something to do with that or insufficient climb for the Departure from TNCM. I did find a single picture on A.net of an Air Europe 777 at TNCM in 2001. i can't find a record of any other 777's visiting TNCM though.
How much fun would it be to try and hold onto the fence as those GE-90 engines spool up though
-Paul
I thought it was something to do with that or insufficient climb for the Departure from TNCM. I did find a single picture on A.net of an Air Europe 777 at TNCM in 2001. i can't find a record of any other 777's visiting TNCM though.
How much fun would it be to try and hold onto the fence as those GE-90 engines spool up though

-Paul
http://web2.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=22972
http://web2.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=22973
Certainly, there's no aircraft limitation that prevents the 777 from visiting SXM. Air France was rumoured to be switching the current 343X equipment to a 773ER at some point, but I guess in the end it all comes down to economics, and airlines fly the equipment they feel will be most profitable into TNCM.
http://web2.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=22973
Certainly, there's no aircraft limitation that prevents the 777 from visiting SXM. Air France was rumoured to be switching the current 343X equipment to a 773ER at some point, but I guess in the end it all comes down to economics, and airlines fly the equipment they feel will be most profitable into TNCM.
You might be right, and wrong at the same time. Actually there are structural limitation for aircrafts such as the 77W on such small airports, but it's not due to the aircraft performance itself, it's due to the runway and tawiways own limitation, their endurance.ChrisKSDF wrote:Certainly, there's no aircraft limitation that prevents the 777 from visiting SXM.
Although the whole plane is lighter than an A340 or B747, the main gear is the culprit on the 77W, because it has only to sets of boggies, versus 4 for the 747 for instance, so the total weight isnt applied the same way on the runway.
If the 77W normal MTOW is 344.5tons, it's limited for instance at 321.t in Pointe-a-Pitre(TFFR) and Fort-de-France (TFFF) where Air France operates the 777s, for same exact reasons. Runway and taxiways limitations.
The 777 cannot be used from Europe due to ETOPS (Extended Twin-Engine Operations). It is due to its maximum diversion time of 120/180 minutes (time depending on governing rule). Since most of the flight is over open ocean, 4-engined aircraft are being utilizied. Rules may be changing soon due to a recent law that will allow 2-engine aircraft to operate if they can prove they have an inflight shutdown rate of 1 in 100,000 hours. Right now, to qualify for a 180 minute diversion they must have an inflight shutdown rate of 2 in 100,000 hours. Just an interesting tidbit of info.
That's not quite correct. British Airways uses the 777 to Jamaica and that's further away than TNCM.a319mech wrote:The 777 cannot be used from Europe due to ETOPS (Extended Twin-Engine Operations). It is due to its maximum diversion time of 120/180 minutes (time depending on governing rule). Since most of the flight is over open ocean, 4-engined aircraft are being utilizied. Rules may be changing soon due to a recent law that will allow 2-engine aircraft to operate if they can prove they have an inflight shutdown rate of 1 in 100,000 hours. Right now, to qualify for a 180 minute diversion they must have an inflight shutdown rate of 2 in 100,000 hours. Just an interesting tidbit of info.
The BA flight is a Gatwick to Kingston flight which lasts around 9 hrs so I doubt they use any route other than the norm. The Air Jamaica(A340) flight to Heathrow is about the same time (flight time-9hrs) and they use the regular route, so I assume BA does as well. I also see a BA777 at montego bay, Jamaica but I'm not sure if it's the same flight.
Err, do you have that the right way around? Moving a shutdown rate from 2 permitted per 100,000hr to 1/100,000hr is surely making it twice as strict.a319mech wrote:...allow 2-engine aircraft to operate if they can prove they have an inflight shutdown rate of 1 in 100,000 hours. Right now, to qualify for a 180 minute diversion they must have an inflight shutdown rate of 2 in 100,000 hours. Just an interesting tidbit of info.