βœ” A Fuel jettison system is available to avoid safety compromise and the necessity for heavy maintenance tasks, that could arise due to a potential overweight landing.

βœ” Against a popular rumour, in regular flight operations, there is no draining of fuel before landing. This would be neither permissible nor economical for the airlines.

βœ” However, there are few exceptional cases in which aircraft have to and are allowed to discharge fuel in a controlled manner for safety reasons.

βœ” If the fully fueled aircraft is heavier than the maximum permissible landing weight in such a situation, the captain must decide from below options, considering urgency & safety.

πŸ‘‰ Landing aircraft with overweight (safety concerns).

πŸ‘‰ Drain the kerosene (Quick option).

πŸ‘‰ Circling aircraft to use fuel ( Slower option).

βœ” Long-haul Jets like B747 have large tanks to store ATF for the flight. Therefore, their MTOW is significantly more than the landing weight (MLW), needing a Jettison system compared to narrow body aircrafts like A320.

βœ” The ICAO stipulates that ATF should be discharged at a height of 4 to 8 km, but at least at a height of 1,800 meters.

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Author – Tanmay Palei
Sr. Aircraft Structure Engineer

Categorized in:

Aircraft Engineering,

Last Update: September 28, 2024